Classic Audiobook Collection - He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Swett Marden ~ Full Audiobook [self help]
Episode Date: April 17, 2023He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Swett Marden audiobook. Genre: self help In He Can Who Thinks He Can, motivational pioneer Orison Swett Marden makes a brisk, conviction-filled case that the turnin...g point in any life is often a decision of belief. Drawing on vivid anecdotes, practical observations, and the optimistic spirit of early twentieth-century self-improvement, Marden argues that confidence, clear purpose, and persistent effort are not optional extras but the inner tools that shape opportunity. He explores how fear and self-doubt quietly limit ambition, how enthusiasm and courage can be trained like muscles, and why setbacks become either excuses or stepping-stones depending on the mindset behind them. Chapter by chapter, Marden urges listeners to cultivate disciplined habits, constructive thinking, and a resilient will, while warning against negative influences, aimless drifting, and the habit of expecting failure. More than a pep talk, this short classic offers a framework for strengthening character, setting higher standards, and acting with steady determination when circumstances are uncertain. It is a direct invitation to test the power of self-belief in work, relationships, and personal goals. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:19:50) Chapter 02 (00:30:53) Chapter 03 (00:46:11) Chapter 04 (01:05:04) Chapter 05 (01:26:41) Chapter 06 (01:41:55) Chapter 07 (02:03:07) Chapter 08 (02:18:16) Chapter 09 (02:31:32) Chapter 10 (02:48:31) Chapter 11 (03:10:16) Chapter 12 (03:25:38) Chapter 13 (03:40:16) Chapter 14 (03:55:11) Chapter 15 (04:11:29) Chapter 16 (04:20:45) Chapter 17 (04:34:56) Chapter 18 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin
Chapter 1 He Can Who Thinks He Can
I promised my God I would do it
In September 1862 when Lincoln issued his preliminary
emancipation proclamation the sublimest act of the 19th century
He made this entry in his diary
I promised my God I would do it
Does anyone doubt that such a mighty resolution
added power to this marvelous man,
or that it nerved him to accomplish what he had undertaken.
Neither ridicule nor a caricature,
neither dread of enemies nor desertion of friends
could shake his indomitable faith
in his ability to lead the nation
through the greatest struggle in its history.
Napoleon, Bismarck,
and all other great achievers had colossal faith in themselves.
It doubled, trebled,
even quadripled the ordinary power of these men.
In no other way can we account for the world.
the achievements of Luther, Wesley, or Savonarola.
Without this sublime faith and confidence in her mission,
how could the simple country maiden, Jean de Arc,
have led and controlled the French army?
This divine self-confidence multiplied her power a thousandfold
until even the king obeyed her,
and she led his stalwart troops as if they were children.
After William Pitt was dismissed from office,
he said to the Duke of Devonshire,
I'm sure I can save this country and that nobody else can.
For 11 weeks, says Bancroft, England was without a minister,
at length the king in aristocracy recognized Pitts ascendancy
and yielded to him the reins.
It was his unbounded confidence in his ability
that compelled the recognition and led to the supremacy in England
of Benjamin Israeli, the once despised Jew.
He did not quail or lose heart when the hisses and jairs of the British Parliament
wringing his ears. He sat down amid the jeering members saying,
You will yet hear me. He felt within him the confidence of power that made him
Prime Minister of England and turned sneers and hisses into admiration and applause.
Much of President Roosevelt's success has been due to his colossal self-confidence.
He believes in Roosevelt, as Napoleon believed in Napoleon.
There is nothing timid or half-hearted about our great president.
He goes at everything with gigantic.
assurance with that tremendous confidence which half wins the battle before he
begins it's astonishing how the world makes way for a resolute soul and how
obstacles get out of the path of a determined man who believes in himself
there is no philosophy by which a man can do a thing when he thinks he can't
what can defeat a strong man who believes in himself and cannot be ridiculed
down talk down or written down poverty cannot dishearten him misfortune
deter him or hardship turn him a hair's breath from his course whatever comes he keeps his eye on the
goal and pushes ahead what would you think of a young man ambitious to become a lawyer who should surround
himself with a medical atmosphere and spend his time reading medical books do you think he would
ever become a great lawyer by following such a course no he must put himself in a law atmosphere
go where he can to absorb it and be steeped in it until he is attuned to the law
legal note. He must be so grafted upon the legal tree that he can feel its sap circulating through
him. How long will it take a young man to become successful who puts himself in an atmosphere of
failure and remains in it until he is soaked, saturated with the idea? How long will it take a man
who depreciates himself? Talks failure, thinks failure, walks like a failure and dresses like a failure.
It was always complaining of the insurmountable difficulties in his way and whose every step is on the road to failure.
How long will it take him to arrive at the success goal?
Will anyone believe him or expect him to win?
The majority of failures begin to deteriorate by doubting or depreciating themselves or by losing confidence in their own ability.
The moment you harbor doubt and begin to lose faith in yourself, you capitulate to the enemy.
Every time you acknowledge weakness, inefficiency, or lack of ability, you weaken your self-confidence,
and that is to undermine the very foundation of all achievement.
So long as you carry around a failure atmosphere and radiate doubt and discouragement,
you will be a failure.
Turn about face, cut off all currents of failure thoughts, of discouraged thoughts.
Boldly face your goal with a stout heart and a determined endeavor,
and you will find that things will change for you,
but you must see a new world before you can live in it.
It is to what you see, to what you believe,
to what you struggle incessantly to attain that you will approximate.
Trust thyself, every heart vibrates to that iron string.
I know people who have been hunting for months for a situation
because they go into an office with the confession of weakness in their very manner.
They show their lack of self-confidence.
their prophecy of failure is in their face in their bearing they surrender before the battle begins they are living witnesses against themselves when you ask a man to give you a position and he reads this language in your face and manner
please give me a position do not kick me out fate is against me i am an unlucky dog i am disheartened i have lost confidence in myself he will only have contempt for you he will say to himself that you will say to himself that you
are not a man to start with, and he will get rid of you as soon as he can. If you expect to get a
position, you must go into an office with the air of a conqueror. You must fling out self-confidence
from yourself before you can convince an employer that you are the man he's looking for. You must show
by your very presence that you are a man of force, a man who can do things with vigor, cheerfulness,
and enthusiasm. Self-reliance, which carries great, vigorous, self-faith, has ever been the best
substitute for friends, pedigree, influence, and money.
It is the best capital in the world.
It has mastered more obstacles,
overcome more difficulties,
and carried through more enterprises than any other human quality.
I have interviewed many timid people
as to why they let opportunities pass by them
that were eagerly seized by others with much less ability,
and the answer was invariably a confession like the following.
I have not the courage, said one.
I lack confidence in myself, said another.
I shrink from trying, for fear I shall make a mistake,
and I shall have the mortification of being turned down, said a third.
It would look so cheeky for me to have the nerve to put myself forward, said a fourth.
Oh, I do not think it would be right to seek a place so far above me, said another.
I think I ought to wait until the place seeks me, or I am better prepared.
So they run through the whole gamut of self-distrust.
this shrinking this timidity or self-effacement often proves a worse enemy to success than actual incompetence take the lantern in hand and you will always have light enough for your next step no matter how dark for the light will move along with you do not try to see the long way ahead one step is enough for me a physical trainer in one of our girls colleges says that his first step is to establish the girls in self-confidence to
lead them to think only of the ends to be attained and not of the means.
He shows them that the greater power lies behind the muscles in the mind
and points to the fact so frequently demonstrated that a person in a supreme crisis,
as in a fire or other catastrophe, can exert strength out of all proportion to his muscle.
He thus helps them get rid of fear and timidity, the great handicaps to achievement.
I believe if we had a larger conception of our possibilities,
a larger faith in ourselves,
we could accomplish infinitely more.
And if we only better understood our divinity,
we would have this larger faith.
We are crippled by the old orthodox idea of man's inferiority.
There is no inferiority about the man that God made.
The only inferiority in us is what we put into ourselves.
What God made is perfect.
The trouble is that most of us are but a burlesque of the man
God patterned and intended.
A Harvard graduate, who has been out of college a number of years,
writes that because of his lack of self-confidence,
he has never earned more than $12 a week.
A graduate of Princeton tells us that except for a brief period,
he has never been able to earn more than a dollar a day.
These men do not dare to assume responsibility.
Their timidity and want of faith in themselves destroy their efficiency.
The great trouble with many of us is that we do not believe in a number of people.
in ourselves we do not realize our power man was made to hold up his head and carry himself like a conquer not like a slave as a success not as a failure to assert his god-given birthright self-depreciation is a crime
if you would be superior you must hold the thought of superiority constantly in the mind a singularly modest man of so retiring at his position that at one time he did not show half of his great ability
whose shrinking nature and real talent for self-abasement had actually given him an inferior appearance,
told me one day how he had encountered this tendency toward self-depreciation.
Among other things he said, he had derived a great benefit from the practice he had formed
of going about the streets, especially where he was not known, with an air of great importance,
as though imagining himself the mayor of the city, the governor of the state, or even president of the United
States. By merely looking as though he expected everybody to recognize that he must be a person
of note, he changed not only his appearance, but also his convictions. It raised him immeasurably
in his own estimation. It had a marked effect upon his whole character, where once he walked
through the streets shrinking from the gaze of others and dreading their scrutiny, he now boldly
invites, even demands attention by his evident superiority, for he has the appearance of one whom people
would like to know. In other words, he has caught a glimpse of his divinity. He really feels his superiority
and his self-respecting manner reflects it. Be sure that your success will never rise higher than
your confidence in yourself. The greatest artist in the world could not paint the face of a
Madonna with a model of depravity in his mind. You cannot succeed while doubting yourself or
thinking thoughts of failure. Cling to success thoughts. Fill your mind. Fill your mind.
with cheerful, optimistic pictures, pictures of achievement.
This will scatter the specters of doubt and fear
and send a power through you, which will transform you into an achiever.
No matter how poor or how hemmed in you may be,
stoutly deny the power of adversity or poverty to keep you down.
Constantly assert your superiority to environment.
Believe in yourself.
Feel that you are to dominate your surroundings.
Resolve that you will be the master and not do that.
the slave of circumstances.
This very assertion of superiority,
this assumption of power,
this affirmation of your ability to succeed,
the attitude that claims success
is an inalienable birthright,
will strengthen the whole man
and give great added power
to the combination of faculties
which doubt, fear, and lack of confidence undermine.
Self-confidence marshals all one's faculties
and twist their united strength
into one mighty achievement cable.
It carries conviction.
It makes other people believe in us.
What has not been accomplished
through its miraculous power?
What triumphs in invention,
in art, and in discovery
have been wrought through its magic?
What does not civilization owe
to the invincible self-faith
of its inventors, its discoverers,
its railroad builders,
its mine developers and city builders?
It has won a thousand victory
in science and in war, which were deemed impossible by faint-hearted doubters.
The fact that you believe implicitly that you can do what may seem impossible or very difficult
to others shows that there is something within you that has gotten a glimpse of power
sufficient to do the thing. Many men who have achieved great things cannot account for
their faith. They cannot tell why they had the implicit confidence that they could do what they
undertook. But the result was evidence that something within them had gotten a glimpse of
latent, resourceful, reserve power, and possibilities which would warrant that faith.
And they have gone ahead, often when they could not see a ray of light, with implicit confidence
that they would come out all right, because this faith told them so. It told them so because it had
been in communication with something within them that was divine, that which had passed the bounds of
unlimited and enter the domain of the limitless.
When we begin to exercise the faculties of self-faith, self-confidence, we are stimulating
and increasing the strength of the very faculties which enable us to do the thing we have set
our hearts on. The very exercise of faith helps us to do what we undertake, because our greater
concentration develops that portion of the brain which enables us to accomplish it.
Men who have left their mark on the world have often been employed.
Fliacet followers of their faith when they could see no light and their faith has led them through the wilderness of doubt and hardship into the promised land
Our faith often tells us that we may proceed safely even in the dark when we see no light ahead
Faith is a divine leader which never misdirects us
We must only be sure that it is faith and not merely egotism or selfish desire
Our faith puts us in touch with the infinite opens the way to unbound possibilities and
limitless power. It is the truth of our being. It is the one thing that we can be sure will not
mislead us. An unwavering belief in oneself destroys the greatest enemies of achievement,
fear, doubt, and vacillation. It removes the thousand and one obstacles which impede the
progress of the weak and irresolute. Faith in one's mission, in the conviction that the
creator has given us power to realize our life call, as it is written in our
and stamped on our brain cells is the secret of all power.
Poverty and failure are self-invited.
The disasters people dread often come to them.
Worry and anxiety enfeeble their force of mind
and so blunt their creative and productive faculties
that they are unable to exercise them properly.
Fear of failure or lack of faith in one's ability
is one of the most potent causes of failure.
Many people of splendid powers have a take.
only mediocre success, and some are total failures, because they set bounds to their achievement,
beyond which they did not allow themselves to think that they could pass. They put limitations
to their ability. They cast stumbling blocks in their way by aiming only at mediocrity or predicting
failure for themselves, taking their wares down instead of up, disparaging their business,
and belittling their powers. Thoughts are forces, and the constant affirmation of one's inherent right
in power to succeed will change inhospitable conditions and unkind environments to favorable ones.
If you resolve upon success with energy, you will very soon create a success atmosphere and
things will come your way. You can make yourself a success magnet. If things would only change,
you cry. What is it that changes things? Wishing or hustling, dreaming or working? Can you expect
them to change while you merely sit down and wish them to change? How long would it
take you to build a house sitting on the foundation and wishing that it would go up wishing does not amount to
anything unless it is backed by endeavor determination and grit webster's father was much chagrined
and pained when daniel refused a fifteen hundred dollars clerkship in the court of common pleas in new hampshire
which he had worked hard to secure for him after he left college daniel he said don't you mean to take that office
no indeed father i hope i can do much better than that i mean to use my tongue in the courts not my pen i mean to be an actor not a register of other men's acts
sublime self-faith was characteristic of this giant's career every child should be taught to expect success and to believe that he was born to achieve as the acorn is destined to become an oak
it is cruel for parents and teachers to tell children that they are dull or stupid or that they are not like others of their age they should inspire them instead with hope and confidence and belief in their success birthright
a child should be trained to expect great things and should believe firmly in his god-given power to accomplish something worth while in the world without self-faith and an iron will man is but the plaything of chance a puppet of circumstances
with these he is a king and it is in childhood the seeds must be sown that will make him a conqueror in life if you want to reach nobility you can never do it by holding the thought of inferiority the thought that you are not as good as other people
that you are not as able that you cannot do this that you cannot do that can't philosophy never does anything but tear down it never builds up if you want to amount to anything in the world you must hold up your head
say to yourself continually i am no beggar i am no pauper i'm not a failure i am a prince i am a king success is my birthright and nobody shall deprive me of it a proper self-esteem is not a vulgar
quality it is a very sacred one to esteem oneself justly is to get a glimpse of the
infinites plan in us it is to get the perfect image which the creator had in mind when
he formed us the complete man or woman not the dwarf pinched one with lack of self-esteem
or of self-confidence sees when we get a glimpse of our immortal selves we shall see possibilities
of which we never before dreamed a sense of wholeness of power and self-confidence
will come into our lives which will transform them.
When we rate ourselves properly, we shall be in tune with the infinite.
Our faculties will be connected with an electric wire which carries unlimited power,
and we shall no longer stumble in darkness, doubt, and weakness.
We shall be invincible.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin.
This Librevox recording is in the first.
the public domain.
Getting aroused.
How's the boy getting on, Davis?
asked Farmer John Field as he watched his son, Marshall, waiting upon a customer.
Well, John, you and I are old friends, replied Deacon Davis, as he took an apple from a barrel
and handed it to Marshall's father as a peace offering.
We're old friends, and I don't want to hurt your feelings.
But I'm a blunt man, and they're going to tell you the truth.
Marshall is a good, steady boy, all right.
but he wouldn't make a merchant if he stayed in my store a thousand years he weren't cut out for a merchant
take him back to the farm john and teach him how to milk cows if marshal field had remained as clerk
in deacon davis's store in pittsfield massachusetts where he got his first position he could never
have become one of the world's merchant princes but when he went to chicago and saw the marvelous
examples around him of poor boys who had one success it aroused his ambition and fired him
with the determination to be a great merchant himself if others can do such wonderful things he
asked himself why cannot i of course there was the making of a great merchant in mr field from the
start but circumstances an ambition arousing environment had a great deal to do with stimulating
his latent energy and bringing out his reserve force it is doubtful if he would have climbed
so rapidly in any other place than chicago in 1856 when young
Field went there, this marvelous city was just starting on its unparalleled career.
It had then only about 85,000 inhabitants.
A few years before it had been a mere Indian trading village, but the city grew by leaps and
bounds and always beat the predictions of its most sanguine inhabitants.
Success was in the air.
Everybody felt there were great possibilities there.
Many people seemed to think that ambition is a quality born within us that is not
susceptible to improvement, that it is something thrust upon us which will take care of itself.
But it is a passion that responds very quickly to cultivation and requires constant care and
education, just as the faculty for music or art does, or it will atrophy.
If we do not try to realize our ambition, it will not keep sharp and defined.
Our faculties become dull and soon lose their power if they are not exercised.
How can we expect our ambition to remain fresh and vigorous through years of inactivity, indolence, or indifference?
If we constantly allow opportunities to slip by us without making any attempt to grasp them, our inclination will grow duller and weaker.
What I most need, as Emerson says, is somebody to make me do what I can.
To do what I can, that is my problem.
Not what a Napoleon or Lincoln could do, but what I can do.
it makes all the difference in the world to me whether i bring out the best thing in me or the worst whether i utilize ten fifteen twenty-five or ninety per cent of my ability
everywhere we see people who have reached middle life or later without being aroused they have developed only a small percentage of their success possibilities they are still in a dormant state the best thing in them lies so deep that it has never been awakened
when we meet these people we feel conscious that they have a great deal of latent power that has never been exercised great possibilities of usefulness and of achievement are unconsciously going to waste within them
Some time ago there appeared in the newspapers an account of a girl who had reached the age of 15 years,
and yet had only attained the mental development of a small child.
Only a few things interested her.
She was dreamy, inactive, and indifferent to everything around her most of the time,
until one day, while listening to a hand organ on the street,
she suddenly awakened to full consciousness.
She came to herself.
Her faculties were aroused,
and in a few days she leaped forward years in her development.
Almost in a day she passed from childhood to budding womanhood.
Most of us have an enormous amount of power of latent force
slumbering within us as it slumbered in this girl,
which could do marvels if we would only awaken it.
The judge of the municipal court in a flourishing western city,
one of the most highly esteemed jurists in his state,
was in middle life before his latent power was aroused,
and a literate blacksmith.
He is now 60, the owner of the finest library in his city,
with the reputation of being its best red man
and one whose highest endeavor is to help his fellow man.
What caused the revolution in his life?
