The Influence   of  Sentiment.—Our  sentiments, like    our dispositions,   are not
only    a   natural growth  from    the experiences upon    which   they    are fed,    but they    in
turn     have    large   influence   in  determining     the     direction   of  our     further
development.    Our sentiments  furnish the soil    which   is  either  favorable   or  hostile
to  the growth  of  new experiences.    One in  whom    the sentiment   of  true    patriotism
is  deep-rooted will    find    it  much    harder  to  respond to  a   suggestion  to  betray  his
country's   honor   on  battlefield,    in  legislative hall,   or  in  private life,   than    one
lacking in  this    sentiment.  The boy who has a   strong  sentiment   of  love    for his
mother  will    find    this    a   restraining influence   in  the face    of  temptation  to  commit
deeds   which   would   wound   her feelings.   A   deep    and abiding faith   in  God is  fatal
to  the growth  of  pessimism,  distrust,   and a   self-centered   life.   One's   sentiments
are a   safe    gauge   of  his character.  Let us  know    a   man's   attitude    or  sentiments  on
religion,   morality,   friendship, honesty,    and the other   great   questions   of  life,   and
little  remains to  be  known.  If  he  is  right   on  these,  he  may well    be  trusted in  other
things; if  he  is  wrong   on  these,  there   is  little  to  build   upon.
Literature  has drawn   its best    inspiration and choicest    themes  from    the field   of
our  sentiments.     The     sentiment   of  friendship  has     given   us  our     David   and
Jonathan,   our Damon   and Pythias,    and our Tennyson    and Hallam. The sentiment
of  love    has inspired    countless   masterpieces;   without its aid most    of  our fiction
would    lose    its     plot,   and     most    of  our     poetry  its     charm.  Religious   sentiment
inspired    Milton  to  write   the world's greatest    epic,   "Paradise   Lost."  The sentiment
of  patriotism  has furnished   an  inexhaustible   theme   for the writer  and the orator.
Likewise    if  we  go  into    the field   of  music   and art,    we  find    that    the best    efforts of
the masters are clustered   around  some    human   sentiment   which   has appealed    to
them,    and     which   they    have    immortalized    by  expressing  it  on  canvas  or  in
marble, that    it  may appeal  to  others  and cause   the sentiment   to  grow    in  us.
Sentiments  as  Motives.—The    sentiments  furnish the deepest,    the most    constant,
and  the     most    powerful    motives     which   control     our     lives.  Such    sentiments  as
patriotism, liberty,    and religion    have    called  a   thousand    armies  to  struggle    and die
on  ten thousand    battlefields,   and have    given   martyrs courage to  suffer  in  the fires
of  persecution.    Sentiments  of  friendship  and love    have    prompted    countless   deeds
of  self-sacrifice  and loving  devotion.   Sentiments  of  envy,   pride,  and jealousy
have    changed the boundary    lines   of  nations,    and have    prompted    the committing
of  ten thousand    unnamable   crimes. Slowly  day by  day from    the cradle  to  the
grave    we  are     weaving     into    our     lives   the     threads     of  sentiment,  which   at  last
become  so  many    cables  to  bind    us  to  good    or  evil.
