POVERTY.

CHAPTER XIII.

POVERTY.

Physical labor is one of the greatest promoters of both physical and mental health, and its necessity should therefore be regarded as a blessing rather than a curse for the vast majority of mankind. On the other hand, idleness of mind and body, or conditions of life which give neither opportunity nor necessity for exertion, tend toward ill-health and unhappiness, and consequently are to be avoided.

The condition of poverty creates the necessity for labor, and, if its stress is not too great, is not to be regarded as an unmixed evil. It stimulates to exertion, and exertion tends to develop and strengthen all portions of the system. The natural tendency of the mind is to run riot, to avoid hardship, and to follow the enjoyment of the present moment irrespective of the future, and it is only that discipline which comes from the necessities of life in the midst of civilization, which can lead it up to a higher standard of endurance and health.

If, therefore, the effects of poverty were to end here, they might properly be regarded as blessings. But this is not the case; for the vast majority of the poor they go much beyond the requirements of health-giving labor and discipline, and manifest themselves in quite an opposite result. The lack of brain-discipline, ignorance, too many hours of toil, too few of relaxation, illy-prepared or unsuitable food, foul air in sleeping apartments, unsanitary surroundings, and other conditions always attendant upon the poor, especially in large towns and cities, all tend toward deterioration of brain-tissue.