The hearing of a single lecture on the value of education.
This was what stirred the slumbering power within him,
awakened his ambition,
and set his feet in the path of self-development.
I've known several men who never realized,
their possibilities until they reached middle life. Then they were suddenly aroused as if from a long
sleep by reading some inspiring, stimulating book, by listening to a sermon or lecture,
or by meeting some friend, someone with high ideals, who understood, believed in, and encouraged
them. It will make all the difference in the world to you whether you are with people who are
watching for ability in you, people who believe in, encourage and praise you, or whether you are with
who are forever breaking your idols, blasting your hopes, and throwing cold water on your aspirations.
The Chief Probation Officer of the Children's Court in New York, in his report for 1905 says,
Removing a boy or girl from improper environment is the first step in his or her reclamation.
The New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children,
after 30 years of investigation of cases involving the social and moral welfare of over half a mid-mid-year-old.
children has also come to the conclusion that environment is stronger than heredity even the strongest of us are not beyond the reach of our environment no matter how independent strong-willed and determined our nature we are constantly being modified by our surroundings
take the best-born child with the greatest inherited advantages and let it be reared by savages and how many of its inherited tendencies will remain if brought up from infancy in a bar
brutal atmosphere it will of course become brutal the story is told of a well-born child who being lost or abandoned as an infant was suckled by a wolf with their own young ones and who actually took on all the characteristics of the wolf walked on all fours howled like a wolf and ate like one it does not take much to determine the lives of most of us we naturally follow the example about us and as a rule we rise or fall according to the strongest current
which we live the poets i am a part of all that i have met is not a mere poetic flight of fancy it's an
absolute truth everything every sermon or lecture or conversation you have heard every person who has
touched your life has left an impress upon your character and you are never quite the same person
after the association or experience you are a little different modified somewhat from what you were before
just as beecher was never the same man after reading ruskin some years ago a party of russian workers were sent to this country by a russian firm of shipbuilders in order they might acquire american methods and catch the american spirit
within six months the russians had become almost the equals of american artisans among whom they worked they had developed ambition individuality personal initiative and a marked degree of excellence in their work
a year after their return to their own country the deadening non-progressive atmosphere about them had done its work the men had lost the desire to improve they were again plotters with no goal beyond the day's work
the ambition aroused by stimulating environment had sunk to sleep again our indian schools sometimes publish side by side photographs of the indian youths as they come from the reservations and as they look when they are graduated well dressed
intelligent, with the fire of ambition in their eyes. We predict great things for them,
but the majority of those who go back to their tribes, after struggling a while to keep up their
new standards, gradually drop back to their old manner of living. There are, of course, many
notable exceptions, but these are strong characters able to resist the downward dragging
tendencies about them. If you interview the great army of failures, you will find that
multitudes have failed because they never got into a stimulating encouraging environment because their
ambition was never aroused or because they were not strong enough to rally under depressing,
discouraging, or vicious surroundings. Most of the people we find in prisons and poorhouses are
pitiable examples of the influence of an environment which appealed to the worst instead of to the
best in them. Whatever you do in life make any sacrifice necessary to keep an ambition aroused
rousing atmosphere, an environment that will stimulate you to self-development.
Keep close to people who understand you, who believe in you, who will help you to discover
yourself and encourage you to make the most of yourself.
This may make all the difference to you between a grand success and a mediocre existence.
Stick to those who are trying to do something and to be somebody in the world.
People of high aims, lofty ambition.
Keep close to those who are dead in earnest.
Ambition is contagious.
You will catch the spirit that dominates your environment.
The success of those about you who are trying to climb upward
will encourage and stimulate you to struggle harder
if you have not done quite so well yourself.
There is a great power in a battery of individuals
who are struggling for the achievement of high aims,
a great magnetic force which will help you to attract the object of your ambition.
It is very stimulating to be with people whose aspirations run parallel with your own.
If you lack energy, if you are naturally lazy, indolent, or inclined to take it easy,
you will be urged forward by the constant prodding of the more ambitious.
End of Chapter 2
Chapter 3 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
education by absorption john wannamaker was once asked to invest in an expedition to recover from the spanish main de blooms which for half a century had lain at the bottom of the sea in sunken frigates young men he replied
i know of a better expedition than this right here near your own feet lie treasures untold you can have them all by faithful study let us not be content to mine the most coal to make the largest locomotives to weave the largest quantities of carpets
but amid the sounds of the pick the blows of the hammer the rattle of the looms and the roar of the machinery take care that the immortal mechanism of god's own hand the mind is still for the hammer the rattle of the looms and the roar of the machinery take care that the immortal mechanism of god's own hand the mind is still for
full trained for the highest and noblest service.
The uneducated man is always placed at a great disadvantage.
No matter how much natural ability one may have, if he's ignorant, he is discounted.
It is not enough to possess ability.
It must be made available by mental discipline.
We ought to be ashamed to remain in ignorance in a land where the blind, the deaf and dumb,
and even cripples and invalids, managed to obtain a good education.
many youths throw away little opportunities for self-culture because they cannot see great ones they let the years slip by without any special effort at self-improvement until they are shocked in middle life or later by waking up to the fact that they are still ignorant of what they ought to know
everywhere we go we see men and women especially from twenty-five to forty years of age who are cramped and seriously handicapped by the lack of early training i often get letters from such people
asking if it's possible for them to educate themselves so late in life. Of course it is.
There are so many good correspondent schools today and institutions like Chateauagua,
so many evening schools, lectures, books, libraries, and periodicals,
that men and women who are determined to improve themselves have abundant opportunities to do so.
While you lament the lack of early education and thing is too late to begin,
you may be sure that there are other young men and women not very far from you who are making great strides in self-improvement,
though they may not have half as good an opportunity for it as you have.
The first thing to do is to make a resolution, strong, vigorous, and determined,
that you are going to be an educated man or woman,
that you are not going to go through life humiliated by ignorance,
that if you have been deprived of early advantages, you're going to make up for their loss.
Resolve that you will no longer be handicapped and placed at a disadvantage for that which you can remedy.
You will find the whole world will change to you when you change your attitude toward it.
You'll be surprised to see how quickly you can very materially improve your mind after you've made a vigorous resolve to do so.
Go about it with the same determination that you would to make money or to learn a trade.
There is a divine hunger in every normal being for self-expansion, a yearning for,
growth or enlargement beware of stifling this craving of nature for self-unfoldment man was made
for growth it is the object the explanation of his being to have an ambition to grow larger and
broader every day to push the horizon of ignorance a little farther away to become a little richer
in knowledge a little wiser and more of a man that is an ambition worthwhile it is not absolutely
necessary that an education should be crowded into a few years of school life the best educated people
are those who are always learning always absorbing knowledge from every possible source and at every
opportunity i know young people who have acquired a better education a finer culture through a habit
of observation or of carrying a book in the pocket to read at odd moments or by taking courses in
correspondence schools than many who have gone through college youths who are quick
to catch at new ideas and who are in frequent contact with superior minds not only often acquire
a personal charm but even to a remarkable degree develop mental power the world is a great university
from the cradle to the grave we are always in god's great kindergarten where everything is trying to
teach us its lesson to give us its great secret some people are always at school always storing up precious
bits of knowledge. Everything has a lesson for them. It all depends upon the eye that can see,
the mind that can appropriate. Very few people ever learn how to use their eyes. They go through
the world with a superficial glance at things. Their eye pictures are so faint and so dim that
details are lost and no strong impression is made on the mind. Yet the eye was intended for a great
educator the brain is a prisoner never getting out to the outside world it depends upon its five or
six servants the senses to bring it material and the larger part of it comes through the eye the man who
has learned the art of seeing things looks with his brain i know a father who is training his
boy to develop his powers of observation he will send him out upon a street with which he is
not familiar for a certain length of time and then question him on his
returned to see how many things he has observed. He sends him to the show windows of great stores,
to museums, and other public places to see how many of the objects he has seen the boy
can recall and describe when he gets home. The father says that this practice develops in the boy
a habit of seeing things instead of merely looking at them. When a new student went to the
great naturalist, Professor Augusti of Harvard, he would give him a fish and tell him to look at it
for half an hour or an hour, and then describe to him what he saw.
After the student thought he had told everything about the fish, the professor would say,
You have not really seen the fish yet.
Look at it a while longer, and then tell me what you see.
He would repeat this several times until the student developed a capacity for observation.
If we go through life like an interrogation point, holding an alert, inquiring mind toward everything,
we can acquire great mental wealth,
wisdom which is beyond all material riches.
Ruskin's mind was enriched by the observation of birds, insects, beasts, trees,
rivers mountains, pictures of sunset and landscape,
and by memories of the song of the lark and of the brook.
His brain held thousands of pictures, of paintings, of architecture, of sculpture,
a material wealth which he reproduced as a joy for all time.
everything gave up its lesson its secret to his inquiring mind the habit of absorbing information of all kinds from others is of untold value a man is weak and ineffective in proportion as he secludes himself from his kind
there is a constant stream of power a current of forces running to and fro between individuals who have come in contact with one another if they have inquiring minds we are all giving and taking perpetually when we associate
together the achiever today must keep in touch with the society around him he must put his
finger on the pulse of the great busy world and feel its throbbing life he must be a part of it
or there will be some lack in his life a single talent which one can use effectively is
worth more than ten talents imprisoned by ignorance education means that knowledge has been
assimilated and become a part of the person it is the ability to express the power
within one, to give out what one knows that measures efficiency and achievement. Pinned up
knowledge is useless. People who feel their lack of education and who can afford the outlay
can make wonderful strides in a year by putting themselves under good tutors, who will direct
their reading and study along different lines. The danger of trying to educate oneself lies in
delusitory, disconnected, aimless studying, which does not give anything like the benefit to be derived
from the pursuit of a definite program for self-improvement.
A person who wishes to educate himself at home
should get some competent, well-trained person
to lay out a plan for him,
which can only be effectively done
when the advisor knows the vocation,
the tastes, and the needs of the would-be student.
Anyone who aspires to an education,
whether in country or city,
can find someone to at least guide his studies.
Some teacher, clergyman, lawyer,
or other educated person in the community to help him.
There is one special advantage in self-education.
You can adapt your studies to your own particular needs
better than you could in school or college.
Everyone who reaches middle life without an education
should first read and study along the line of his own vocation
and then broaden himself as much as possible by reading on other lines.
One can take up alone many studies,
such as history, English literature,
rhetoric drawing mathematics and can also acquire by oneself almost as effectively as with a teacher a reading knowledge of foreign languages
the daily storing up of valuable information for use later in life the reading of books that will inspire and stimulate to greater endeavor the constant effort to try to improve oneself and one's condition in the world are worth far more than a bank account to a youth
how many girls there are in this country who feel crippled by the fact that they have not been able to go to college and yet they have the time and the material close at hand for obtaining a splendid education but they waste their talents and opportunities in frivolous amusements and things which do not count in forceful character building
it is not such a very great undertaking to get all the essentials of a college course at home or at least a fair substitute for it every hour in which one focuses his mind vigorously upon his studies at home may be as beneficial as the same time spent in college
every well-ordered household ought to protect the time of those who desire to study at home at a fixed hour every evening during the long winter there should be by common consent a quiet period for mental
For what is worthwhile in mental discipline, a quiet hour uninterrupted by time thief callers.
In thousands of homes where the members are devoted to each other and should encourage and help each other along,
it is made almost impossible for anyone to take up reading, studying, or any exercise for self-improvement.
Perhaps someone is thoughtless and keeps interrupting the others so that they cannot concentrate their minds.
or those who have nothing in common with your aims or your earnest life,
drop in to spend an evening in idle chatter.
They have no ideals outside of the bread and butter and amusement questions,
and do not realize how they are hindering you.
There is constant temptation to waste one's evenings,
and it takes a stout ambition and a firm resolution to separate oneself
from a jolly, fun-living, and congenial family circle,
or happy-hearted, youthful callers,
in order to try to rise above the common herd of unambitious persons who are content to slide along,
totally ignorant of everything but the requirements of their particular vocations.
A habit of forcing yourself to fix your minds deadfastly and systematically upon certain studies,
even if only for periods of a few minutes at a time, is of itself of the greatest value.
This habit helps one to utilize the odds and ends of time which are unavailable to most people,
because they have never been trained to concentrate the mind at regular intervals.
A good understanding of the possibilities that live in spare moments is a great success asset.
The very reputation of always trying to improve yourself,
of seizing every opportunity to fit yourself for something better,
the reputation of being dead in earnest,
determined to be somebody and to do something in the world,
would be of untold assistance to you.
People like to help those who are trying to help themselves.
They will throw opportunities in their way.
Such a reputation is the best kind of capital to start with.
One trouble with people who are smarting under the consciousness of deficient education
is that they do not realize the immense value of utilizing spare minutes.
Like many boys who will not save their pennies in small change
because they cannot see how a fortune could ever grow by the saving.
They cannot see how a little study here and there each day will ever amount to a good substitute for a college education.
I know a young man who never attended a high school, and yet educated himself so superbly that he has been offered a professorship in a college.
Most of his knowledge was gained during his odds and ends of time while working hard at his vocation.
Spare time meant something to him.
The correspondence schools deserve very great credit for inducing hundreds of thousands of people,
including clerks, mill operatives, and employees of all kinds to take their courses,
and thus safer study the odds and ends of time which otherwise would probably be thrown away.
We have heard of some most remarkable instances of rapid advancement,
which these correspondence school students have made by reason of the improvement in their education.
Many students have reaped a thousand percent on their educational investment.
It has saved them years of drudgery and has shortened wonderfully the road to their goal.
Wisdom will not open her doors to those who are not willing to pay the price and self-sacrifice in hard work.
Her jewels are too precious to scatter before the idol, the ambitionless.
The very resolution to redeem yourself from ignorance at any cost is the first great step toward gaining an education.
Charles Wagner once wrote to an American regarding his little boy,
May he know the price of the hours.
God bless the rising boy who will do his best,
for never losing a bit of the precious and God-given time.
There is untold wealth locked up in the long winter evenings
and odd moments ahead of you.
A great opportunity confront you.
What will you do with it?
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of He Can Who Thinks He Can
by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Freedom at any cost
Were you to decide to risk your reputation,
your material welfare, your whole future,
upon some great physical or mental contest,
which you could extend over a considerable period of time,
you would begin long beforehand
to train or discipline yourself for the decisive conflict.
You would not, if possible to avoid doing so,
go into it handicapped.
Every person who is ambitious
to make his life count,
to do what is worthwhile,
is entering upon just such a contest.
In starting upon a conflict
so grave, so significant,
and which affects the whole future,
the first thing to do is get absolute freedom
from everything which strangles ambition,
discourages effort, and hinders progress.
Freedom from everything which saps vitality,
enslaves the faculties and wastes energy,
to remove every obstruction from the way and leave a clear path to one's goal.
No matter how ambitious a runner may be to win,
if he does not train off his surplus fat,
if he is hampered with extra clothing,
or runs with feet cramped and sore, his race is lost.
The trouble with most of us is that,
wild ambitious to succeed,
we do not put ourselves in a condition to win.
We do not cut the cords which bind us
or try to get rid of the entanglements and obstructions
that hinder us, we trust too much to luck. To eliminate everything that can possibly retard us,
to get into as harmonious an environment as possible, is the first preparation for a successful career.
There are tens of thousands of people who have ability and inclination to rise out of mediocrity
and to do something worthwhile in the world, but who never do so because they cannot break the
change that bind their movements. Most of us are so bound in some part of our nature,
that we cannot get free, cannot gain the liberty to do the larger thing possible to us.
We go through life doing the smaller, the meaner, when the larger, the grander would be possible
could we get rid of the things that handicap us.
Every normal man has a reserve power within him, a mindy coil of force and purpose,
which would enable him to make his life strong and complete, were he free to express the largest
and the best things in him, were he not fettered by some bond, physical, or,
moral you can tie a strong horse with a very small cord and he cannot show his greatest
speed or strength till he is free on every hand we see people with splendid ability
tied down by some apparently insignificant thing which handicaps all their movements
they cannot go ahead until they are free a giant would be a weakling if he were
confined to so small a space that he did not have room to exert himself with freedom
The majority of people live in a cramped and uncongenial environment.
In an atmosphere which dampens enthusiasm, discourages ambition and effort,
scatters energy and wastes time.
They have not the courage or stamina to cut the shackles that bind them,
to throw away all crutches and props,
and to rely on themselves to get into an environment where they can do what they desire.
Their ambition finally dies through discouragement and inaction.
I recall the case of a youth with artistic talent who let precious years go by,
drifting by accident from one vocation to another,
without encouraging this God-given ability or making any great effort to get rid of the little things
which stood in the way of a great career, although he was always haunted by longing for it.
He was conscientious in his everyday work, but his heart was never in it.
His artistic nature yearned for expression, to get away from the work against which every faculty
protested and to go abroad and study. But he was poor, and although his work was drudgery,
and his whole soul loathed it, he was afraid of the hardships and the obstacles he would have
to encounter if he answered the call that ran in his blood. He kept resolving to break away
and to follow the promptings of his ambition, but he also kept waiting and waiting for
a more favorable opportunity, until, after a number of years, he found other things crowding
into his life. His longing for art became fainter and fainter. The call was less and less
imperative. Now he rarely speaks of his early aspirations, for his ambition is practically dead.
Those who know him feel that something grand and sacred has gone out of him, and that
although he has been industrious and honest, he has never expressed the real meaning in his life,
the highest thing in him. I know a woman who in her youth and early womanhood had marked
musical ability. A voice rich, powerful, sympathetic. She had also a beautiful face and a magnetic
personality. Nature had been very generous to her, and she longed to express her remarkable powers,
but she was in a most discouraging environment. Her family did not understand or sympathize with
her ambition, and she finally became accustomed to her shackles and like a prisoner, ceased to
struggle for freedom. A songstress of international,
fame who heard her voice said that she had it in her to make one of the world's greatest singers
But she yielded to the wishes of her parents and the fascinations of society until the ambition gradually died out of her life
She says that the dying of this great passion was indescribably painful
She settled down to the duties of a wife but has never been really happy and has always carried in her face an absent far-away look of disappointment
Her unused talent was a great loss to the world
and a loss indescribable to herself.
She drags out a dissatisfied existence,
always regretting the past
and vainly wishing that instead of letting her ambition die,
she had struggled to realize it.
Timmidity also hinders freedom.
Thousands of able young men and women
in this country are ambitious to make the most of themselves,
but are completely fettered or held back by an abnormal timidity,
a lack of self-faith.
They feel great,
They feel great unused powers within, struggling for expression, but dread that they may fail.
The fear of being thought forward or egotistical seals their lips, palsies their hands,
and drives their ambition back upon itself to die of inaction.
They do not dare to give up a certainty for an uncertainty.
They are afraid to push ahead.
They wait and wait, hoping that some mysterious power may liberate them and give them confidence and hope.
Many people are imprisoned by ignorance.
