Reject Rejection
Illustration
by Editor James S. Hewett

Many of those who have risen from failure to real achievement have rejected the rejection of this world.

In 1902, the poetry editor of The Atlantic Monthly returned a sheaf of poems to a twenty-eight-year-old poet with this cure note: "Our magazine has no room for your vigorous verse." The poet was Robert Frost, who rejected the rejection.

In 1905, the University of Bern turned down a Ph.D. dissertation as being irrelevant and fanciful. The young physics student who wrote the dissertation was Albert Einstein, who rejected the rejection.

In 1894, the rhetoric teacher at Harrow in England wrote on the sixteen-year-old's report card, "a conspicuous lack of success." The sixteen­-year-old was Winston Churchill, who rejected the rejection.

Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc., Illustrations Unlimited, by Editor James S. Hewett