AS FAR AS HARRINGTOlSr 



auxiliary yawl, and there are several smaller 

 motor-boats all doing good and valiant serv- 

 ice. 



Dr. Grenfell's work will go on after he is 

 gone, for he has imbued many workers with 

 his spirit. It is doubtless at times uphill and 

 thankless work, for there are always evil- 

 thinkers and hostile critics of good works. In 

 this age of the mailed fist, when spiritual 

 things seem as naught, the Christlike spirit 

 of the work is refreshing. A poor lad with a 

 diseased hip-bone, who had lain in bed a year, 

 said to Dr. Grenfell, " Doctor, how can I do 

 anything for others?" To which he replied, 

 "Why, look cheerful, and be grateful, and purr 

 when you are pleased. Cheer the doctor and 

 the nurse, and the man in the next bed. That 's 

 what Christ would do. Go and do likewise." 



Our climb to the top of the island was en- 

 livened by the affectionate companionship of 

 four white Eskimo puppies, who, with their 

 dark-haired mother, had greeted us outside 

 the hospital. They were full of spirits and 

 always ready to romp, and when we tired of 

 their play they would gambol over their 

 mother until she sedately and sternly quieted 

 147 