They never reach the freedom which education gives.
Their mental powers are never unlocked.
They have not the grit to struggle for emancipation,
the stamina to make up for the lack of early training.
They think they are too old to begin.
The price of freedom seems too high to pay at their time of life,
and so they plot upon a low plane
when they could have gained the heights where superiority dwells.
Others are so bound by the world.
fetters of prejudice and superstition that their lives are narrow and mean these are the most
hopeless of all they are so blinded that they do not even know they are not free but they think
other people are in prison if you would attain that largeness of life that fullness of self-expression
which expands all the faculties you must get freedom at any cost nothing will compensate you
for stifling the best thing in you bring it out at any sacrifice it often takes
makes a great deal of friction, of suffering, of struggling with obstacles and misfortunes,
before the true strength of one's character is brought out.
The diamond could never reveal its depths of brilliancy and beauty,
but for the friction of the stone which grinds its facets,
polishes it, and lets in the light which discloses its hidden wealth.
This is the price of its liberation from darkness.
Ask the majority of men and women who have done great things in the world
world, to what they owe their strength, their breadth of mind, and the diversity of experience
which has enriched their lives. They will tell you that these are the fruits of struggle,
that they acquired their finest discipline, their best character drill, in the effort
to escape from uncongenial environment, to break the bonds which enslaved them, to obtain an
education, to get away from poverty, to carry out some cherished plan, to reach their ideal
whatever it was.
The efforts we are obliged to make
to free ourselves from the bonds of poverty
or heredity, of passion or
prejudice, whatever it is
that holds us back from our heart's desire,
call to our aid spiritual
and physical resources which
would have remained forever unused,
perhaps undiscovered, but for
the necessity thrust upon us.
Unsatisfied longings
and stifled ambitions eat away at the
very heart of desire.
They sap strength of character,
destroy hope and blot out ideals.
They play havoc with the lives of men and women.
They make them mere shells, empty promises of what they might have been.
I do not believe that anybody in any circumstances can be happy
until he expresses that which God has made to dominate in his life,
until he has given vent to that grand passion which speaks loudest in his nature,
until he has made the best use of that gift which was intended to take precedence of all his other powers.
no man can live a half-life when he has genuinely learned that it is a half-life said philip brooks after we have gained a glimpse of a life higher and better than we have been living we must either break the bonds that bind us and struggle towards the attainment of that which we see
or development will cease and deterioration set in even the longing to reach an ideal will soon die out if no effort is made to satisfy it no one should follow a vocation except by inevitable compulsion which does not tend to unlock his prison-house and let out the man
no one should voluntarily remain in an environment which prevents his development civilization owes its greatest triumphs to the struggles of men and women to free themselves from the bonds of circumstance
No man can live a full life while he is bound in any part of his nature.
He must have freedom of thought as well as freedom of action to grow to his full height.
There must be no shackles on his conscience, no stifling of his best powers.
Be yourself.
Do not lean or apologize.
Few people belong to themselves.
They are slaves to their creditors or to some entangling alliance.
They do not do what they want to.
They do what they're compelled to do,
giving up their best energy to make a living, so that there is practically nothing left to make a life.
There are plenty of men today working for others who really have more ability than their employers,
but have been so enslaved, so entangled, and faculty-bound by debt or unfortunate alliances,
that they have not been able to get the freedom to express their ability.
Can anything compensate a promising young man for the loss of his freedom of action,
his liberty of speech and conviction?
Can any money pay him for cringing and crawling,
sneaking and apologizing throughout his life,
when it is within his power to hold up his head
and without wincing look at the world squarely in the face?
Never put yourself in a position,
no matter what the inducement,
whether a big salary or other financial reward,
or the promise of position or influence,
where you cannot act the part of a man.
Let no consideration tie your tongue
or purchase your opinion.
Regard your independence as your inalienable right,
with which you will never part for any consideration.
One talent with freedom is infinitely better
than genius tied up and entangled,
so that it must do everything at a disadvantage.
Of what use is a giant intellect
so restrained and hampered
that it can only do a pygmy's work.
To make the most of ourselves,
we must cut off whatever drains vitality,
physical or immoral,
and stop all the waste of life.
We must cut off everything which causes friction,
which tends to weaken effort, lower the ideals,
and drag down the life standards,
everything which tends to kill the ambition
and to make us satisfied with mediocrity.
Multitudes of people enslaved by bad physical habits
are unable to get their best selves into their work.
They are kept back by a leakage of energy and vital force
resulting from bad habits and dissipation.
Some are hindered by peculiarities of disposition, by stubbornness, slovenliness, meanness, revengefulness, jealousy or envy.
These are all handicaps.
Others go through life galled by their chains, but without making any serious continuous effort to emancipate themselves.
Like the elephants or other wild animals changed in the menageries, at first they rebel at their loss of freedom and try hard to break away, but gradually they begin.
become accustomed to slavery and take it for granted that it is a necessary part of their existence
then again there are entanglements which retard the progress and nullify the efforts of many
business men such as debt bad partners or unfortunate social alliances comparatively few men
belong to themselves or are really free they go the way they are pushed they waste a large
part of their energy on that which does not really count in the main issue of
life spend their lives paying for a dead horse clearing up old debts that came from bad
judgment blunders or foolish endorsements instead of putting on speed and gaining on
life's road they are always trying to make up for lost time they are always in the rear
never in the vanguard of their possibilities an ambitious young man anxious to do
what is right and eager to make a place for himself in the world entangles himself
in complications that thwart his life purpose and cripple all his efforts, so that no matter
how hard he struggles, he is never able to get beyond mediocrity. Hopelessly in debt, with a family
to support, he cannot take advantage of the great opportunities about him as he could if he were
free, if he had not risked his little savings and tied up his future earnings for years ahead.
His great ambition only mocks him, for he cannot satisfy it. He is tied,
hand and foot. Like a caged eagle, no matter how high he might soar into the ether,
he must stop when he strikes the bars. The man who trusts everybody is constantly crippling
himself by entangling alliances. He endorses notes, loans money, helps everybody out, and usually
gets left. He ties up his productive ability and hamperes his work by his poor judgment or
lack of business sense. A most estimable man of my acquaintance was ruined.
financially by endorsements and loans, which would have been foolish even for a boy of 15.
For many years, it took every dollar he could spare from the absolute necessities of his
family to pay these obligations. Our judgment was intended to preside over our mental faculties
and to help us discriminate between the wise and the foolish. That man wins who keeps a level
head and uses sound judgment in every transaction. Whatever you do, do not get involved.
make it a life rule to keep yourself clean and clear with everything safeguarded.
Before you go into anything of importance, think it through to the end.
Make reasonably sure that you know where you are coming out.
Do not risk a competence or your home and your little savings
in the hope of getting something for nothing.
Do not be carried away by the reports of those who in some venture
have made a great deal on a little money, where one makes a hundred lose.
There is no greater delusion in the world
than thinking that by putting out a little flyer here and there,
you can make a few hundreds or a few thousands.
If you cannot make money in the vocation which you have chosen for your life work
and in which you have become expert,
if you cannot get rich in the business whose every detail you understand,
how can you expect that somebody else will take your money
and give you a tremendous return for it
when it will not get your personal supervision?
I know a lawyer in New York, now millionaire,
who had worked most of his way through college
and came to the metropolis an utter stranger,
taking a little desk room in a broker's office near Wall Street,
who at the outset made a cast-iron rule
he would always keep himself free from debt and entangling alliances.
By this inflexible rule, it is true,
he often lost opportunities which would have brought him excellent returns,
but he has never tied himself up in any transaction.
the result is that he has not worried himself to death but he has reserved his strength nearly every enterprise he has gone into has been very successful because he has not touched anything unless he could see through to the end and knew how he would come out even taking into consideration possible shrinkage accident and loss
In this way, although he has never made any very brilliant strides or lucky hits,
he has not gone up by leaps and bounds,
he has never had to undo what he has done and has always kept in a secure position.
He has gained the confidence not only of men in his profession,
but also of capitalists and men of wealth,
who have entrusted large sums to him because he has always kept his head level
and himself free from entanglements.
People know that their business and their capital will be safe,
in his hands. Through steady growth and persistent pushing of practical certainties, he has not only
become a millionaire, but a broad, progressive, comprehensive man of affairs. Develop your judgment
early and exercise your caution until it becomes reliable. Your judgment is your best friend.
Your common sense is your great life partner, given you for guidance and to protect your interests.
Depend upon these three great friends. Sound judgment, caution,
and common sense, and you will not be flung about at the mercy of adverse winds.
Chapter 5 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Marden.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
What the world owes to dreamers.
Once when Emerson was in the company of men of affairs
who had been discussing railroad, stocks, and other business matters for some time, he said,
Gentlemen, now let us discuss real things for a while.
Emerson was called the dreamer of dreams because he had the prophetic vision that saw the world to be, the higher civilization to come.
Tens of thousands of men and women stand today where he then stood almost alone.
Edison is a dreamer because he sees people half a century hence using and enjoying inventions, discoveries,
and facilities which make the most advanced utilities of today seem very antiquated.
His mind's eye sees as curiosities in museums, 50 years hence,
those mechanisms and devices which now seem so marvelous to us.
Dreamers in this sense are true prophets.
They see the civilization that will be long before it arrives.
As it was the Dreamers of 49 who built the old San Francisco
and made it the greatest port on the western coast.
So after the recent great earthquake and fire,
when the city lay in ashes and three hundred,
hundred thousand people were homeless, it was the dreamers of today who saw the new city in the
ashes where others saw only desolation, and who, with indomitable grit, the unconquerable
American will that characterized the pioneers of a half century before, begin to plan a restored
city greater and grander than the old. It was in dreams that the projectors of the great
transcontinental railroads first saw teeming cities and vast business enterprises where the more
practical men without imagination saw only the great American desert vast alkali plains sage grass and impassable
mountains the dreams of men like callus p huntington and leon leland strafford bound together the east and the
west with bands of steel made the two oceans neighbors reclaim the desert and built cities where before
only desolation reigned it was the persistency and grit of dreamers that triumphed over the congressman with
imagination who advised importing dromedaries to carry the mails across the great american desert because they said it was ridiculous a foolish waste of money to build a railroad to the pacific ocean as there was nothing there to support a population
it was such dreamers as those who saw the great metropolis of chicago in a straggling indian village who saw omaha kansas city denver salt lake city los angeles and san francisco many years before they arrived that made the
their existence possible it was such dreamers as marshall field joseph leiter and potter palmer who saw in the ashes of the burn chicago a new and glorified city infinitely greater and grander than the old take the dreamers out of the world's history and who would care to read it our dreamers they are the advance guard of humanity the toilers who with bent back and sweating brow cut smooth roads over which man marches forward from generation to generation to generation
Most of the things which make life worth living, which have emancipated man from drudgery and lifted him above commonness and ugliness, the great amenities of life we owe to our dreamers.
The present is but the sum total of the dreams of the ages that have gone before, the dreams of the past made real.
Our great ocean liners, our marvelous tunnels, our magnificent bridges, our schools, our universities, our hospitals, our hospitals, our
libraries, our cosmopolitan cities with their vast facilities, comforts, and treasures of art
are all the result of somebody's dreams. We hear a great deal of talk about the impracticality
of dreamers, of people whose heads are among the stars while their feet are on the earth.
But where would civilization be today but for the dreamers? We should still be riding in the
stagecoach or tramping across continents. We should still cross the ocean and sailing ships
and our letters would be carried across continents by the Pony Express.
It cannot be done, cries the man without imagination.
It can be done, it shall be done, cries the dreamer,
and he persists in his dreams through all sorts of provisions,
even to the point of starvation, if necessary,
until his visions, his inventions, his discoveries,
his ideas for the betterment of the race are made practical realities.
What a picture.
the dreamer Columbus presented as he went about exposed to continual scoffs and indignities,
characterized as an adventurer. The very children taught to regard him as a madman and pointing
to their foreheads as he passed. He dreamed of a world beyond the seas, and in spite of
unspeakable obstacles, his vision became a glorious reality. It was the men who, a quarter of a
century ahead of their contemporaries, saw the marvelous whole press in the hand-presses,
that made modern journalism possible.
Without these dreamers,
our printing would still be done by hand.
It was the men who were denounced as visionaries
who practically annihilated space
and enabled us to converse and transact business
with people thousands of miles away
as though they were in the same building with us.
How many, matter of fact,
unimaginative men who see only through practical eyes,
would it take to replace a civilization,
an Edison, a bell, or a Marconi?
the very practical people tell us that the imagination is all well enough in artists musicians and poets but that it has little place in the great world of realities yet all leaders of men have been dreamers
our great captains of industry our merchant princes have had powerful prophetic imaginations they had faith in the vast commercial possibilities of our people if it had not been for our dreamers the american population would still be hugging the atlantic coasts
The most practical people in the world are those who can look far into the future and see the civilization yet to be.
Who can see the coming man emancipated from the narrowing hampering fetters,
limitations and superstitions of the present day,
who have the ability to foresee things to come with the power to make them realities.
The dreamers have ever been those who have achieved the seemingly impossible.
Our public parks, our art galleries,
Our great institutions are dotted with monuments and statues which the world is built to its dreamers,
those who saw visions of better things, better days for the human race.
What horrible experiences men and women have gone through in prisons and dungeons for their dreams?
Dreams which were destined to lift the world from savagery and emancipate man from drudgery.
The very dreams for which Galileo and other great scientists were imprisoned and persecuted were recognized as,
science only a few generations later. Galileo's dream gave us a new heaven and a new earth.
The dreams of Confucius, of Buddha, of Socrates, have become realities in millions of human
lives. Christ himself was denounced as a dreamer, but his whole life was a prophecy,
a dream of the coming man, the coming civilization. He saw beyond the burlesque of the man
God intended, beyond the deformed, weak, deficient, imperfect man heredity had made, to the
perfect man, the ideal man, the image of divinity. Our visions do not mock us. They are evidences
of what is to be, the foreglimpses of possible realities. The castle in the air always
precedes the castle on the earth. George Stevenson, the poor miner, dreamed of a locomotive
engine that would revolutionize the traffic of the world, while working in the coal pits for sixpence
a day, or patching the clothes and mending the boots of his fellow workmen to earn a little money
to attend night school, and at the same time supporting his blind father, he continued to dream.
People called him crazy.
His roaring engine will set the houses on fire with its sparks, everybody cried.
Smoke will pollute the air.
Carriage makers and coachmen will starve for one of work.
work see this dreamer in the house of commons when members of parliament were cross-questioning him what said one member can be more palpably absurd and ridiculous than the prospect held out of locomotives traveling twice as fast as horses
we should as soon expect people of woolwich to suffer themselves to be fired upon by one of congruves's rockets as to thrust themselves to the mercy of such a machine going at such a rate
we trust that parliament will in all the railways it may grant limit the speed to eight or nine miles an hour which is as great as can be ventured upon but in spite of calmeny ridicule and opposition this crazy visionary toiled on for fifteen years
for the realization of his vision.
On the 4th of August, 1907,
New York celebrated the centennial of the dream of Robert Fulton.
See the crowd of curious scoffers
at the wharves of the Hudson River
at noon on Friday, August 4, 1807,
to witness the results of what they thought
the most ridiculous idea which ever entered a human brain.
To witness what they believed
would be a most humiliating failure
of the dreams of a crank,
who proposed to take a party of people up the river to albany in a steam vessel named clermont did anybody ever hear of such an absurd idea as navigating against the current of the hudson river without sail scornfully said the scoffing wiseacres
many of them thought that the man who had fooled away his time and money on the clermont was little better than an idiot and that he ought to be in an insane asylum but the clermont did sail up the hudson and falter
was held as a benefactor of the human race.
What does the world not owe to Morse, who gave it its first telegraph?
When the inventor asked for an appropriation of a few thousand dollars
for the first experimental line from Washington to Baltimore,
he was sneered at by congressmen.
After discouragements which would have disheartened most men,
this experimental line was completed,
and some congressmen were waiting for the message
which they did not believe would ever come.
when one of them asked the inventor how large a package he expected to be able to send over the wire.
But very quickly the message did come, and derision was changed to praise.
The dream of Cyrus W. Field, which tied two continents together by the ocean cable,
was denounced as worse than folly.
How long would it take to get the world's day-by-day news but for such dreamers as Field?
When William Murdoch, at the close of the 18th century, dreamed with a world's day-by-day news but for such dreamers as field?
lighting london by means of coal gas can fade to buildings and pipes even sir humphrey davy sneeringly asked do you intend taking the dome of st paul's for a gasm-meter sir walter scott too ridiculed the idea of lighting london by smoke but he lived to use this same smoke dream to light his castle at abbotsford
what said the wise scientist a light without a wick impossible how people laughed at the dreamer charles goodeer who struggled with heart
hardships for 11 long years while trying to make India rubber of practical use.
See him in prison for debt still dreaming while pawning his clothes and his wife's jewelry
to get a little money to keep his children from starving.
Note his sublime courage and devotion to his vision, even when without money to bury a dead
child, while his five other children were near starvation, and his neighbors were denouncing
him as insane.
women called Elias Howe a fool and crank and condemned him for neglecting his family to dream of a machine which has proved a blessing to millions of their sex.
The great masters are always idealists, seers of visions.
The sculptor is a dreamer who sees the statue in the rough block before he strikes a blow with his chisel.
The artist sees a vision of the finished painting in all its perfection and beauty of coloring and form before he touches a brush to the,
canvas every palace every beautiful structure is first the dream of the
architect it had no previous existence in reality the building came out of his
ideal before it was made real sir Christopher Rinn saw st. Paul's cathedral in all
its magnificent beauty before the foundations were laid it was his dream which
revolutionized the architecture of London it was the dreaming Baron houseman who
made Paris the most beautiful city in the world.
Think what we owe the beauty dreamers for making our homes and our park so attractive.
Yet there are thousands of practical men in New York today who, if they could have their way,
would cut Central Park up into lots and cover it with business blocks.
The achievements of every successful man are but the realized visions of his youth,
his dreams of bettering his condition, of enlarging his power.
Our homes are the dreams that begin with lovers and their efforts to better their condition.
The dreams of those who once lived in huts and in log cabins.
The modern luxurious railway train is the dream of those who rode in the old stagecoach.
Not more than a dozen years ago, the horseless carriage,
the manufacture of which now promises to make one of the largest businesses in the world,
was considered by most people in the same light as is the airship today.
but there has recently been an exhibition of these dreams in madison square garden new york on a scale so vast in the suggestiveness of its possibilities as to stagger credulity
half a dozen years since this invention was looked upon as a mere toy a fad for a few millionaires twelve years ago there was not a single factory in america making cars for the market fourteen years ago there were only five horseless vehicles in this country
and they had to be imported at extravagant prices.
Today, there are over 100,000 in actual use.
Instead of being a toy for millionaires,
the automobile is now being used in place of horses
by thousands of people with ordinary incomes.
