16 Metaphors for helping

"A second help may be the conversing frequently and freely with those of your own sex who are like minded."John

The divine help is ever nigh; excerpt from a letter dated February 7, 1901 from Mary Baker Eddy to Edward A. Kimball.

"WHEN DISTRESS IS GREATEST, HELP IS NEAREST.

Once in talking about her trips through the jungle Mary said, "My great help and comfort was prayer.

help, sister!' were the words that woke me, and sent me flying with breathless speed to the place whence the call came.

South of the Mason-Dixon Line, self- help is half-scandal.

I know what's to be done, and most help is no help to me.

Because of her nervousness, of her overstrain, she had lost a good deal of her mental poise; and she divined that the only help for that was certainty of Dorn's fate.

Help upon the spot, is the thing you often most want in the country.

"A second help may be, frequent and free converse with others of your own sex who are like minded.

Of course self-help, as a spirit and as a policy, is a virtue, if it does not sacrifice the rights of others.

God's help, it's my friend the marksman!"

If it should be possible for safe shelter to be had for $400, then with the wife's help $700 should be the sum in the "region of choice."

Now, neither Gus nor Liza is able to work, and the only help available for them is the meager State Old Age Assistance.

Their help was our safety; without these soldiers, and the assistance rendered by their chieftains, Delhi could never have been taken; while, on the other hand, had they risen and cast in their lot with the mutinous sepoys, no power on earth could have saved us from total annihilation.

It is the gradual leading-out (e-ducation), unfolding, expanding, of their mental and bodily powers, the helping of them to become, not soldiers, or missionaries of culture, or pioneers of Empire, or even British citizens, but simply human personalities.

16 Metaphors for  helping