Early Rising
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My dear  brother,
  In the course of my reading I am always glad to meet with anything which  strikes me as suitable for your instruction. This morning I opened upon a page  of Mr. Jay's daily devotional books, in which he  speaks of early rising, and his thoughts are so excellent, that I shall make  free use of them, and mingle them with my own.
  "The  habit of early rising, if ever formed, is commonly established in childhood or  youth. If one has wasted the delightful morning hours of fifteen years in bed,  he will not readily learn to deny himself as an adult. Therefore, I wish you  now to learn to enjoy,
  The cool,  the fragrant, and the silent morn,
  To meditation due, and sacred song."
  Perhaps  you are ready to ask, "How much sleep is necessary?" This cannot be  answered in a word. Some need more than others. But Mr. Jay  says, "It is questionable whether they require much more. Yes, it may be  questioned whether they require any more, as to length. What they need more of,  is better sleep; and the quality would be improved by lessening the  quantity." This remark used to be often made by the celebrated and  excellent Dr. Benjamin Rush.  Try the experiment of shortening your slumbers; you will have fewer dreams,  fewer turnings and tossing's but more solid repose, more refreshment.
  But you  must shorten your rest at the right end; not by sitting up late at night—but by  rising early in the morning. Physicians say that one hour's sleep before  midnight is worth more than two hours after it. However this may be, one  hour of study before breakfast is certainly worth two after supper. The  mind is more fresh and cheerful, and the health is less injured. And then, how  much more delightful are the early hours! The poet says truly,
  "Sweet is the breath of morn, her rising sweet,
  With charm of earliest birds."
  In the  delightful months of spring, summer, and autumn, you should be up at sunrise.  When the morning haze begins to disperse, you will observe all nature bedewed  with sweetness. Fresh odours breathe from the woods, and fields, and gardens. A  thousand birds are singing in the branches. The morning walk among such scenes  is as useful to the health as it is pleasing to the taste.
  It is  time that you should begin to care for your health, and take measures to secure  strength for future usefulness. The advantage of early rising, as it regards  this, will be apparent in your vigor, your appetite, your nerves, your spirits,  and even your complexion. Ask your physician. Is there a medical man on earth  that would risk his reputation by a contrary opinion? Dr. Sinclair,  in his volumes on health and long life, remarks, that though those who lived to  a very great age differed in many things, they all resembled each other here.  There was not one who did not rise early.
  Whatever  business you may ever be engaged in, will be furthered by early rising. What an  advantage has a student from this habit in planning and arranging his pursuits  for the day! And in having leisure for any incidental engagement, without  putting everything else into disorder! While another is disposed to cry out,  "A little more sleep, and a little more slumber," and who begins at  ten what he should have begun at six, is thrown into hurry and confusion; and  bustles about trying to remedy his situation. He feels himself a drudge all  day; and at night is weary, without having accomplished his task. All this is  so well known. Among all businessmen, a man's reputation suffers from the want  of this virtue.
  The  heathen used to say, 'Morning is the friend to the muses.' It surely is a  friend to the graces. If it is the best time for study, it is also the best  time for devotion. When prayer and praise are neglected in the morning, they  are commonly neglected all day; and if you let the world get the start of your  soul in the morning, you will seldom overtake it all day. Morning devotion  sweetens every succeeding hour, pours a balm on the conscience, gives a  pleasant savour to business, locks the door against wicked thoughts, and  furnishes matter for pious reflection. It is better to go from prayer to  business—than from business to prayer. Fellowship with God prepares for  fellowship with our fellow creatures, and for every event, whether pleasing or  painful.
  Boerhaave,  celebrated physician, rose early in the morning, and through his life, his  practice was to dedicate an hour each morning for private prayer and  meditation. Colonel Gardiner,  even when in camp, used to spend two hours of the early morning in pious  exercises. The great Judge Hale,  also, rose early for prayer, and read a portion of God's word, without which,  he said, nothing prospered with him all day. Howard,  the philanthropist, was an early riser. John Wesley  usually slept five hours; and for many years, he, and all the first Methodist  preachers, had a public service at five in the morning. President   Dwight of Yale,  was in the habit of studying Scripture before day. And there was in one of our  southern States, a labouring man who, by devoting two hours of every morning to  study, before he went to his work, became a learned theologian.
  If you  have already acquired the disgraceful habit of lying in bed late, break it off  now, not gradually—but at once. Do not regard the little unpleasant feelings  you may have to endure for a few weeks. Go forth, and inhale the fragrance of  the charming spring and autumnal mornings; it will be a cordial to your body  and your mind. And in the summer, the season from early dawn until breakfast is  the only time you available, when you can enjoy a book, a walk or ride in the  open air.
  I have  written to you more than once, concerning the example of our adorable Saviour;  and I wish the chief object of these letters may be, to set His blessed example  more fully before you. Now, what do you suppose was our Lord's practice? Just  imagine to yourself, the way in which he spent his morning hours. Can you for  an instant suppose that he passed them in slumbers upon his couch? When the hum  of business began among the labourers of Judea or of Galilee,  and the sun shone warmly on the fields and villages—was the Redeemer asleep? Is  it possible for you to think so? No, it is not. On a certain occasion, we read,  "And in the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out, and  departed into a solitary place, and there prayed"—and yet he had been  greatly occupied the whole of the day preceding this.
  We think  little of time—but he never passed an idle hour. The language of the whole of  his life was, "I must work the works of him who sent me, while it is yet  day—the night comes, when no man can work." Yet he was really a man. He  took our infirmities, and wearied nature required repose. But he distinguished  between what was necessary and what was needless. It may be also said of his  whole life, "He pleased not himself."
Your affectionate brother, 
James
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