This dream is already helping us to solve the problem of crowded streets.
It is providing a great educator as well as a health giver
by tempting people into the country.
The average man will ultimately, through its full realization,
practically travel in his own private car.
In fact, this dream is becoming one of the greatest joys and blessings
that has ever come to humanity.
It was the wonderful dream in steel of Carnegie, Schwab
and their associates together with that of the elevator creator
that made the modern city with its skyscrapers possible.
What do we not owe to our poet dreamers who, like Shakespeare,
have taught us to see the uncommon in the common,
the extraordinary in the ordinary.
The divinest heritage of man is the capacity to dream.
It matters not how much we have to suffer today
if we believe there is a better tomorrow.
Even stone walls do not a prison make to those who can dream.
Who would rob the poor of this dreaming faculty
that takes the drudgery out of their dry, dreary occupations?
Who would deprive them of the luxuries
which they enjoy in their dreams of a better and brighter future, of a fuller education,
of more comforts for those dear to them.
There is no medicine like hope, no incentive so great and no tonic so powerful as
expectation of something better tomorrow.
Dreaming is especially characteristic of the typical American.
No matter how poor or what his misfortune, he is confident, self-reliant, even defiant at fate,
because he believes better days are coming.
The clerk can live in a store of his own,
which his imagination builds.
The poorest factory girl dreams of a beautiful home of her own,
the humblest dream of power.
The ability to lift oneself instantly out of all perplexities,
trials, troubles, and discordant environment
into an atmosphere of harmony and beauty and truth is beyond price.
How many of us would have hard enough, hope enough,
and courage enough to continue the struggle of life with enthusiasm if our power of dreaming
were taken away from us it is this dreaming this hoping this constant expectancy of better things to
come that keeps our courage lightens our burdens and makes clear the way i know a lady who has
gone through the most trying and heart-rending experiences for many years and yet everybody who
knows her marvels at her sweetness of temper her balance of mind and beauty of care
character she says that she owes everything to her ability to dream that she can at will lift herself out of the most discordant and trying conditions into a calm of absolute harmony and beauty and come back to her work with a freshened mind and invigorated body
the dreaming faculty like every other faculty may be abused a great many people do nothing but dream they spend all their energies in building air castles which they never try to make real
They live in an unnatural, delusive, theoretical atmosphere
until the faculties become paralyzed from inaction.
It is a splendid thing to dream
when you have the grit and tenacity of purpose
and the resolution to match your dreams with realities.
But dreaming without effort,
wishing without putting forth exertion to realize the wish,
undermines the character.
It is only practical dreaming that counts.
Dreaming coupled with hard work and persistent endeavor.
Just in proportion as we make our dreams realities,
shall we become strong and effective?
Dreams that are realized become an inspiration for new endeavor.
It is in the power to make the dream good that we find the hope of this world.
Dreaming and making good, this was what John Harvard did
when with his few hundred dollars he made Harvard College possible.
The founding of Yale College, with a handful of books,
was but a dream made good.
President Roosevelt owes everything to his dream of better conditions for humanity, of higher ideals,
his dream of a larger, finer type of manhood, of better government, of finer citizenship,
of a larger and cleaner manhood and womanhood.
The child lives in dreamland.
It creates a world of its own and plays with the castles it builds.
It traces pictures which are very real to it.
It enjoys that which was never on sea or land, but which has a powerful influence in shaping its future life and character.
Do not stop dreaming.
Encourage your visions and believe in them.
Cherish your dreams and try to make them real.
This thing in us that aspires, that bids us to look up, that beckons us higher, is God-given.
Aspiration is the hand that points us to the road that runs heavenward.
as your vision is, so will your life be.
Your better dream is the prophecy of what your life may be, ought to be.
The great thing is to try to fashion the life after the pattern shown us in the moment of our highest inspiration,
to make our highest moment permanent.
We are all conscious that the best we do is but a sorry apology for what we ought to do, might do.
The average man is but a burlesque of the sublime man God intended him to be.
we certainly were made for something larger grander and more beautiful than we are we have a feeling that what we are is out of keeping with does not fit the larger greater life plan which the creator pattern for us
that it is mean sordid stingy and pinched compared with the pattern of that divine man shown us in the moment of our highest vision it is this creative power of the imagination these dreams of the dreamers make good that will ultimately raise me
man to his highest power that will break down the barriers of caste, race, and creed, and make
real the poet's vision of the Parliament of Man, the Federation of the World.
The Golden Age lies onward, not behind, the pathway through the past has led us up.
The pathway through the future will lead on, and higher.
End of Chapter 5
Chapter 6 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Marden
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The spirit in which you work.
It ought not be necessary to ask a man if he likes his work.
The radiance of his face should tell that.
His very buoyancy and pride in his task,
his spirit of unbounded enthusiasm and zest ought to show it.
He ought to be so in love with his work that he finds his greatest delight in it.
And this inward joy should light up his whole being.
A test of the quality of the individual is the spirit in which he does his work.
If he goes to it grudgingly, like a slave under the lash,
if he feels the drudgery in it, if his enthusiasm and love for it do not lift it out of commonness
and make it a delight instead of a bore, he will never make a very great place for himself
in the world.
The man who feels his life-yoke galling him, who does not understand why the bread-and-butter
question could not have been solved.
by one great creative act instead of every man's being obliged to wrench everything he gets from nature through hard work.
The man who does not see a beneficent design and a superb necessity in the principle that everyone should earn his own living
has gotten a wrong view of life and will never get the splendid results out of his vocation that were intended for him.
Multitudes of people do not half respect their work. They look upon it as a disagreeable necessity
for providing bread and butter, clothing and shelter,
as unavoidable drudgery, instead of as a great man-builder,
a great life university for the development of manhood and womanhood.
They do not see the divinity in the spur of necessity
which compels man to develop the best thing in him,
to unfold his possibilities by his struggle to attain his ambition,
to conquer the enemies of his prosperity and his happiness.
They cannot see the curse in the universe.
unearned dollar which takes the spur out of the motive. Work to them is sheer drudgery, an unmitigated evil.
They cannot understand why the creator did not put bread ready-made on trees. They do not see
the stamina, the grit, the nobility and the manhood in being forced to conquer what they get.
No one can make a real success of his life when he is all the time grumbling or apologizing
for what he is doing. It is a confession of weakness.
what a pitiable sight to see one of god's noblemen made to hold up his head and be a king to be cheerful and happy and to radiate power going about whining and complaining of his work even deploring the fact that he should have to work at all
it is demoralizing to allow yourself to do a thing in a half-hearted grudging manner there is a great adaptive power in human nature the mind is wonderfully adjustive to different conditions but you will not get the best result
until your mind is settled, until you are resolved not only to like your work,
but also to do it in the spirit of a master and not in that of a slave.
Resolve that whatever you do, you will bring the whole man to it,
that you will fling the whole weight of your being into it,
that you will do it in the spirit of a conqueror.
And so get the lesson and power out of it, which come only to the conqueror.
Put the right spirit into your work.
treat your calling as divine, as a call from principle.
If the thing itself be not important, the spirit in which you take hold of it makes all the
difference in the world to you. It can make or mar the man. You cannot afford grumbling
service or botched work in your life's record. You cannot afford to form a habit of half-doing
things or of doing them in the spirit of a drudge, for this will drag its slimy trail
through all your subsequent career,
always humiliating you at the most unexpected times.
Let other people do the poor jobs, the botched work, if they will.
Keep your standards up, your ideals high.
The attitude with which a man approaches his task
has everything to do with the quality and efficiency of his work
and with its influence upon his character.
What a man does is a part of himself.
It is the expression of what he stands for.
Our life work is an outpicturing of our ambition, our ideals, our real selves.
If you see a man's work, you see the man.
No one can respect himself or have that sublime faith in himself,
which is essential to all high achievement,
when he puts mean, half-hearted, slipshod service into what he does.
He cannot get his highest self-approval until he does his level best.
No man can do his best or call out the highest thing in him.
while he regards his occupation as drudgery or a bore.
Under no circumstances allow yourself to do anything as a drudge.
Nothing is more demoralizing.
No matter if circumstances force you to do something which is distasteful,
compel yourself to find something interesting and instructive in it.
Everything that is necessary to be done is full of interest.
It is all a question of the attitude of mind in which we go to our task.
If your occupation is distasteful, every rebellious thought, every feeling of disgust,
only surround you with a failure atmosphere which is sure to attract more failure.
The magnet that brings success and happiness must be charged with a positive, optimistic, enthusiastic force.
The man who has not learned the secret of taking the drudgery out of his task by flinging his whole soul into it
has not learned the first principles of success or happiness.
It is perfectly possible to so exalt the most ordinary business
by bringing to it the spirit of a master as to make of it a dignified vocation.
The trouble with us is that we drop into a humdrum existence
and do our work mechanically with no heart, no vim, and no purpose.
We do not learn the fine heart of living for growth, for mind and soul expansion.
We just exist.
It was not intended that any necessities.
employment should be merely commonplace there is a great deep meaning in it all a glory in it
our possibilities our destiny are in it and the good of the world why is it that most people
think that the glory of life does not belong to the ordinary vocations that this belongs to the
artist to the musician to the writer or to someone of the more gentle and what they call dignified
professions. There is as much dignity and grandeur and glory in agriculture as in statesmanship or
authorship. Some people never see any beauty anywhere. They have no soul for the beautiful.
Others see it everywhere. Farming to one man is a humdrum existence, an unbearable vocation,
a monotonous routine, while another sees the glory and the dignity in it, and takes infinite
pleasure in mixing brains with the soil and in working with the creator to produce grander
results. I knew a cobbler in a little village who took infinitely more pride in his vocation
than did the lawyer, or even the clergyman of that town. I know a farmer who takes more pride in
his crops than any other person in his community takes in his calling. He walks over his
farm as proudly as a monarch might travel through his kingdom. This true master farmer,
will introduce his visitor to his horses and cows and other animals as though they were important personages that is the kind of enthusiasm that takes the drudgery out of the farm and makes a joy out of life which to many is so dull and commonplace
i have known a stenographer on small pay who put a higher quality of effort into her work than the proprietor of the great establishment she worked for and she got more out of life than he did i knew a schoolteacher in a little district
twenty-five miles from a railroad in a schoolhouse right in the forest who took more pride in her work and in the progress of her pupils than some presidents of colleges whom i've known appeared to take in their duties
a girl who declared that she never would do housework that she never would cook no matter what misfortunes might come to her married a man who lost his money and she was forced to part with her servants and to do the cooking herself for the family
she thought she never could do it but she determined to make bread-making an art to elevate cooking and make it a science in her home and she succeeded no matter how humble your work may seem do it in the spirit of an artist of a master
in this way you lift it out of commonness and rob it of what would otherwise be drudgery you will find that learning to thoroughly respect everything you do and not to let it go out of your hands until it has the stamp of your approval upon it as a trademark will have a wonderful effect upon your whole character
the quality of your work will have a great deal to do with the quality of your life if your work quality is down your character will be down your standards down
your ideals down.
The habit of insisting upon the best of which you are capable,
and of always demanding of yourself the highest,
never accepting the lowest,
will make all the difference between mediocrity or failure
and a successful career.
If you bring your work to the spirit of an artist instead of an artisan,
if you bring a burning zeal,
an all-absorbing enthusiasm,
if you determine to put the best there is in everything you do,
no matter what it is,
you will not long be troubled with a sense of drudgery everything depends on the spirit we bring to the task the right spirit makes an artist in the humblest task while the wrong spirit makes an artisan in any calling no matter how high that calling may be
there is a dignity an indescribable quality of superiority in everything we do which we thoroughly and honestly respect there is nothing belittling nor menial which has to be done for the well
of the race. You cannot afford to give the mere dregs, the mere leavings of your energies to your work.
The best in you is none too good for it. It is only when we do our best, when we put joy, energy,
enthusiasm, and zeal into our work that we really grow. And this is the only way we can keep
our highest self-respect. We cannot think much of ourselves when we are not honest in our work,
when we are not doing our level best.
There is nothing which will compensate you
for the loss of faith in yourself,
for the knowledge of your reputation
for doing bungling, dishonest work.
You have something infinitely higher within you
to satisfy than to make a mere living
to get through your day's work as easily as possible.
It is your sense of right,
the demand within you to do your level best,
to develop the highest thing in you,
to do the square thing, to be a man.
This should speak so loudly in you
that the mere bread and butter question,
the money-making question,
should be absolutely insignificant in comparison.
Start out with a tacit understanding with yourself
that you will be a man at all hazards,
that your work shall express the highest and best things in you,
and that you cannot afford to debase or demoralize yourself
by appealing to the lowest, the most despicable,
mean sight of yourself by deteriorating by botching your work how often we see people working
along without purpose half committed to their aim only intending to pursue their vocation
until they strike snags they intend to keep at it as long as it is tolerable or until they
find something they like better this is a cowardly way to face a life work which determines our
destiny a man ought to approach his life task however humble with
the high ideals that characterize a great master as he approaches the canvas upon which
he's going to put his masterpiece, with a resolution to make no false moves that will mar the
model that lives in his ideal. A sacred thing, this approaching the uncut marble of life.
We cannot afford to strike any false blows which might mar the angle that sleeps in the stone.
For the image we produce must represent our life work. Whether it is beautiful or hideous,
divine or brutal, it must stand as an expression of ourselves as representing our ideals.
It always pains me to see a young person approaching his life work with carelessness and indifference,
as though it did not make much difference to him how he did his work if he only got through
with it and got his pay for it. How little the average youth realizes the sacredness, the dignity,
the divinity of his calling. There is a higher meaning, something broader,
deeper and nobler in a vocation than making a living or seeking fame making a life is the best thing in it it should be a man-developer a character-builder and a great life school for broadening deepening and rounding into symmetry harmony and beauty all the god-given faculties within us
the part of our life work which gives us a living which provides the bread and butter and clothes and houses and shelter is merely incidental to the great disciplinary
educative phase of it, the self-unfoldment.
It is a question of how large and how grand a man or woman
you can bring out of your vocation, not how much money there is in it.
Your life work is your statue. You cannot get away from it.
It is beautiful or hideous, lovely or ugly,
inspiring or debasing as you make it. It will elevate or degrade.
You can no more get away from it than you can, of your own volition,
rise from the earth, every errand you do, every letter you write, every piece of merchandise you
sell, every conversation, every thought of yours. Everything you do or think is a blow of the
chisel which mars or beautifies the statue. The attitude of mind with which we perform our life work
colors the whole career and determines the quality of the destiny. It is the lofty ideal
that redeems the life from the curse of commonness and imparts a touch of nobility to every calling.
But a low, sordid aim will take the dignity out of any occupation.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Responsibility develops power.
There is enough latent force in a maximite torrent.
torpedo shell to tear a warship to pieces. But the amount of force or explosive power in one of
these terrific engines of destruction could never be ascertained by any ordinary concussion. Children
could play with it for years, pound it, roll it about, and do all sorts of things with
it. The shell might be shot through the walls of an ordinary building without arousing its
terrible dynamic energy. It must be fired from a cannon with terrific force, through a foot or so
of steel plate armor before it meets with resistance great enough to evoke its mighty explosive power.
Every man is a stranger to his greatest strength, his mightiest power, until the test of a great
responsibility. A critical emergency or a supreme crisis in his life calls it out.
Work on a farm, hauling wood, working in a tannery, storekeeping, West Point, the Mexican War,
doing odd jobs about town. We're not enough to arouse the sleeping.
giant in General Grant. There is no probability that he would ever have been heard of from
outside his own little community, but for the emergency of the Civil War. There was a tremendous
dynamic force in the man, but it required the concussion of the Great Civil War to ignite it.
No ordinary occasion touched his slumbering power. No ordinary experience could ignite the
powder in this giant. Under common circumstances, he would have gone through life a stranger
to his own ability, just as most of the great dynamite shells now in existence will probably
never be exploded because of the lack of a war emergency great enough to explode them.
Farming, wood chopping, rail splitting, surveying, storekeeping, the state legislature,
the practice of law. Not even the United States Congress furnished occasions great enough,
resistance strong enough, to ignite the spark of power, to explode the dynamic force in Abraham
lincoln only the responsibility of a nation in imminent peril furnished sufficient concussion to
ignite the giant powder in perhaps the greatest man that ever trod the american continent there is no
probability that lincoln would have gone down in history as a very great man but for the crisis of the
civil war the nation's peril was the responsibility thrust upon him which brought out the last
ounce of his reserves his latent power of achievement the resources which he never would
would have dreamed he possessed but for this emergency.
Some of the greatest men in history never discovered themselves
until they lost everything but their pluck and grit,
or until some great misfortune overtook them
and they were driven to desperation to invent a way out of their dilemma.
Giants are made in the stern school of necessity.
The strong, vigorous, forceful, stalwart men
who have pushed civilization upward are the products of self-help.
They have not been pushed or boosted,
but they have fought every inch of the way up to their own loaf.
They are giants because they have been great conquerors of difficulties,
supreme masters of difficult situations.
They have acquired the strength of the obstacles which they have overcome.
Many of our giant businessmen never got a glimpse of their real power
until some great panic or misfortune swept their property away
and knocked the crutches out from under them.
Many men and women never discovered their ability
until everything they thought would help them to success
had been taken away from them,
until they had been stripped of everything
that they held dear in life.
Our greatest power, our highest possibility,
lies so deep in our natures
that it often takes a tremendous emergency,
a powerful crisis to call it out.
It is only when we feel that all bridges behind us are burned,
all retreat cut off,
and that we have no outside aid to lean upon,
that we discover our full inherent,
power. As long as we get outside help, we never know our own resources. How many young men and
young women owe their success to some great misfortune, which cut off a competence, death of a
relative, the loss of business or home, or some other great calamity, which threw them on their
own resources and compel them to fight for themselves. Responsibility is a great power developer.
Where there is responsibility, there is growth. People who are never thrust in.
into responsible positions never develop their real strength.
This is one reason why it is so rare to find very strong men and women
among those who have spent their lives in subordinate positions
in the service of others.
They go through life comparative weaklings
because their powers have never been tested or developed
by having great responsibility thrust upon them.
Their thinking has been done for them.
They have simply carried out somebody else's program.
They have never learned to stand.
alone, to think for themselves, to act independently. Because they have never been obliged to plan
for themselves, they have never developed the best things in them. Their power of originality,
inventiveness, initiative, independence, self-reliance, their possible grid and stamina. The power
to create, to make combinations, to meet emergencies, the power which comes from continuous
marshalling of one's forces to meet difficult situations, to adjust, to achieve,
just means to ends that stamina or power which makes one equal to the great crisis in the life of a
nation is only developed by years of practical training under great responsibility there is nothing
more misleading than the philosophy that if there is anything in a youth it will come out it may come
out and it may not it depends largely upon circumstances upon the presence or absence of an
ambition arousing a grid awakening environment
The greatest ability is not always accompanied by the greatest confidence or the greatest ambition.
