Too Early and Too Late
Too Early and Too Late
Punctuality
is a necessary habit in all public affairs in a civilized society. Without it,
nothing could ever be brought to a conclusion; everything would be in state of
chaos. Only in a sparsely-populated rural community is it possible to disregard
it. In ordinary living, there can be some tolerance of unpunctuality. The
intellectual, who is working on some abstruse problem, has everything
coordinated and organized for the matter in hand. He is therefore forgiven if
late for a dinner party. But people are often reproached for unpunctuality when
their only fault is cutting things fine. It is hard for energetic, quick-minded
people to waste time, so they are often tempted to finish a job before setting
out to keep an appointment. If no accidents occur on the way, like punctured
tires, diversions of traffic, sudden descent of fog, they will be on time. They
are often more industrious, useful citizens than those who are never late. The
over-punctual can be as much a trial to others as the unpunctual. The guest who
arrives half an hour too soon is the greatest nuisance. Some friends of my
family had this irritating habit. The only thing to do was ask them to come
half an hour later than the other guests. Then they arrived just when we wanted
them.
If you
are citing a train, it is always better to be comfortably early than even a
fraction of a minted too late. Although being early may mean wasting a little
time, this will be less than if you miss the train and have to wait an hour or
more for the next one; and you avoid the frustration of arriving at the very
moment when the train is drawing out of the station and being unable to get on
it. An even harder situation is to be on the platform in good time for a train
and still to see it go off without you. Such an experience befell a certain
young girl the first time she was traveling alone.
She
entered the station twenty minutes before the train was due since her parents
had impressed upon her that it would be unforgivable to miss it and cause the
friends with whom she was going to stay to make two journeys to meet her. She
gave her luggage to a porter and showed him her ticket. To her horror, he said
that she was two hours too soon. She felt inhere handbag for the piece of paper
on which her father had written down all the details of the journey and gave it
to the porter. He agreed that a train did come into the station at the time on
the paper and that it did stop, but only to take on mail, not passengers. The
girl asked to see a timetable, feeling sure that her father could not have made
such a mistake. The porter went to fetch one and arrive back with the station
master, who produced it with a flourish and pointed out a microscopic 'o'
beside the time of the arrival of the train at his station; this little 'o'
indicated that the train only stopped for mail. Just at that moment the train
came into the station. The girl, tears streaming down her face, begged to be
allowed to slip into the guard's van. But the station master was adamant: rules
could not be broken and she had to watch that -116- train disappear towards her
destination while she was left behind.
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