The New Zealand Railways Magazine, Volume 6, Issue 7 (February 1, 1932.)
Where There's a Well There's a Way
Where There's a Well There's a Way.
Britain has spent fifty per cent, of her time making mistakes and the other fifty unmaking them. Falling into a well is easier than falling out of it, but provided you can keep your respiratory end above the water line, each bout of well-sinking adds to mental well being, until finally you become so wise that you can get out of wells without falling into them. It is true that “where there's a well there's a way” This kind of dropsicality is productive of tolerance for the lop-sided-ness of others.