There is, at this moment, enough power latent in the clerks or ordinary employees in almost any of our business houses
to manage them as well as, or better than they are being managed today,
if the opportunity and necessary emergency to call out this dynamic force should arise.
But how can clerks who remain behind counters, measuring cloth, selling shoes or hosieres,
year in and year out, ever know what latent power for organization, what executive ability
or initiative they possess. It is true that some of the more ambitious and courageous get out
and start for themselves, but it does not follow that they are always abler than those who
remain behind. Sometimes the greatest ability is accompanied by great modesty and even timidity.
Then again, employees conscious of great ability are often deferred from taking the risk of launching
out for themselves because of possible disaster to those depending upon them for daily bread.
But thrust great responsibility upon a man drive him to desperation, and the demand will bring
out what there is in him. It will call out his initiative, his ingenuity, his resourcefulness,
his self-reliance, his power to adjust means to ends. If there are any elements of leadership
in him, responsibility will call them out. It will test his power to, and he will test his power
to do things. I have in mind a young man who developed such amazing ability within six months
from the date of a very important promotion that he surprised everybody who knew him. Even his
best friends did not believe that it was in him. But the great responsibilities, the desperate
situation thrust upon him, brought out his reserve power, and he very quickly showed of what
stuff he was made. This promotion and a little stock in the concern which had been given him
aroused his ambition and called out a mighty power which before he did not dream he possessed.
Tens of thousands of young men and young women today are only waiting for a chance to show themselves,
waiting for an opportunity to try their wings. And when the opportunity, the responsibility comes,
they will be equal to anything that confronts them.
Proprioters of large concerns are often very much exercised by the death of a superintendent or lieutenant
who is managed with exceptional ability.
They are fearful that very disastrous results may follow
and believe it will be almost impossible to fill his place,
but while they are looking around to find a man big enough for the place,
someone, perhaps, who was under the former chief,
attends to his duties temporarily,
and makes even a better manager than his predecessor.
Young men and young women are rising out of the ranks constantly,
everywhere, who fill these positions oftentimes,
much better than those who drop out and whose places it was thought almost impossible to fill.
Do not be afraid to pile responsibility upon your employees. You will be amazed to see how quickly
they will get out from under their load and what unexpected ability they will develop.
Many employers are always looking for people outside of their own establishment to fill important
vacancies, simply because they cannot see or appreciate a man's ability until he has actually
demonstrated it. But how can he demonstrate it until he has the chance? There are probably
today scores of young men in every one of our great business houses who are as capable as the
present heads. There is no position that cannot be filled as well or better than it's being
filled now by someone who is still in the ranks and who has not yet been heard from in any
distinctive way. When some great statesman falls, the people often look about to find that there
is apparently no one to fill his place, but from an unexpected source, perhaps from a little
out-of-the-way town, from the common ranks, there comes a man who is equal to the emergency.
The way to bring out the reserve in a man is to pile responsibility upon him. If there is
anything in him, this will reveal it. Some of us never quite come to ourselves in fullness and power
until driven to desperation. It is when we are shipwrecked, like Robinson Caruso upon an island,
with nothing but our own brain and hands,
nothing but resources locked up deep in ourselves,
that we really come to complete self-discovery.
A captain never knows what is in his men
until they have been tested by a gale at sea which threatened shipwreck.
That there are great potencies and power possibilities within us
which we may never know is proved by the tremendous forces
that are aroused in ordinary people in some great crisis or emergency.
The elevator boy may have never dreamed that there was anything heroic in his nature.
He may never have thought there was a possibility of his rising in the world to the importance of the men whom he lifted to their offices.
But the building takes fire, and this boy, who was seldom noticed by anyone, who did not show any special signs of ability,
in a few minutes develops the most heroic qualities.
He runs his elevator up through the burning floors when choked with smoke.
the hot cable blistering his hands and rescues a hundred people who but for him might have lost their lives a ship is wrecked at sea and a poor immigrant becomes the hero of the hour commanding a lifeboat and giving orders with calmness authority and force when others have lost their heads
a hospital takes fire and the delicate timid girl invalid develops into a heroine almost instantly and does a giant's work in fires and wrecks in great disasters or emergencies of all kinds are enacted deeds of daring and of sublime heroism which before the great test came would have been thought impossible by those who did them
no one ever knows just how much dynamic force there is in him until tested by a great emergency or a supreme crisis
Oftentimes, men reach middle life and even later before they discover themselves.
Until some great emergency loss or sorrow has tested their timber,
they cannot tell how much strain they can stand.
No emergency great enough to call out their latent power ever before confronted them,
and they did not themselves realize what they would be equal to
until the great crisis confronted them.
I've known several instances where daughters reared in luxury
were suddenly thrown upon their own resources by the death of their parents and the loss of their inherited fortunes.
They had not been brought up to work, did not know how to do anything useful, had no trade and no idea how to earn a livelihood,
and yet all at once they developed marvelous ability for doing things.
The power was there, latent, but responsibility had not hitherto been thrust upon them.
Young men suddenly forced into positions of tremendous responsibility by,
accident or death are often not the same men in six months. They have developed strong,
manly qualities which no one ever dreamed they possessed. Responsibility has made men of them,
and it makes women of inexperienced and untried girls who are suddenly thrust into an emergency
where they are obliged to conduct a business or support a family. Many people distrust their
initiative because they have not had an opportunity to exercise it, the monotonous routine of doing the
same work year in and year out does not tend to develop new faculties. All the mental powers must
be exercised, strengthened before we can measure their possibilities. I know young men who believe in
everybody but themselves. They seem to have no doubt about other people accomplishing what they
undertake, but are always shaky about themselves. Oh, do not put me at the head of this or that.
Somebody else can do it better than I. They shrink from responsibility because they lack
self-faith. The only way to develop power is to resolve early in life never to let an opportunity
for doing so go by. Never shrink from anything which will give you more discipline, better training,
and enlarged experience. No matter how distasteful, force yourself into it. There is nothing like
responsibility for developing ability. Never mind if the position is hard, take it and make up
your mind that you were going to fill it better than it was ever before filled. I once heard a man
say he regretted more than anything else in his life that he had indulged his natural inclination
to decline every position of responsibility offered him. He was naturally so shy that any position
which attracted attention or gave him the least publicity was distasteful to him. His magnificent
possibilities remain undeveloped because he has never had that responsibility.
which calls out one's reserves and develops his latent powers many a time he thought he would
change his course and made up his mind never to let another opportunity for self-development go by him
unimproved but the habit of delaying until he should be better prepared got such a hold of him
that he could not change the result is that although he is a man of recognized power with a superb
mind, his life has been an extremely quiet one, very tame and unimportant compared with what it
would have been, at he made it a rule to thrust himself into every position of responsibility,
which would have called out the best in him. Many people never discover themselves or know
their possibilities because they always shrink from responsibility. They lease themselves
to somebody else and die with their greatest possibilities unreleased, undeveloped.
Personally, I believe it is the duty of every young person to have an ambition to be independent,
to be his own master, and to resolve that he will not be at somebody else's call all his life.
Come and go at the sounding of a gong or the touch of a bell,
that he will at least belong to himself, that he will be an entire wheel and not a cog,
that he will be a whole machine, although it may be a small one,
rather than part of someone else's machine.
the very stretching of the mind toward high ideals the looking forward to the time when we shall be our own masters working along the lines of a resolution a fixed irrevocable determination as a strengthening unifying influence upon all the faculties
and you will be a stronger man or woman whatever your future if you keep steadily persistently in your mind your own individual declaration of independence it means freedom it means delivery
from restraint, from a certain feeling of slavery which attaches to every subordinate position.
I do not believe that it is possible for anyone to reach the same magnitude of manhood or womanhood
to grow to the same statute after giving up the struggle for absolute independence
or the hope of going into business or profession or something else all of one's own.
It is true that not every person has the executive ability or strength of mind,
the qualities of leadership, the moral stamina, or the push to conduct a business successfully for himself and stand his ground.
There are also many instances of young men who have others dependent upon them
and who are not in a position to take the risks of going into business for themselves.
A great many, however, work for others merely because they do not dare to take the risk of starting on their own responsibility.
They lack the courage to branch out.
The fear of possible failure deters them.
Moreover, a great many start as boys in certain occupations work up to a fairly good salary,
and though they may be ambitious to be independent, are yet held back by the distrust of their
own powers and the advice of others to, let well enough alone until the habit of doing the
same thing year in and year out becomes so fixed that it is very difficult to wrench themselves
out of their environment.
A great many people prefer a small certainty to a big uncertainty.
There is no disposition to hazard, no desire to take risks in their makeup.
They do not want to assume large responsibilities.
They prefer steady employment and the certainty that every Saturday night they will find fixed sums in their pay envelopes
to the great risks, responsibilities, and uncertainties of a business of their own.
You may not have the ambition, the desire, or the inclination to take responsibility.
You may prefer to have an easier life and to let somebody else worry about the payment of notes and debts, the hard times, the dull seasons, and the panics.
But if you expect to bring out the greatest possibilities in you, if growth, with the largest possible expansion of your powers, is your goal,
you cannot realize your ambition in the fullest and completest sense while merely trying to,
to carry out somebody else's program and letting him furnish the ideas.
There must be a sense of complete independence, not partial but complete,
in order to reach the highest growth.
We do not attain our full stature of manhood or womanhood in captivity or in slavery,
but in freedom, in absolute liberty.
The eagle must be let out of the cage, no matter how large or how comfortable,
before it can exhibit all the powers of an eagle.
It is the locked-up forces within that lie deep in our natures, not those which are on the surface
that test our metal.
It is within everybody's power to call out these hidden forces, to be somebody, and to do something
worthwhile in the world, and the man who does not do it is violating his sacred birthright.
Every man or woman who goes through the world with great continents of undiscovered possibilities
locked up within him commits a sin against himself, and that which born
orders on a crime against civilization.
Don't be afraid to trust yourself.
Have faith in your own ability to think along original lines.
If there is anything in you, self-reliance will bring it out.
Whatever you do, cultivate a spirit of manly independence in doing it.
Let your work express yourself.
Don't be a mere cog in a machine.
Do your own thinking and carry out your own ideas as far as possible, even though working
for another.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
An Overmastering Purpose
Before water generates steam, it must register
22012 degrees of heat.
200 degrees will not do it.
210 will not do it.
The water must boil before it will generate enough steam
to move an engine.
to run a train.
Leukwarm water will not run anything.
A great many people are trying to move their life trains with lukewarm water or water that's
almost boiling, and they are wondering why they are stalled, why they cannot get ahead.
They are trying to run a boiler with 200 or 210 degrees of heat, and they cannot understand
why they do not get anywhere.
Lukewarmness in his work stands in the same relation to a man's achievement as lukewarm water
does to the locomotive boiler. No man can hope to accomplish anything great in this world
until he throws his whole soul, flings the force of his whole life into it. In Philip Brooks's
talks to young people, he used to urge them to be something with all their mind. It is not enough
simply to have a desire to be something. There is but one way to accomplish it, and that is
to strive to be somebody with all the concentrated energy we can muster. Any kind of human being
can wish for a thing, can desire it, but only strong, vigorous minds with great purposes
can do things.
There is an infinite distance between the wishers and the doers.
A mere desire is lukewarm water, which never will take a train to its destination.
The purpose must boil, must be made into life steam to do the work.
Who would ever have heard of Theodore Roosevelt outside his immediate community if he had
only half committed himself to what he had undertaken?
if he had brought only a part of himself to his task the great secret of his career has been that he has flung his whole life not a part of it with all the determination and energy and power he could muster into everything he has undertaken
no dilly-dallying no faint-hearted efforts no lukewarm purpose for him every life of power must have a great master purpose which takes precedence of all other motives a supreme principle which is so commanding
and so imperative in its demands for recognition and exercise that there can be no mistaking its call without this the water of energy will never reach the boiling point the life train will not get anywhere
the man with a vigorous purpose is a positive constructive creative force no one can be resourceful inventive original or creative without powerful concentration and the undivided focusing of the mind is only possible along the line of ambition
the life purpose.
We cannot focus the mind upon a thing we are not interested in and enthusiastic about.
A man ought to look upon his career as a great artist looks upon his masterpiece,
as an outpicturing of his best self, upon which he dwells with infinite pride
and a satisfaction which nothing else can give.
Yet many people are so loosely connected with their vocations that they are easily separated
from it.
I know young men who seem anxious to get on in their careers, but in a single evening they
could be induced to give up their calling for something else.
They are always wondering whether they are in the right place or where their ability
will count most.
They lose heart when they strike obstacles, or they become discouraged when they hear of
someone else who has made a success in some other line, and wonder if they had not better
try something in the same line.
If one is so loosely attached to his occupation that he could be able to be able to be able to
be easily induced to give it up you may be sure that he is not in the right place if nature has
called you to a position if the call runs in your blood it is a part of your life and you cannot get away
from it it is not a separate thing from yourself it exists in every brain cell every nerve cell
every blood corpuscle contain some of it you can no more get away from it than a leopard can
get away from his spots so when a young man asks me if i do not
think he had better make a change i feel very certain that he is not in the place god called him to for
the thing he was made for is as much a part of his real being as his temperament it is nearer to him
than his heartbeat closer than his breath there is a photograph of the thing he was made for
in every cell in his body he cannot get away from it the thing which will make the life distinctive
which will make it a power is the one supreme thing which we
want to do and feel that we must do, and no matter how long we may be delayed from this aim,
or how far we may be swerved aside by mistakes or iron circumstances, we should never give up
hope or a determination to pursue our object. Some people have not the moral courage,
the persistence, the force of character, to get the things out of the way which stand between them
and their ambition. They allow themselves to be pushed this way and that way into things for which
they have no fitness or taste. Their willpower is not strong enough to enable them to fight their
way to their goal. They are pushed aside by the pressure about them and do the things for which they
have little or no liking or adaptation. If there's anything in the world a person should fight for,
it is freedom to pursue his ideal, because in that is his great opportunity for self-expression,
for the unfoldment of the greatest thing possible to him. It is his great chance. It is his great
chance to make his life tell in the largest, completest way, to do the most original,
distinctive thing possible to him. If he does not pursue his ideal, does not carry out his
supreme aim, his life will be more or less a failure, no matter how much he may be actuated
by a sense of duty, or how much he may exert his willpower to overcome his handicap.
There is great power in a resolution that has no reservation in it, a strong,
persistent, tenacious purpose which burns all bridges behind it, clears all obstacles from its
path, and arrives at its goal, no matter how long it may take, no matter what the sacrifice or
the cost. The inspiration of a great, positive aim transforms the life, and revolutionizes
a shiftless, ambitionless, dissipated, good-for-nothing man, as if some divine energy had worked
in him. Even as love sometimes transforms a slovenly
purposeless, coarse man into a clean, methodical, diviner being.
When the awakening power of a new purpose, a resolute aim, is born in a man, he is a new creature.
He sees everything in a new light, the doubts, the fears, the apathy, the vicious temptations
which dogged his steps but yesterday, the stagnation which had blighted his past life,
all vanish as if by magic. They are dispelled by the breath of a new purpose,
Beauty and system take the place of unsightliness and confusion.
Order reigns in the place of anarchy.
All his slumbering faculties awakened to activity.
The effect of this new ambition is like the clarifying change
made by a waterway in a stagnant swampy district.
The water clarifies as soon as it begins to move, to do something.
Flowers spring up in place of poisonous weeds
and vegetation, beauty, birds and song make joyous
the once miasmic atmosphere.
Chemists tell us that when a compound is broken up
and an atom is released from the attraction of other atoms,
it takes on a new energy
and immediately seeks combination with another free atom.
But the longer it remains alone, the weaker it becomes.
It seems to lose much of its vitality
and power of attraction when idle.
When the atom is first freed from the grasp of its fellows,
it is called nascent, newborn.
It is then that it has its maximum of gripping power,
and if it finds a free atom immediately after it is released,
it will unite with it with greater vigor than ever.
The power seems to go out of it if it delays its union with another atom.
Mythology tells us that Minerva, the goddess of wisdom,
sprang complete, full-orbed, full-grown from Jupiter's brain.
Man's highest conception, his most effective thought,
most inventive and resourceful ideas and grandest visions spring full-orbed complete,
with their maximum of power spontaneously from the brain.
Men who postpone their visions, who delay the execution of their ideas,
who bottle up their thoughts to be used at a more convenient time, are always weaklings.
The forceful, vigorous, effective men are those who execute their ideas
while they are full of enthusiasm of inspiration.
Our ideas, our visions, our resolutions come to us fresh every day
because this is the divine program for the day, not for tomorrow.
Another inspiration, new ideas will come tomorrow.
Today, we should carry out the inspiration of the day.
A divine vision flashes across the artist's mind with lightning-like rapidity,
but it is not convenient for him to cease his
brush and fasten the immortal vision before it fades. He keeps turning it over and over in his
mind. It takes possession of his very soul, but is not in his studio, or it is not convenient
to put his divine vision upon canvas, and the picture gradually fades from his mind. A strong, vigorous
conception flashes into the brain of the writer, and he has an almost irresistible impulse to
seize his pen and transfer the beautiful images and the fascinating concept to paper.
But it is not convenient at the moment, and while it seems almost impossible to wait,
he postpones the writing.
The images and the conception keep haunting him, but still he postpones.
Finally the visions grow dimmer and dimmer, and at last fade away and are lost forever.
There is a reason for all this.
Why do we have these strong, vigorous impulses?
These divine visions of splendid possibilities.
Why do they come to us with such rapidity and vigor, such vividness and suddenness?
It is because it is intended that we shall use them while fresh,
execute them while the inclination is hot.
Our ideas, our visions are like manna of the wilderness,
which the Israelites were obliged together fresh every day.
If they undertook to hoard it, it became stale, the nourishment evaporated,
the life went out of it.
They could not use old mana.
There is something about allowing a strong resolution to evaporate without executing it
that has a deteriorating influence upon the character.
It is the execution of a plan that makes stamina.
Almost anybody can resolve to do a great thing.
It is only the strong, determined character that puts the resolve into execution.
If we could only make our highest moments permanent,
what splendid things we should do in life,
and what magnificent beings we should become,
But let our resolutions cool, our visions fade, until it's more convenient to execute them,
and they're gone.
There is no easier way in which one can hypnotize or deceive himself than by thinking that
because he is always making great resolutions, he is doing something worthwhile or carrying
them out.
