The Days of a Man ================= Exported from Holy-Writings.com on 2026-06-18 1 clipping 1. Source: Bahá'í Library Online (bahai-library.com), curated by Jonah Winters. Used by permission of the curator. Original citation: David Starr Jordan, The Days of a Man, bahai-library.com. ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────── THE DAYS OF A MAN BEING MEMORIES OF A NATURALIST, TEACHER AND MINOR PROPHET OF DEMOCRACY BY DAVID STARR JORDAN ILLUSTRATED VOLUME Two 1900-1921 Jungle and town and reef and sea, I have loved God's earth and God's earth loved me, Take it for all in all! Yonkers-on-Hudson, New York WORLD BOOK COMPANY 1922 The Days of a Man 1912 as to personal liberty, diet, and methods of studying literature, and his many eccentricities were effective in impressing his ideas. It seems that he had been granted an undesired "leave of absence" from Cra- cow because of his freedom of speech. In the stormy days which followed he took refuge in Savoy, whence he sent me his book on "The Meaning of Freedom," and where later, as I learned through the Polish Relief Committee, he was on the verge of starvation. We then forwarded a little money from Stanford, but I have since heard nothing of his fate. The Bahai Another visitor of the same year was the Bahai, Abdul Bahas, son of Baha O'llah, the famous Persian devotee, founder and head of a widespread religious sect holding as its chief tenet the Brotherhood of Man, with all that this implies of personal friend- liness and international peace. Through an inter- preter the kindly apostle expressed with convincing force a message accepted, in name at least, by good men and women all through the ages. He asked forsome of my own essays to be translated into Persian and cordially invited me to his abode of peace in the hills of Damascus. Still another apostle of good will, who came to us not long after, was Sir Wilfred Grenfell, the mission- ary physician of the bleak shores of Labrador. The story of his noble work has been so well told that I need only express my own appreciation of the man and my pleasure in presenting him to the students of the University. On June 5, 1912, on the invitation of the German consul, Von Bopp, I heard an address at the Fair- — The Days of a Man (Used by permission of the curator)