The World As I Have Found It 
 
Project Gutenberg's The World As I Have Found It, by Mary L. Day 
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Title: The World As I Have Found It Sequel to Incidents in the Life of 
a Blind Girl 
Author: Mary L. Day Arms 
Release Date: February 7, 2005 [EBook #14963] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
WORLD AS I HAVE FOUND IT *** 
 
Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Melissa Er-Raqabi, and the Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. 
 
[Transcriber's Note: Inconsistencies in spelling and punctuation have 
been retained as in the original.] 
[Illustration: MARY L. DAY ARMS] 
 
THE WORLD AS I HAVE FOUND IT. 
SEQUEL TO Incidents in the Life of a Blind Girl. 
BY MARY L. DAY ARMS. 
WITH AN INTRODUCTION 
By Rev. Charles F. Deems, LL.D.
BALTIMORE: PUBLISHED BY JAMES YOUNG, 112 West 
Baltimore Street. 
 
ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1878, by MARY 
L. DAY ARMS, In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at 
Washington. 
 
INTRODUCTION. 
Mrs. Arms has asked me to write an introduction to her book. It hardly 
seems to need it. The title-page shows that it was written by one who is 
blind. It is a sequel to another volume. That volume has been widely 
sold, and all who read it will, I am sure, have some desire to see how 
the stream of the life of its writer has been flowing since her first book 
was written. Her patient perseverance under privations has won her a 
large circle of personal friends, who will take pleasure in procuring and 
preserving this fresh memento of the Blind Girl. 
Such a book as this has a value which, probably, has not occurred to its 
author. She has put on record the phenomena of her life as she has 
recollected them, with great simplicity, merely for the entertainment of 
her readers, without attaching any importance to the value which every 
such memoir has in the department of science. But it is just from the 
study of such phenomena as these that the students in mental and moral 
philosophy learn the laws of mind and the operations of a human soul 
under a divine, moral government. As a matter of taste we might omit 
the writer's description of her husband, whom she never yet has seen, p. 
45, and her account of her love affairs, p. 49; and if we had 
discretionary editorship, and the volume had been written by one 
having always had her sight, we should unhesitatingly exclude such 
passages. But, as the records of the impressions, consciousnesses and 
general mental phenomena of a blind girl in love, they stand to be, 
perhaps, quoted hereafter in some abstruse scientific treatise, or bloom 
out in some perennial poem. 
There is an immediate practical usefulness in such a book as this. It has 
its wholesome lesson for the young. It shows what strength of character 
and vigor of purpose will accomplish under even extraordinary 
embarrassments. The young lady had a hard early life. She had neither 
friends nor money nor sight, but she unwhiningly took up the task of
taking care of herself, and discharged it so nobly as to make for herself 
a wide circle of friends, and keep for herself that sense of self-reliance 
as toward man, and of faith as toward God, which are worth more than 
all the dirty dollars that wickedness can give to weakness. 
Let our young women who are in straitened circumstances, in 
circumstances that seem absolutely exclusive of all hope of retaining 
virtue and keeping life, read this book and its predecessor, and pluck up 
faith and hope. Let all our young ladies, daughters of loving parents, 
daughters who have no care for the morrow, daughters of delicious ease 
and happy opportunity, read this book, and then let their consciences 
ask them how they are to carry their idleness to be examined at the 
judgment sent of Christ, in contrast with this blind girl's industry, 
fidelity and perseverance. 
CHARLES F. DEEMS. CHURCH OF THE STRANGERS, New York, 
4th July, 1878. 
 
CHAPTER I. 
"Warriors and statesmen have their meed of praise, And what they do, 
or suffer, men record; While the long sacrifice of woman's days Passes 
without a thought, without a word: And many a holy struggle for the 
sake Of duty, sternly, faithfully fulfil'd; For which the anxious soul 
must watch and wait, Goes by unheeded as the summer wind, And 
leaves no memory, and no trace behind!    
    
		
	
	
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