I know a man who would feel insulted if anyone were too intimate that he had not been a hard
worker and had not accomplished a great deal in life. And yet, although he is an able man,
his whole life has been spent in jumping out of one thing into another so quickly that one
could scarcely see the change. Yet every time you see him he carries his head high. He is as
enthusiastic and optimistic as though his whole life had been one triumphant march. His enthusiasm
is intense, but it fades away just as quickly as it came.
the very fact that he always lives in the clouds is always dreaming of the great things he is going to do seems to convince him that he actually does them but he never stays at one thing long enough to reach effectiveness
his whole life has been spent in starting things brilliantly and enthusiastically few men have ever begun so many things as he or completed so few the putting-off habit will kill the strongest initiative too much caution and lack of
of confidence are fatal enemies of initiative how much easier it is to do a thing when the purpose
impels us when enthusiasm carries us along than when everything drags in the postponement one is drudgery
the other delight hungering and striving after knowledge is what makes a scholar hungering and
striving after virtue is what makes a saint hungering and starving after noble action is what
makes a hero a man the great success
processes we see everywhere are but the realization of an intense longing, a concentrated effort.
Everyone is gravitating toward his aim just in proportion to the power and intensity of his desire
and his struggle to realize it. One merely desires to do this or that, or wishes he could,
or would be glad if he could. Another knows perfectly well that if he lives, he's going to do
the thing he sets his heart on if it is within the limits of human possibility.
We do not hear him whining because nobody will pay his way to college.
He does not say he wishes to go.
He says, I am going to prepare myself for a great life work.
I have faith in my future.
I have made a vow to myself to succeed,
and I am going to do so on a broad-gauge plan.
I am not going to start out half-equipped, half-fitted.
I will have college training.
When you find a boy who resolves within himself that come what will,
he is going to do the thing he sets his heart on,
and that there are no ifs or buts or ands about it.
You may be sure he's made of winning stuff.
He will not postpone and postpone the realization of his vision
until too late, until his glory has vanished.
He will lose no time in putting forth all his energy to make it real,
and if it is a possible thing, he will succeed.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9 of He Can Who Thinks He Can,
by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Has your vocation your unqualified approval?
I quote from the following sentence from a letter just received.
In your February editorial,
the following paragraph has impressed me mindily.
To spend a life in buying and selling lies,
or cheap, shoddy shams,
is demoralizing to every element of nobility,
to excellence in any form.
I happen to be in the sham business and hate it so heartily that I want to get out of it as soon
as I can do so with justice to others' interests.
This young man, who gets more than $10,000 a year in salary, says that he is expected to
trade upon the credulity of the poorer classes who can ill afford to be preyed upon.
And he continues,
While I need the money, I cannot enjoy this kind of work, nor can I write with conviction
or ambition on projects which I naturally know to be fakes.
Besides, I am afraid of the very thing pointed out in your editorial,
namely growing down to the work.
I hate hypocrisy worse than any other thing,
and I cannot do my best work in any business based on such a foundation.
I do not want to remain in an occupation which pays its highest salaries
to the most skillful fakers.
It is pitiable to see a strong, brilliant, promising young man
capable of filling a high position, trying to support himself and his family in an occupation
which has not received his approval, which is lowering his ideals, which dwarfs his nature,
which makes him despise himself, which strangles all that is best and noblest within him,
and which is constantly condemning him and ostracizing him and his family from all that is best
and truest in life. How often we hear young men say,
I do not like the business I am in.
I know it has a bad influence on me.
I do not believe in the methods used or the deceptions practiced.
I am ashamed to have my friends know what I am doing,
and I say as little about it in public as possible.
I know I ought to change,
but it is the only business I understand
in which I can earn as much money as I need to keep up appearances,
for I have been getting a good salary,
and I have contracted expensive habits of living,
and I have not the force of character to risk a change.
Do not deceive yourself with the idea that somebody has got to do this questionable work
and that it might as well be you.
Let other people do it, if they will.
There is something better for you.
The Creator has given you a guarantee, written in your blood and brain cells,
that if you keep yourself clean and do that which he has indicated in your very constitution,
you will be a man.
will succeed and will belong to the order of true nobility.
But if you do not heed that edict, you will fail.
You may get a large salary, but this alone is not success.
If the almighty dollar is dragging its slimy trail all through your career,
if money-making has become your one unwavering claim,
you have failed, no matter how much you have accumulated.
If your money smells of the blood of the innocent,
If there is a dirty dollar in it, if there is a taint of adverse in it,
if envy and greed have helped in its accumulation,
if there is a sacrifice of the rights and comforts of others in it,
if there is a stain of dishonor on your stocks and bonds,
or if a smirched character looms up in your pile,
do not boast of your success, for you have failed.
Making money by dirty work is bad business, gild it how we will.
There are a thousand indications in your,
that the Creator did not fit you for what is wrong, but only for the right.
Do the right, and all nature, all law, and all science will help you, because the attainment
of rectitude is the plan of the universe. It is the very nature of things. Reverse it, and all
these forces are pledged to defeat you. To the young men who have written for advice,
let me say that if you are making money by forcing yourself by sheer willpower to do what you loathe,
what does not engage your whole heart, or that into which you cannot fling your entire being,
because you fear that it is not quite right, you can do a thousand times better in an occupation
which has your unreserved, unqualified consent.
If you refuse to smirk your ability, no matter what the reward, you will thereby increase
your success power a thousandfold.
The very fact that you can come out of a questionable situation boldly and take a stand for the right,
regardless of consequences, will help you immeasurably.
The greater self-respect, increased self-confidence,
and the tonic influence which will come from the sense of victory,
will give you the air of a conqueror instead of that of one conquered.
Nobody ever loses anything by standing for the right with decision, with firmness, and with vigor.
You have a compass within you, the needle of which points more surely to the right
and to the true, then the needle of the mariner points to the pole star.
If you do not follow it, you are in perpetual danger of going to pieces on the rocks.
Your conscious is your compass, giving you when you were launched upon life's high seas.
It is the only guide that is sure to take you safely into the harbor of true success.
What if a mariner should refuse to steer by the pointing of his compass,
declaring it to be all nonsense, that the needle should always point north
and should pull it around so that it would point in some other direction,
fasten it there, and then sail by it.
He would never reach the port in safety.
It takes only a little influence,
just a little force, to pull the needle away from its natural pointing.
Your conscious compass must not be influenced by greed or expediency.
You must not tremble it.
You must leave it free.
The man who tamperes with the needle of his conscience,
who pulls it away from his natural love,
and who tries to convince himself that there are other standards of right,
other stars as reliable as the pole star of his character,
and proposes to follow them in some questionable business,
is a deluded fool who invites disaster.
Every little while I meet young men who dislike to tell me what their vocation is.
They seem ashamed of what they're doing.
One young man I met some time ago very reluctantly told me
that he was a bartender in a large saloon.
I asked him how long he had been there, and he said about six years.
He said he hated the business.
It was degrading.
But that he was making pretty good money,
and just as soon as he could get enough laid up so that he could afford it,
he was going to quit and go into something else.
Now this young man had been deceiving himself for years
by thinking he was doing pretty well,
and that he would soon leave the business.
There is something very demoralizing to the whole nature
in doing that against which
the better self-protests.
An effort to reconcile the ideal
with that which we cannot respect
is fatal to all growth.
This is the reason why men
shrivel and shrink instead of expanding
when they are out of place.
A man does not grow
when a large part of him
is entering its protest against his work.
A volunteer makes a better soldier
than a drafted man.
A great many young men try to justify
themselves and check inward protests
by the perpetual self-suggestion
that it is better to keep on for the present
in questionable occupations
because the great financial reward
will put them in a position to do better later.
This is a sort of sedative to the conscious
to keep it quiet until they can afford to listen to it.
Do not deceive yourself by the expectation
of making clean money in a dirty occupation.
Do not deceive yourself either
by thinking you can elevate a bad business
or make it respectable.
Many a man has thus been dragged down to his ruin.
Some occupations are so demoralizing, brutalizing, and hardening
that even Lincoln could not make them respectable.
If what you are doing is wrong, stop it.
You have nothing to do with it.
If you are in doubt, or if you suspect that you are warping your conscience,
give yourself the benefit of the doubt.
Take no chances with it.
Leave it before it's too late.
long familiarity with a bad business will make it seem right to you.
If it is very profitable, it will at last hush your doubts and blunt your moral faculties.
It will make you feel that there is compensation in pursuing it,
at least until capital is accumulated for something else.
Besides the philosophy of habit that is every repetition of an act
makes it more certain that it will be repeated again and again,
quickly making the doer a slave.
in spite of the protests of your weakened will the trained nerve centers continue to repeat the acts even when you abhor them what you at first choose at last compels you you are as irrevocably chained to your deeds as the atoms are chained by gravitation
so my friends when you are thinking of engaging in an occupation which is a little questionable and which does not get the complete consent of your faculties do not forget this tremendous gripping power of habit
which, when you may wish to change,
will pull like a giant to get you back into the old rut.
You have no right to choose an occupation
which calls into play your inferior qualities,
the lying, cunning, overreaching, scheming,
long-headed, underhand qualities,
those which covet and grasp and snatch,
and never give,
while all that is noblest in you shrivels and dies.
If you have already made a wrong choice,
why should you remain in an occupation which does,
does not have your unqualified approval or in one of which you are ashamed and in which you
have to stretch your conscience every day to make deceitful statements and false representations
to influence purchasers unduly, to induce them by a smooth manner and a lying tongue to do that
which you know is not for their advantage and for which you will reproach yourself afterwards.
Why should you desecrate your manhood and pervert your ability in a contemptible occupation when
there are so many clean, respectable vocations which are searching for your ability and hunting
for your talent. You say that it is hard for you to change. Of course it is hard to jog along
in humdrum toil for the sake of being honest when acquaintances all around are getting rich
by leaps and bounds. Of course it takes courage to refuse to bend the knee to questionable methods,
lies, schemes and fraud when they are so generally used. Of course it takes courage to tell the exact
truth when a little deception or a little departure from the right would bring great temporary gain.
Of course it takes courage to refuse to be bribed when it could be covered up by a little
specious mystification. Of course it takes courage to stand erect when by bowing and scraping
to people with a pole you can get inside information which will make you win what you know others
must lose. Of course it takes courage to determine never to put into your pocket a dirty dollar
a line deceitful dollar, a dollar that drips with human sorrow,
or a dollar that has made some poor, gullible, wretch, poorer,
or has defeated another's cherished plans,
or robbed him of ambition or education.
But this is what character is for,
this is what manhood means,
this is what backbone and stamina were given us for,
to stand for the right and oppose the wrong,
no matter what the results.
Wear threadbare clothes if necessary.
Live on one meal a day in a house with bare floors and bare walls if you must,
but under no circumstances ever consent to prostitute your manhood
or to turn your ability to do an unclean thing.
Dig trenches, carry hod, work as a section hand on a railroad, shovel coal,
anything rather than sacrifice your self-respect,
blunt your sense of right and wrong,
and shut yourself off forever from the true joy of living
and the approbation which comes only from the consciousness
of doing your level best to reach the highest that is possible to you.
Do not choose that occupation which has the most money in it,
the greatest promise of material reward, notoriety or fame even.
But choose that which will call out the man in you
and which will develop your greatest strength and symmetry of manhood,
personal nobility.
Manhood is greater than wealth and grander than fame.
Personal nobility is greater than any calling or any reward that it can bring.
End of Chapter 9.
Chapter 10 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Stand for Something
The greatest thing that can be said of a man, no matter how much he is achieved,
is that he has kept his record clean.
Why is it that in spite of the ravages of time,
the reputation of Lincoln grows larger
and his character means more to the world every year?
It is because he kept his record clean
and never prostituted his ability
nor gambled with his reputation.
Where, in all history,
is there an example of a man who was merely rich,
no matter how great is wealth
who exerted such a power for good,
who was such a living force in civilization, as was this poor backwoods boy.
What a powerful illustration of the fact that character is the greatest force in the world.
A man assumes importance and becomes a power in the world just as soon as it is found that he stands for something,
that he is not for sale, that he will not lease his manhood for any salary, for any amount of money,
or for any influence or position, that he will not lend his name to anything.
which you cannot endorse.
The trouble with so many men today
is that they do not stand for anything
outside their vocation.
They may be well educated,
well up on their specialities,
may have a lot of expert knowledge,
but they cannot be dependent upon.
There is some flaw in them
which takes the edge off their virtue.
They may be fairly honest,
but you cannot bank on them.
It is not difficult to find a lawyer
or a physician who knows a good deal
who is eminent in his profession.
But it is not so easy to find one who is a man before he is a lawyer or a physician,
whose name is a synonym for all that is clean, reliable, solid, substantial.
It is not difficult to find a good preacher,
but it is not so easy to find a real man, sterling manhood, back of the sermon.
It is easy to find successful merchants,
but not so easy to find men who put character above merchandise.
What the world wants is men who have principle underlying their expertness,
principle under their law, their medicine, their business,
men who stand for something outside of their offices and stores,
who stand for something in their community,
whose very presence carries weight.
Everywhere we see smart, clever, long-headed, shrewd men,
but how comparatively rare it is to find one whose record is as clean as a houndstooth,
who will not swerve from the right,
Who would rather fail than be a party to a questionable transaction?
Everywhere we see businessmen putting the stumbling blocks of deception and dishonest methods right across their own pathway,
tripping themselves up while trying to deceive others.
We see men worth millions of dollars filled with terror.
Trembling-lust investigations may uncover things which will damn them in the public estimation.
We see them cowed before the law like whipped spaniels, catching at any straw that will
save them from public disgrace what a terrible thing to live in the limelight of popular favor to be envied
as rich and powerful to be esteemed as honorable and straightforward and yet to be conscious all the time
of not being what the world thinks we are to live in constant terror of discovery in fear that
something may happen to unmask us and show us up in our true light but nothing can happen to injure
seriously the man who lives four-square to the world, who has nothing to cover up, nothing to
hide from his fellows, who lives in a transparent, clean life, with never a fear of disclosures.
If all his material possessions are swept away from him, he knows that he has a moment in the
hearts of his countrymen, in the affection and admiration of the people, and that nothing
can happen to harm his real self because he has kept his record clean. Mr. Roosevelt early
resolved that let what would come whether he succeeded in what he undertook or failed whether he
made friends or enemies he would not take chances with his good name he would part with everything else
first that he would never gamble with his reputation that he would keep his record clean his first
his first ambition was to stand for something to be a man before he was a politician or anything else
the man must come first in his early career he had many opportunities
to make a great deal of money by allying himself with crooked sneaking unscrupulous politicians he had all sorts of opportunities for political graft but crookedness never had any attraction for him he refused to be a party to any political jobbery any underhand business he preferred to lose any position he was seeking to let somebody else have it if he must get smirched in the getting it he would not touch a dollar place or preferment unless
unless it came to him clean, with no trace of jobbery on it.
Politicians who had an axe to grind knew it was no use to try to bribe him
or to influence him with promises of patronage, money, position, or power.
Mr. Roosevelt knew perfectly well that he would make many mistakes and many enemies,
but he resolved to carry himself in such a way that even his enemies
should at least respect him for his honesty of purpose,
and for his straightforward, square-deal methods.
He resolved to keep his record clean, his name white, at all hazards.
Everything else seemed unimportant in comparison.
In times like these, the world especially needs men as Mr. Brozavelt.
Men who hew close to the chalk line of right and hold the line plumb to truth.
Men who do not pander to public favor.
Men who make duty and truth their goal and go straight to their mark,
turning neither to the right nor to the left, though a paradise tempt them.
Who can ever estimate how much his influence is done toward purging politics and elevating the American ideal?
He has changed the viewpoint of many statesmen and politicians.
He has shown them a new and better way.
He has made many of them ashamed of the old methods of grafting and selfish greed.
He has held up a new ideal, shown them that unselfish service to their country is infinitely nobler than an ambition for self-angrandizement.
American patriotism has a higher meaning today because of the example of this great American.
Many young politicians and statesmen have adopted cleaner methods and higher aims because of his influence.
There is no doubt that tens of thousands of young men in this country are cleaner in their lives,
and more honest and ambitious to be good citizens, because here is a man who always stands for the square deal,
for civic righteousness, for American manhood.
Every man ought to feel that there is something in him
that bribery cannot touch, that influence cannot buy,
something that is not for sale,
something he would not sacrifice or tamper with for any price,
something he would give his life for if necessary.
If a man stands for something worthwhile,
compelled recognition for himself alone
on account of his real worth,
He is not dependent upon recommendations, upon fine clothes, a fine house, or a pole.
He is his own best recommendation.
The young man who starts out with the resolution to make his character his capital
and to pledge his whole manhood for every obligation he enters into will not be a failure,
though he wins neither fame nor fortune.
No man ever really does a great thing who loses his character in the process.
No substitute has ever yet been discovered for honesty.
Multitudes of people have gone to the wall trying to find one.
Our prisons are full of people who have attempted to substitute something else for it.
No man can really believe in himself when he is occupying a false position and wearing a mask.
When the little monitor within him is constantly saying,
You know you are a fraud.
You are not the man you pretend to be.
The consciousness is not being generous.
not being what others think him to be robs a man of power honeycombs the character and destroys self-respect and self-confidence when lincoln was asked to take the wrong side of a case he said i could not do it all the time while talking to that jury i should be thinking lincoln you're a liar you're a liar and i believe i should forget myself and say it out loud character as capital is very much underestimated by a great number of
of young men. They seem to put more emphasis upon smartness, shrewdness, long-headedness, cunning,
influence, a poll, than upon downright honesty and integrity of character. Yet why do scores of
concerns pay enormous sums for the use of the name of a man who perhaps has been dead
for half a century or more? It is because there is power in that name, because there is character
in it, because it stands for something, because it represents reliability and square dealing.
Think of what the name of Tiffany, of Park, and Tilford, or any of the great names which stand in the
commercial world as solid and immovable as the Rock of Gibraltar are worth.
Does it not seem strange that young men who know these facts should try to build up a business
on a foundation of cunning, scheming, and trickery, instead of building on the solid rock of
character, reliability and manhood.
Is it not remarkable that so many men should work so hard to establish a business
on an unreliable flimsy foundation instead of building upon the solid masonry of
honest goods, square dealing and reliability?
A name is worth everything until it is questioned, but when suspicion clings to it, it is
worth nothing.
There is nothing in this world that will take the place of character.
There is no policy in the world to say nothing of the right.
or wrong of it that compares with honesty and square dealing in spite of or because of all the crookedness
and dishonesty that is being uncovered of all the scoundrels that are being unmasked integrity is the
biggest word in the business world today there never was a time in all history when it was so big and it is
growing bigger there never was a time when character meant so much in business when it stood for so
much everywhere as it does today. There was a time when the man who was the shrewdest and sharpest
and cunningest in taking advantage of others got the biggest salary, but today the man at the other
end of the bargain is looming up as never before. Nathan Strauss, when asked the secret of the
great success of his firm, said it was their treatment of the man at the other end of the bargain.
He said they could not afford to make enemies, they could not afford to displease or take
advantage of customers or to give them reason to think that they had been unfairly dealt with,
that in the long run the man who gave the squarrest deal to the man at the other end of the bargain
would get ahead fastest. There are merchants who have made great fortunes, but who do not carry
weight among their fellow men because they have dealt all their lives with inferiority.
