THE HONGKONG DAILY PRESS, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2ND, 1923,
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COWARDICE. AND FEAR.
INTERESTING STATEMENT BY AN
EMINENT SPECIALIST.
3
No
part of the report of the War Odier Committee on Shell Shock states the Even ing Standard, is more interesting than |that relating to fear, and cowardice.
In the view of the Committee neither feel ing fear nor manifesting signs of fear-pallor, shaking, temors, quick pulse-de of them selves constituto cowardice,
though more
or less essential to is 4 witness described avery distingo in the war, who had suffered from shell-shock, gave his evillence anonymously, and said: I knew the thing was coming on for months be fore it actually arrived. I was always consumed with fear, and it was, dificult to conceal that fear."
emotions
Writing to the Evening Standard on this subject, Sir Robert Armstrong Jones, the eininent specialist, says: The study of the tions has commanded considerable attention withi us even before the war, and both
psychologists who are students of the mind and physiologists who are students of the bodily fauction-have en deavoured to describe them and to investi- gate their underlying physical basis. One of the most interesting writers, among the former is Mr. A. F. Shand while the play siological laboratory of Harvard University, in America, represented by Mr. W. B. Can-
STARVING AMIDST PLENTY!
WORLD
Why is it that with a plentiful supply of A food, good food too, met or women, can starve just as surely as if they had no food at all! | 74 Why is it that men and women can't be really healthy unless the food they eat is perfectly digested? And, further, why is it that after a good square meal, not only may you. derive little or no benefit from fox, but that some food may be positively harmful to your health? These are questions the answers which are of vital importance to every riader of this paper. THOMY
hard-earned money for food. Most of us. in fact, spend our lives slaring for food anil riment, hence it is only fair to ourselves that we shoull get the best value possible out of the food we eat. Let us consider the question that men and women can't be healthy lear the food they cat is perfectly digested. It is strong statement to make, but very true nevertheles. For the food you eat in intended to rebuild and replace the wear and fear that is daily, hourly going on in your body. Good food. well digested, renowa bone, munselo, and tisane, and makes, you healthy and strong. Good fond, badly digested, does at nourish your body as it should and there is a weakening of muscalar fibre, nervous d consequently tisane with impoverished blood. Then you are
pour state of health, a victim of the many symptoms that have their origia in bad digestiu. Erect time you eat food, it should, us
tere up its nourish
nient to enrich the
non, bas dealt clearly, with the latter den through the repair and build aspect, and he has explained fully the physical mechanism of the emotions as they direct and control.confact.
YUNDAMENTAL INSTINCT." "Fear is one of the deepest and most aniversal of the
item. That is the reason why fount can
sometimes be worse than useless.
Whas we strongly adrim to do whenever is to try Mother Seigel's Syrup. Its succes in indigestion threster to endanger your health, banishing stomach, and liver troublew has been time and again beyond all doubt. Ita
the whole bodily ystem But that is only
sole Douily syster possible when your digestion is quite satisfactory. In the case of indigestion the food, ferments in the intestines, gives off harmful products, wome of which most certainly find their way into the and is a fun-bhod, and are thus carried to all parts of the damental instinct im human he ings to ensure safety. It is an emotion with A definite end, which is to escape from langet, and it therefore haan'special biological value to the individual. To experience fear is not to be a coward, and certainly the man *ho impable of fear is not the man who has the highest forta of courage, and on the other. hand the man who is brave, is not he wremarkable effray depends, not upon any one ingredient, but upon many herbal extracts, is careless, reckless, fearless of what's past which in combination exert a wonderfully present, and to come. Too little fear fervis curative and strengthening induence apon the to rushness, just as too much gives rise to
atmach, liver and bowels. timidity.. Fear is the result of some previou
Fious. You (30 understand the enthusiasm of many experience of the individual, although one time afferers for Mother Seiger's Syrup. must be acquired by it be the result of suggestion.
we, who, as loctors in the Army, were responsible for the treatment of so-called shell-shock, fund that those who suffered
It has banished their pains after eating. or their Hatulence, acility, bilionsness or constip ation and therefore they could'nt be anything else hat grateful to this grand old herbal remedy. That's how tens of thousands feel, and, after
did not get well when many of them well, they know best how conforting it is to be treated together, the condition being conti- nued by seeing the others, and certainly of indigestion, that arch-enemy of good the symptoms were at times induced in health. Try Mother Seigel's Strap, and shars
their enthusiasm for it. B. 310. others by anggration. We know that many of the wild animals when captured young show no fear because they have not ex- perienced danger. They behave like child- ran with fire. They are not afraid because they have never experienced danger, and these perso0s also are not the type of the brave or the courageous. The really i Grave man is he who has met danger and realises it and uses his reason to control bis com luct
નાર
IN SPITE OF YEAR.
It is clear that Captain Scott exper rienced fear in regard to the dangers of the great. Antarctic expedition to which he and his brave party succumbed, be- cause he rande all the necessary prepa- rations to meet danger. He not only realised the presence of the emotion of fear, but he so controlled his conduct meet, it. Captain Scott knew from his former experiences of Arctic exploration the risks he ran, yet in spite of fear he dared to risk them and make the voyage. This is true courage. “
to
"In the same way, to many of our base soldiers and officers, the prospects of the adventures of the war was the necessary experience which brought about the co- tion of fear, but in their case, other n tions, such as curiosity and hope, and wonder alsc, braced them for action, helped to create a fresh motive for co- duct, not the least of which was the feali sation or cognition that they were fighting for right-haman brotherhood, social jus- tice and liberty.
"To many of our wolliers life without langer would be that and insipid, and ve know that peril and danger are often great incentives to courage., Mr. Graham Wallas said that if warg were to cease, then Alpine climbing would become a popular mania, for men will insist upon meeting danger in order to conquer it, and it has been said that if we knew whence we came and whither would lose we were going, donth to many much of the feeling and mystery of adventure it at present possesses. It is clear that the man who entertains the emotion of fear is not a coward; in fact, the reverse is more
true."
PRUSSIAN CODE OF HONOUR. BARON'S SUICIDE FOR LOVE,
Medieval ideas of honour die hard in circles of the old Prussian Army, but Ger-. man society in the Republic is beginning to be shocked by them. A glaring exam- ple occurred on July 24th in Schöneberg, one of Berlin's more fashionable quarters, when Baron Walter von 8:illfried, a former officer of the old army, shot him self in the house of Major Hanns Herbert von Borcke.
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Major von Borcke and his wife had recently become acquainted with Baron von Stillfried. The latter had conceived a passionate attachment for the major's ed wife and confided in bor the troubles of his former married life," He had just become divorced for the second time, and Frau von Borcke evidently showed her new acquaintance a certain amount of sympathy. Major von Borcke, however, p disapproved of the friendship and appeal. ed to the baron to cease his attentions, as his wife's reputation might become com- promised...
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A meeting was finally arranged to täko place outside the major's house, at which the pair wers to come to some sort of understanding, but a heavy thunderstorm drove theni indoors. Then the baron and
After some talk the major told the baron Frau von Borcke had a long talk, at the that as a man of a honour he would know end of which the baron proposed that what to do, at the same time handing. they should go away together. She de him a revolver. He then left the room, clined, and declared she would remain remarking that he expected the baron to with her husband. At that moment draw his own conclusion within the next Major von Borcke entered the room and ten minutes. Baron von Stillfried inter- put an end to the conversation; his wife went out and the two men were felt preted the remark in the spirit in which it was made and immediately shot himself. together. A
(Continued at foot of next column.)
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7
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