They have lived with shoddy and chams so long that the suggestion has been held in their
minds until their whole standards of life have been lowered. Their ideals have shrunken. Their characters
have partaken of the quality of their business. Contrast these men with the men who stood for
half a century or more at the head of solid houses, substantial institutions, men who have always
stood for quality in everything, who have surrounded themselves not only with ability but with
men and women of character. We instinctively believe in character. We admire people who stand for
something, who are centered in truth and honesty. It is not necessary that they agree with us.
We admire them for their strength, the honesty of their opinions, the inflexibility of their
principles. The late Carl Schurz was a strong man and agonized many people. He changed his
political views very often, but even his worst enemies.
knew there was one thing he would never go back on,
friends or no friends, party or no party.
And that was his devotion to principle as he saw it.
There was no parlaying with his convictions.
He could stand alone, if necessary, with all the world against him.
His inconsistencies, his many changes in parties and politics,
could not destroy the universal admiration for the man who stood for his convictions.
Although he escaped from a German prison and fled his country
where he had been arrested on account of his revolutionary principles
when but a mere youth,
Emperor William I had such a profound respect for his honesty of purpose
and his strength of character that he invited him to return to Germany and visit him,
gave him a public dinner and paid him great tribute.
Who can estimate the influence of President Elliott
in enriching and uplifting our national ideas and standards
through the thousands of students who go out from Harvard University.
The tremendous force and nobility of character of Phillips Brooks
raised everyone who came within his influence to higher levels.
His great earnestness in trying to lead people up to his lofty ideal swept everything before it.
One could not help feeling while listening to him and watching him
that there was a mighty triumph of character, a grand expression of superb manhood.
Such men as these increase our faith in the race
In the possibilities of the grandeur of the coming man
We are prouder of our country because of such standards
It is the ideal that determines the direction of life
And what a grand sight, what an inspiration
Are those men who sacrifice the dollar to the ideal
The principles by which the problem of success is solved
Are right and justice, honesty and integrity
and just in proportion as a man deviates from these principles,
he falls short of solving his problem.
It is true that he may reach something.
He may get money, but is that success?
The thief gets money, but does he succeed?
Is it any honester to steal by means of a long head
than by means of a long arm?
It is very much more dishonest
because the victim is deceived and then robbed, a double crime.
We often receive letters which read,
like this i am getting a good salary but i do not feel right about it somehow i cannot
still the voice within me that says wrong wrong to do what i am doing leave it leave it we always say
to the writers of these letters do not stay in a questionable occupation no matter what inducement it
offers its false light will land you on the rocks if you follow it it is demoralizing to the mental
faculties, paralyzing to the character to do a thing which one's conscience forbids.
Tell the employer who expects you to do questionable things that you cannot work for him
unless you can put the trademark of your manhood, the stamp of your integrity upon everything
you do. Tell him that if the highest thing in you cannot bring success, surely the lowest
cannot. You cannot afford to sell the best thing in you, your honor, your manhood,
to a dishonest man or a lying institution.
You should regard even the suggestion
that you might sell out for a consideration as an insult.
Resolve that you will not be paid for being something less than a man,
that you will not leash your ability, your education, your inventiveness,
your self-respect for a salary to do a man's lying for him,
either in writing advertisements, selling goods, or in any other capacity.
Resolve that whatever your vocation, you are going to stand for something, that you are not going to be merely a lawyer, a physician, a merchant, a clerk, a farmer, a congressman, or a man who carries a big money bag, but that you are going to be a man first, last, and all the time.
End of Chapter 10
Chapter 11 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin
This Libravox recording is in the public domain
Happy? If not, why not?
We have seen many examples during the past few months
of the failure of wealth to produce happiness.
We have seen that a fortune without a man behind it does not stand for much.
The X-rays of public investigation
have revealed some ghastly spectacles.
Of a number of rich men
who were in positions of great responsibility and trust
at the beginning of the recent financial panic,
some have committed suicide.
Others have died from the effects of the disgrace
which they had brought upon themselves and their families.
And still others have suffered tortures,
not so much because of the wrongdoings
as from the fear of disclosure.
A few months ago,
these men were supposed to possess
the things which made men happy.
They had what all the world is seeking so strenuously, money.
They lived in palatial homes and were surrounded with luxuries,
and yet the moment misfortune came, what they called happiness, fled as though it had
the wings of a bird.
These men felt secure because they had that which most people are struggling so hard to get.
They had supposed themselves so firmly entrenched in the wherewithal of life,
but so buttressed by their solid investments that nothing could.
shake them. But almost in the twinkling of an eye their foundations slipped from under them,
their reputations vanished. And instead of being the big men they thought they were,
they not only found out that they were nobodies, but also that their happiness had flown
with their reputations. Happiness is not such a transit visitor as that. If these men had had
the genuine article, no panic could have shaken it, no fire burned it out, no ocean swallowed it up.
Real happiness is not a fluttering fly-away unreality.
It is not superficial.
It does not live in things.
It does not depend upon money.
It inheres in character, in personality.
It consists in facing life the right way,
and no one who faces it the wrong way,
no matter how much money he may have, can ever be happy.
The trouble with many of the men who went down in the panic
was that they put the emphasis upon the wrong thing.
Man is built upon the plan of honesty, of rectitude, the divine plan.
When he perverts his nature by trying to express dishonesty, chicanery, and cunning,
of course he cannot be happy.
The very essence of happiness is honesty, sincerity, truthfulness.
He who would have real happiness for his companion must be clean, straightforward, and sincere.
The moment he departs from the right, she will take wings and fly away.
What a pitiable thing it is to see the human race chasing the dollar, material things,
trying to extract happiness, to squeeze joy out of money alone.
How little people realize that the very thing they are hunting lives in themselves or nowhere.
That if they do not take happiness with them, they may hunt the earth over without finding it.
Happiness is a condition of mind.
It is a fundamental principle, and he who does not understand the principle cannot possibly be happy.
All the misery and the crime of the world rest upon this failure of human beings to understand the principle
that no man can really be happy until he harmonizes with the best thing in him, with the divine, and not with the brute.
No one can be happy who tries to harmonize his life with his animal instincts.
The God, the good, in him is the only possible thing that can make him happy.
Real happiness cannot be bribed by anything sorted or low.
nothing mean or unworthy appeals to it there is no affinity between them founded upon principle it is as scientific as the laws of mathematics and he who works his problem correctly will get the happiness answer there is only one way to secure the correct answer to a mathematical problem and that is to work in harmony with mathematical laws it would not matter if half the world believed there was some other way to get the answer it would never come until
the law was followed with the utmost exactitude.
It does not matter that the great majority of the human race believe there is some other
way of reaching the happiness goal.
The fact that they are discontented, restless, and unhappy shows that they are not
working their problems scientifically.
We are all conscious that there is another man inside of us, that there accompanies us
through life a divine, silent messenger, that other, higher, better self which speaks from
the depths of our nature and which gives its consent, its amen, to every right action and
condemns every wrong one.
Men and women in all times have tried to bribe this constant monitor, to purchase its approval,
to silent it in nervous excitement, to drown it in vicious pleasure with drink and with drugs,
but all in vain.
Men in every age have disregarded its warning, have tried in every possible way to get away
from its tormenting reproofs when they have done wrong.
But no amount of dissipation or excitement has ever been able to silence its voice.
It always continues to give its unbiased, unbribed approval or disapproval to whatever we do.
There is nothing in which people deceive themselves so much as in the pursuit of happiness.
There is only one way to find it, that is, by obeying the laws upon which we are built.
We are constructed along the lines of truth and justice, and we cannot reach felicity by disobeying these.
laws of our nature. So long as we continue to do evil to get money by unfair means, by robbing others
or taking advantage of them, so long as our ambition is to get rich anyway, we can never attain
true happiness because we are going in the wrong direction. We are introducing discord into
our natures, encouraging the very opposite to what we are seeking. It is just as impossible for
a person to reach the normal state of harmony while he is practicing
selfish, grasping methods, as it is to produce harmony in an orchestra with instruments that
are all jangled and out of tune. To be happy, we must be in tune with the infinite in us,
in harmony with our better selves. There is no way to get around it. The idea that we can
practice wrong in our vocations, in our dealings with men, or in our pleasures, and then
periodically seek forgiveness in our prayers or through our churches, the idea that a man
can do wrong and be forgiven without remedying the wrong or without forsaking the sin has done
more harm than almost any other thing in civilization a clear conscience a clean life the
elimination of selfishness jealousy envy and hatred are necessary to all high enjoyment one trouble
with many of us is that we try to make happiness too complicated an affair but happiness really
flees from complication, ceremony, and pretense. Nature has fixed her everlasting edict against
complicated living. You can never force pleasure. It must be natural. It must come from sane living.
Real happiness is so simple that most people do not recognize it. They think it comes from doing
something on a big scale, from a big fortune, or from some great achievement. When in fact
it is derived from the simplest, the quietest, the most unpretentious things in the work.
Our great problem is to fill each day so full of sunshine of plain living and high thinking that there can be no commonness or unhappiness in our lives.
Little kindnesses, pleasant words, and helps by the way, trifling courtesies and encouragements, duties faithfully done, unselfish service, work that we enjoy, friendships, love and affection.
All these are simple things, yet they are what constitute happiness.
happiness. The great sanitariums, the noted springs of the world, are crowded with rich people,
sent there by their physicians to get rid of the effects of complicated living. They tried to
force their pleasures and came to grief. Not long ago, I dined in the home of a very rich man,
and it took two hours and a half to serve the dinner. There were thirteen courses, made up of
the richest kinds of food, and many of them absolutely incompatible with one another. In addition to this,
there were seven kinds of wine think of anyone being healthy or happy living upon such a diet what are the enjoyments of the average rich is there anything more vapid insipid unsatisfying than the chasing after that infinite mysterious something which they call happiness
that will of the wisp which is always beckoning them on but ever eluding their grasp that rainbow which recedes as they approach they may enjoy the titillation of the nerves
for a moment, the temporary excitement and exhilaration which comes from even vicious pleasures.
But what of it all? It is only animal enjoyment. Nothing but regret, disappointment, and disgust follow.
There is within every normal person a strong desire to do something and to be something in the world,
and every idler knows that he is violating the fundamental demand of his nature, that he is really
cheating himself out of a very sacred prize, the getting of which we are, which we are not going to be able to beckoned
would mean more to him than everything else in the world.
I have talked with idle rich young men
who said they knew that it was all wrong for them
to refuse to do their part of the world's work,
that it was a mistake for them not to enter into the activities of life
and struggle for a prize which the creator had fitted them to take,
but that the paralyzing effect of not being obliged to work
had undermined their inclination.
Recently, a rich young man was asked why he did not work.
I do not have to, he said.
said, do not have to, has ruined more young men than almost anything else.
The fact is, nature never made any provision for the idle man.
Vigorous activity is the law of life. It is the saving grace,
the only thing that can keep a human being from retrograding.
Activity along the line of one's highest ambition is the normal state of man,
and he who tries to evade it pays the penalty in deterioration of faculty,
in paralysis of efficiency.
Do not flatter yourself that you can be really happy unless you are useful.
Happiness and usefulness were born twins.
To separate them is fatal.
It is impossible for a human being to be happy
who is habitually idle as it is for a fine chronometer
to be normal when not running.
The highest happiness is the feeling of well-being
which comes from one who was actively employed
in doing what he was made to do,
carrying out the great life purpose patterned in his individual bent the practical fulfilling of the life purpose is to man what the actual running and keeping of time are to the watch without action both are meaningless there is no tonic like that which comes from doing things worthwhile there is no happiness like that which comes from doing our level best every day everywhere no satisfaction like that which comes from stamping our superiority putting
our royal trademark upon everything which goes through our hands. Man was made to do things.
Nothing else can take the place of achievement in his life. Real happiness without achievement
of some worthy aim is unthinkable. One of the greatest satisfaction in this world is the feeling
of enlargement, of growth, of stretching upward and onward. No pleasure can surpass that which
comes from the consciousness of feeling one's horizons of ignorance being pushed farther and farther
their way, of making headway in the world, of not only getting on, but also of getting up.
Happiness is incompatible with stagnation. A man must feel his expanding power lifting,
tugging away at a lofty purpose, or he will miss the joy of living. The discords,
the bickeringes, and divorces, the breaking up of rich homes and the resorting to all sorts of
silly devices by many rich people in their pursuit of happiness, prove that it does not dwell
within them that happiness does not abide with low ideals, with selfishness, idleness, and discord.
It is a friend of harmony, of truth and beauty, of affection and simplicity.
Multitudes of men have made fortunes, but have murdered their capacity for enjoyment in the
process.
How often we hear the remark, he has the money, but cannot enjoy it.
A man can have no greater delusion than that he can spend the best years of his life
coining all of his energies into dollars, neglecting his home, sacrificing friendships, self-improvement,
and everything else that is really worthwhile for money, and yet find happiness at the end.
If a man coins his ability, his opportunities into dollars, and during all the years he is accumulating
wealth, neglects the cultivation of the only faculties which are capable of appreciating the highest happiness,
He cannot effectively revive his atrified brain cells.
His enjoyment, after he makes his money, must come from the exercise of the same faculties
which he has employed in making it.
He cannot undo the results of a life habit after he retires from business.
If you have not kept alive your ability to appreciate the beautiful, the good, and the true,
you will be as surprised to find that it has left you as Darwin was when in the middle of life
he discovered that all at once
that he had lost his power to appreciate Shakespeare and music.
We ought to be able to get a good living,
even to make fortunes,
and yet have a jolly good time every day of our lives.
This idea of being a slave most of the time
and of only occasionally enjoying a holiday is all wrong.
Every day should be a holiday,
a day of joy and gladness,
a day of supreme happiness,
and it would be if we lived sanely,
if we knew the secret of right thinking and normal living.
Isn't it strange that so few people ever think of making happiness a daily duty,
that they should put this everlasting emphasis upon their vocations, on money-making,
and let the thing for which they really live come incidentally or without planning?
The making of a life should be emphasized infinitely more than the making of a living.
Few people ever learn the art of enjoying the little things of life
as they go along. Yet it is the little everyday enjoyments and satisfactions that count most in a
lifetime. Almost every person I know is living in anticipation, not in reality. He's not actually
living the life he has always looked forward to or expected to attain, but is just getting ready
to live, just getting ready to enjoy it. When he gets a little more money, a little better house,
a little more of the comforts of life, a little more leisure, a little more freedom from
responsibility, he will then be ready to enjoy life. It is a rare thing to find a person who can
truthfully say, I'm really living. This is the life I've been striving for, the life that I have
looked forward to as being as near my ideal as I'm likely to find in this world. It is a great
thing so to cultivate the art of happiness that we can get pleasure out of the common experiences
of every day. The happiness habit is just as necessary to our best welfare as the work habit, or
the honesty or square dealing habit. No one can do his best, his highest work, who is not perfectly
normal, and happiness is a fundamental necessity of our being. It is an indication of health,
of sanity, of harmony. The opposite is a symptom of disease, of abnormality. There are plenty of
evidences in the human economy that were intended for happiness, that it is our normal condition
that suffering, unhappiness, discontent are absolutely foreign and abnormal to our natures.
There is no doubt that our life was intended to be one grand sweet song.
We are billed upon the plan of harmony and every form of discord is abnormal.
There is something wrong when any human being in this world,
tuned to infinite harmonies and beauties that are unspeakable, is unhappy and discontented.
One of the most inexplicable mysteries that has ever puzzled the selfishnesses
selfish rich is their failure to find happiness where they had expected to find it the
bitterest disappointment that comes to people who have made fortunes is that the wealth did not
bring the happiness which it promised or anything like it they find that the
affections do not feed on material things that the heart would starve in the
midst of the greatest luxuries alone they find that while money can do many
things it has little power to satisfy the heart yearnings the heart hunger how
many women are there in palatial homes in this country who are starving for happiness and who would
gladly exchange all their luxuries for the love of a good man even if he had not a dollar in the
world no selfish life can ever be happy i am acquainted with a self-made man who has made a fortune
who tells me that the greatest enigma and disappointment of his life lie in the fact that although he
has made millions he is not happy he says that somehow he has never been able to make many
friends, that people avoid him, that he has never been able to get the confidence of others to any
very great extent, and that he is not popular even among his own neighbors. He cannot understand
why he is not happy, for he tells me he has tried very hard to find happiness. The trouble with
him is that he has always done everything with reference to himself. He did not mean to be
selfish, but the whole passion of his life has been to make money because he thought it would
bring everything else that is desirable. He has chosen his friends for their ability to advance his
interests and has considered every step in life with reference to the effect it would have upon him.
What is there in it for me? Seems to have been the interrogation point in his life.
Now happiness is a reflection, an echo, a part of what we do and think. It does not depend
upon our material possessions. The Rose Cabin at Walden Pond cost only 31.
and yet Thoreau was rich and happy because he had a rich mind.
It is impossible for the selfish, greedy, grasping thought.
The thought always centered upon one's own interest,
to produce a happy state of mind as it is for thistle seeds to produce wheat.
But if we sow helpfulness, kindness, unselfishness,
we shall reap a harvest of satisfaction, harmony, and happiness.
Selfishness and real happiness never go together.
They are fatally antagonistic.
An inordinate ambition, a desire to get ahead of others,
a mania to keep up appearances at all hazards,
whether we can afford it or not,
all these things feed selfishness,
that corrosive acid which eats away our possible enjoyment
and destroys the very sources of happiness.
The devouring ambition to get ahead of others in money-making,
to outshine others socially,
develops a sordid grasping disposition,
which is the bane of happiness.
No man with greed develop big within him can be happy.
Neither contentment, satisfaction,
serenity, affection,
nor any other member of the happiness family
can exist in the presence of greed.
It is as impossible for a man who has been dishonest,
who has gotten his wealth by crushing others,
and by taking advantage of them,
to be happy as it is for a person really to enjoy himself
while walking with pebbles in his shoes,
or while constantly being nettled with pinpricks.
No man can be happy who is conscious of being a drone,
of shirking his share in the great world's work,
who knows that he is taking all the good things he can get a hold of in life's great granary,
put thereby the toilers, and is putting nothing back.
A debauched mind that has departed from the principles of right thinking and right living
has incapacitated itself for real enjoyment.
The only way to get the happiness that is worthwhile is to,
live a straight, clean, pure, honest, useful life. There is no power in the universe that can make
a human being happy along any other lines. Straightforward, honest work, a determined endeavor
to do one's best, an earnest desire to scatter flowers instead of thorns, to make other people
a little better off, a little happier because of our existence. These are the only recipes
for real happiness. No man can be happy when he despises his own acts.
when he has any consciousness of wrong, whether of motive or act.
No man can be happy when he harbors thoughts of revenge, jealousy, envy, or hatred.
He must have a clean heart and a clean conscience,
or no amount of money or excitement can make him happy.
End of Chapter 11.
Chapter 12 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Originality
No human being
ever yet made a success trying to be somebody else
even if that person was a success.
Success cannot be copied,
cannot be successfully imitated.
It is an original force, an individual creation.
Every man will be a failure just in proportion
as he gets away from himself
and tries to be somebody else
and to express somebody else instead of himself.
Power comes from within or from nowhere.
Be yourself.
Listen to the voice within.
There is room for improvement in every profession, in every trade, and in every business.
The world wants men who can do things in new and better ways.
Don't think because your plan or idea has no precedent
or because you are young and inexperienced that you will not get a hearing.
The man who has anything new and valuable to give to the world will be listened to and will be followed.
the man of strong individuality who dares to think his own thought and originate his own method who is not afraid to be himself and is not a copy of someone else quickly gets recognition
nothing else will attract the attention of an employer or the rest of the world so quickly as originality and unique ways of doing things especially if they are effective blaze your own way make your own path or you will never make any impression on the world it is striking originality
that attracts attention.
The world admires the man
who has the courage to lift his head above the crowd,
who dares to step to the front and declare himself.
Never before was originality so much at a premium.
The world makes way for the man with an idea.
It is the thinker, the man with original ideas
and the new up-to-date methods,
who is the real productive force in a community.
He is wanted everywhere,
but there is very little demand for human machines.
The world is full of followers, learners, and taggers, who are willing to walk in old trails,
and to have their thinking done for them.
But it is seeking the man with original force who leaves the unbeaten track and pushes into new fields,
the physician who departs from the precedent of those who have gone before him,
the lawyer who conducts his case in an original way,
the teacher who brings new ideas and methods into the schoolroom,
and the clergyman who has the courage to proclaim the message which God has given.
given to him, not that given to some other man who has put it into a book. The world wants
preachers who get their sermons out of life, not out of a library. There are a thousand people
who will do faithfully what they are told, to one who can lay out a program or execute it.
A thousand who can only follow, to one who can lead. It is a rare thing to find a young man
who has the power of initiative and the ability to put a thing through with the force of
originality. Whatever your work in life, do not follow others. Do not imitate. Do not do things
just as everybody else has done them before, but in new, ingenious ways. Show the people in your
specialty that precedents do not cut much of a figure with you, and that you will make your own
program. Resolve that, whether you accomplish much or little in the world, it shall be original,
your own. Do not be afraid to assert yourself in a bold,
individual way originality is power life imitation is death do not be afraid to
let yourself out you grow by being original never by copying by leading never by
following resolve that you will be a man of ideas always on the lookout for
improvement think to some purpose there is always a place for an original man
there is nothing else which will kill the creative faculty and paralyzed
growth more quickly than following precedents in everything and doing everything in the same old
way. I have known progressive young men to stop growing, become hopelessly rutty, and lose all their
progressiveness by going into their father's stores, factories, or places of business, where everything
was done in the same old-fashioned way, and the precedents were followed in everything. They lost
all expansiveness. There was no motive for reaching out for the new and the original, because their
fathers would not change. I have seen splendid fellows who might have become great and grand
men shrivel to pygamy's in their father's ruts. How many of our business houses are weighted down
with machinery, old and equated methods, ponderous bookkeeping, and out-of-date appliances.
When new devices or new methods with shortcut ways of doing things would enable them to
economize greatly, on room, and to get along with much less help. But they cling to the old
with a fatal tenacity.
This is why so many old concerns, which have been strong and powerful for generations,
gradually shrink, shrivel, get into ruts and fail.
While their newer competitors, the bright young men who have gone out from these houses,
do things in a new way, adopt up-to-date methods, keep up with the times, and go on to
greater success.
There is a great advertising quality in originality or uniqueness.
The man who does business like the great majority of men, although he may have superior ability,
does not attract much attention.
But if he makes his own path, adopts original and progressive methods,
puts his specialty in a class by itself, and attracts attention.
Everybody who patronizes him is a traveling advertisement for him.
There is a specialty store in Boston whose progressive proprietors make a study of original ways of doing everything.
For example, all change is given in brand new money, direct from the United States Treasury or Mint.
This does not cost much and causes but little trouble, yet it is a very shrewd advertisement.
It is especially attractive to women and children and has brought a great deal of trade.
Aside from the danger of handling old-soiled money, which has been no one knows where,
it gives a sense of pleasure to handle new, crisp bills and brand-new bright coins.
This is only one of the many unique methods this concern adopts.
People flock to the most up-to-date establishments,
for they know that the newest styles,
the latest and freshest goods,
the greatest variety, the best display of taste,
and the most appropriate things are to be found there.
It is well known that those up-to-date houses
pay the largest salaries and have the best buyers.
There is a hotel in New York which needs no advertising.
It is one of the institutions which people visit
it out of interest, and they are always talking about it. Other things being equal, they will patronize
it. If they cannot afford to have rooms there, they will go there to dine to see the fashions and
prominent people. The amount of free advertising which this hotel has had, in addition to what
perhaps other first-class hotels get, would probably have cost, if paid for, half as much as the
hotel is worth. The same is true in every line of endeavor. It is the newest and the newest, and
and the most up-to-date concern that has the latest devices and the freshest and most original
ideas that draws the people. Do not, however, make the mistake of thinking that if you simply
do things in new ways, you will necessarily be successful. It is effective originality
that counts. There are thousands of men who are always chasing new ideas, new ways of doing
things, who never accomplish anything of note, because they're not effective, not practical.
I know a man who adopts every new device that comes along
and has thus practically run through a largest state left him
because he did not have the judgment or the sagacity
to select really effective devices or methods in the management of his affairs.
The shrewdest thing a young man can do
to say nothing of the influence upon his character
is to put the greatest possible originality
and the highest possible excellence into everything he does,
to make a resolution at the very first time.
outset of his career to stamp his individuality upon everything that goes out of his hands and to
determine that everything he does shall have the imprint of his character upon it as a trademark of the
highest and best that is in him if he does this he will not require a large amount of capital to
start a business and to advertise it his greatest resources will be in himself
originality is the best substitute for advertising as well as the best thing to advertise
if quality goes with it.
Some men are absolutely afraid to do things in a new way.
They must follow somebody else.
What was good enough for my father and grandfather is good enough for me,
seems to be their motto.
They cannot see any reason for changing.
They must have a precedent for everything or they reject it.
They cannot appreciate a new idea or a new way of doing things.
They think there must be something the matter with it if it has not been used before.
They have a peculiar love for the old.
The antique appeals to them.
They think the value of things lies in their age.
These people with hidebound intellect stand in the way of progress.
Every town has these precedent men in the same old-sized stores
with the same old out-of-date shop windows,
the same methods of displaying goods,
the same old cumbersome systems in the counting room.
They are progress-proof.
New ideas frighten them.
The precedent man is always nonplussed, embarrassed by anything new, or when confronted with a condition which requires something original.
He must get hold of something which has been used before, or he is powerless.
Many people think it is unfortunate to be unlike others in their personalities.
They are always afraid of being thought peculiar or eccentric.
Yet the Creator never made two things alike, nor any two people alike.
Nature breaks her mold at every new birth.
Great characters always have strong individuality and originality,
characteristics which mark them from the crowd.
To be eccentric is not to be weak,
but more often it is a sign of strength.
Lincoln had eccentricities, but they were inseparable from his great character.
Accentricities do not make a person disagreeable or repulsive
are often advantages rather than disadvantages.
What is more monotonous than a dead-level insipid character
that has no strongly marked features which individualize it?
We all love a great nature,
a strong, vigorous, rugged personality,
which impresses us with power,
something colossal which looms above us
and inspires us with awe and admiration,
such as we feel when standing under some mighty mountain cliff
towering above us into the clouds?
We do not wish the rugged crags smoothed off.
they add to the peak sublimity they suggest majesty and power why should we want to plane off the eccentricities of a great character or the individuality which characterizes him and distinguishes him from all others
we believe in the original man or woman who does not remind us of others who makes a new strong vigorous and lasting impression upon us who does not imitate or follow who makes his own program who acts upon his own judgment
who leans upon nobody and who does not ask advice but acts fearlessly boldly independently we know
there is force there that can do things that can achieve a reserve power that makes its possessor a master
fearlessness is a quality absolutely necessary to great achievement courage always accompanies force
it is a marked quality of the original man imitators are timid weak do not be afraid of being
original, be an independent, self-reliant, new man, not just one more individual in the world.
Do not try to be a copy of your grandfather, your father, or your neighbor.
That is as foolish as for a violet to try to be like a rose or for a daisy to ape a sunflower.
Nature has given each a peculiar equipment for its purpose.
Every man is born to do a certain work in an original way.
If he tries to copy some other man or do some other man's work, he will be an abortion, a misfit, of failure.
Do not imitate even your heroes.
Scores of young clergymen attempted to make their reputations by imitating Beecher.
They copied his voice and conversation and imitated his gestures and his habits,
but they fell as far short of the great man's power as the Cromo falls short of the masterpiece.
Where are those hundreds of imitators now?
Not one of them has ever made any stir in the world.
The world puts its ban upon all imitations.
It despises a man who tags on to somebody else, leans, or imitates.
He is always classed as a weakling, without force, power, or individuality.
We hear a great deal about the dangers of the one-man power in our great corporations.
People say that they should be managed by large committees or boards of directors.
That too much power should not be put into the hands.
of one man. But there is one original dominating character in every committee, on every board
of directors, who towers above all others and ultimately rules. It is impossible to get away
from the domination of a strong, original forceful character. Just be yourself. The consciousness
that you are not another in the slightest degree, that there is no suggestion of being a copy
of somebody else about you, is a great power in itself. It increases your confidence.
the very reputation of being original buttresses you in any community it helps you to have people say after talking with you there i met an original man to-day who did not even remind me of anybody else i have ever seen
it is refreshing to talk with a man who never remind you of others who uses no cant who is not the slave of precedent who walks on his own legs who has no use for crutches and who never leans a man of force who radiates power
Why try to be somebody else?
To be yourself or to express yourself with originality and power is the greatest thing you can do.
You cannot be another if you try.
It only makes you unnatural and ridiculous and robs you of the power which comes from self-expression, from being yourself.
The more you differ from another man by nature, the more ridiculous you will make yourself by attempting to imitate him.
Real strength inheres in personality.
End of Chapter 12.
Chapter 13 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Had money but lost it.
A prominent New York lawyer of White Experience says that in his opinion,
99 out of 100 of those who make money or inherit it,
lose it sooner or later.
What a spectacle everywhere in this land of plenty
of inexhaustible resources and unlimited opportunity,
where every man ought to be a king,
to see God's noblemen living like European peasants
because they never learn to do business in a business way.
How many thousands of good, honest men and women are there in this country
who have worked very hard and made all sorts of sacrifices of comfort and luxury
in order to lay up something for the future,
and yet have reached middle life or later without having anything to show for it?
many of them indeed finding themselves without a home or any probability of getting one without property or a cent of money laid by for sickness for the inevitable emergency or for their declining years
it seems incredible that a strong sturdy self-made man who has had to fight his way up from poverty and who feels the backache in every dollar he has earned should let his savings slip through his fingers in the most foolish investments with scarcely any investigation
often sending his money thousands of miles away to people he has never seen and about whom he knows practically nothing except through an advertisement which has attracted his attention or through the wiles of some smooth unprincipled promoter great numbers of vast fortunes in this country have been and are being built up on the very ignorance of the masses in regard to business methods the schemers bank on it that it is easy to swindle people who do not know how to protect their property
They thrive on the ignorance of their fellows.
They know that a shrewd advertisement, a cunningly worded circular,
a hypnotic appeal will bring the hard earnings of those unsuspecting people
out of hiding places into their own coffers.
For the sake of your home, for the protection of your hard earnings,
for your peace of mind, your self-respect, your self-confidence,
whatever else you do, do not neglect a good, solid business training,
and get it as early in life as possible.
It will save you from many a fall,
from a thousand embarrassments,
and perhaps from the humiliation of being compelled
to face your wife and children
and confess you have been a failure.
It may spare you the mortification
of having to move from a good home to a poor one,
of seeing your property slip out of your hands,
and of having to acknowledge your weakness
and your lack of foresight and thoughtfulness,
or it may prevent your being made the dupe of sharpers.
Many men who had once had good stores of their own are working as clerks, floorwalkers, or superintendents in departments of other people's stores, just because they risked and lost everything in some venture.
As they now have others depending on them, they do not dare to take the risks they took in young manhood to get a new start, and so they struggle along in mediocre positions still mocked with ambitions which they have no chance to gratify.
How many inventors and discoverers have fought the fight of desperation
amidst poverty and deprivation for years and years,
and have succeeded in giving the world that which helps to emancipate man from drudgery
and to ameliorate the hard conditions of civilization,
and yet have allowed others to snatch their victories away from them
and leave them penniless just because they did not know how to protect themselves?
Thousands of people who were once in easy circumstances
are living in poverty and wretchedness today because they fail to put an understanding or an
agreement in writing or to do business in a business way.
Families have been turned penniless out of house and home because they trusted to a relative
or a friend to do what was right by them without making a hard and fast practical business
arrangement with him.
It does not matter how honest people are.
They may forget, and it is so easy for misunderstandings to arise that it is never safe
to leave anything of importance to a mere oral statement.
Reduce it to writing.
It costs but little in time or money.
And when all parties interested are agreed,
that is the best time to formulate the agreement in exact terms.
This will often save lawsuits, bitterness, and alienations.
How many friendships have been broken because understandings were not put in writing?
Thousands of cases are in the courts today for this reason,
and a large part of lawyers' incomes is derived from,
them many people have a foolish idea that others especially friends or
relatives will be sensitive and think their honesty questioned if they are asked to
put their proposition or agreement or understanding in writing it is not a
question of confidence it is a question of business and business should be done
in a business way so that in case of death or some other unforeseen event every
possibility of complication or misunderstanding will be eliminated the very
people you may think will be sensitive or offended because you are so exacting, will really
think more of you for your straightforward business methods and your carefulness in avoiding
misunderstanding. Many a culture girl has been thrown suddenly on her own resources by the failure
or the death of her father and has found herself wholly incapable of administering his affairs
or of earning a living. Many women, their husbands having died suddenly, are left with large
business responsibilities, which they are utterly unfit to assume. They are at the mercy of designing
lawyers or dishonest businessmen who know well that they are mere babes in their hands when it comes to
important transactions. Business talent is as rare as a talent for mathematics. We find boys and girls
turned out of school and college full of theories and all sorts of knowledge or smatterings of knowledge,
but without the ability to protect themselves from human thieves who are trying to get something for
nothing. No girl or boy should be allowed to graduate, especially from any of the higher institutions
without being well grounded in practical business methods. Parents who send their children out in
life without seeing that they are well versed in ordinary business principles do them an incalculable
injustice. I have heard a young woman boast that she did not know anything about money matters
and had no desire to. She said that she had no idea of the value of a dollar, that she could
could spend all the money she could get, but that it was distasteful to her to discuss economy.
Many such women object to any common-sense consideration of the financial question.
They think it is not necessary for them to know anything about money from the purely business
point of view, as they consider that phase of life belongs wholly to their fathers or brothers
or husbands.
An instructive example of the result of such spirit and ignorance I found in a lady who had
lost her property through a lack of business.
knowledge. She told me that she knew nothing whatever about business. She had never known the value of money.
Her husband died and left her with a large property, and it was her custom to sign any paper or document
that her lawyer or agents presented to her, usually without reading. The people who had charge
of her property knew that she knew nothing about business and took advantage of her ignorance.
They got her property away from her, and she did not have enough left even to conduct a legal
fight to get it back. Thousands of girls are sent out into the world with what is called
finished educations who cannot even give a proper receipt for money, to say nothing of drawing
a promissory note, a draft or a bill, or understanding the significance and importance of business
contracts. Such a woman presented a check for payment to the paying teller of her bank. He
passed it back to her with the request that she'd be kind enough to endorse it. The lady wrote
on the back of the check. I have done business with this bank for many years, and I believe it
to be all right. Mrs. James B. Brown. A society woman in New York presented a check for payment
at a bank, and the teller told her that it was not signed. Oh, did they have to be signed?
She responded. What an awful lot of red tape there is about the banking business. I know of a
lady whose husband made a deposit for her in a bank and gave her a checkbook so that she could
pay her bills without calling on him for money. One day she received a notice from the bank that
her account was overdrawn. She went to the bank and told to tell her that there must be a mistake
about it, because she still had a lot of checks left in her book. She knew so little about business
methods that she thought she could keep drying any amount until the checks were all gone.
This sounds ridiculous and almost incredible, yet the very girl who laughs at it may make
even more absurd blunders. Many an accomplished woman, when given a pen and asked to sign an
important document drawn up by an attorney or a long-headed businessman, will sign it without
reading it or even asking to be informed of its contents, only to learn afterward by disastrous
results that she has signed away her property and turned herself out of her home. Only a short
time ago I read of a lady who had won a suit involving about $20,000. New evidence, however, was
brought forward, which caused the court immediately to reverse its decision. It was proved that the
lady had sworn falsely. She was perfectly innocent of any such intention, but she had sworn that she had
never signed her name to a certain document. The document was produced, and to her utter astonishment,
she saw her signature affixed to it. She acknowledged at once that the signature was hers,
although she had just sworn that she had never signed the paper in question. It appeared that
during her husband's lifetime whenever papers were to be signed he told her where to write her name and she did as she was told without having the slightest idea of the contents of the papers many people come to grief by giving full power of attorney to their lawyer or business agent
very few impractical people especially women understand the significance of a full power of attorney which authorizes the person so empowered to deal with your property in all respects as if it were his own
or as if he had for the time being assumed your personality.
He may sign your name to any instrument.
He may bind you to anything he pleases.
He may draw money from your bank.
He may impersonate you in all business transactions.
In short, as far as business arrangements are concerned,
he stands practically and legally for yourself.
It is a tremendous power to place in the hands of another,
and people should be very careful to whom they assign it.
It should never be conferred.
on any person but one whose honesty is above suspicion and whose knowledge of business and of
men and affairs has been tried and proved.
Oh, I signed a paper giving full power of attorney to my lawyer before I went abroad.
I trusted everything to him, and when I came back practically everything was gone.
My business affairs were so complicated that I have not had the money to fight the man I trusted.
This was, in brief, the story of one man's wrecked finances, as he told
to me. Women will often pay out large sums of money and never think of asking for a receipt,
especially if they are dealing with friends or people they know well. Intelligent women, however,
ought to know that our government is a good example of how we should do business. It does
not doubt President Roosevelt's honesty, and yet he must sign a voucher for his salary, just the
same as the cheapest government employee. The justices of the United States Supreme Court,
who are considered to be the soul of honor, and are the final
arbyters of all great questions, must also sign a receipt for their salaries.
If every child in America had a thorough business training,
tens of thousands of promoters, long-headed, cunning schemers,
who have thriving on the people's ignorance, would be out of an occupation.
I believe that the business colleges are among the greatest blessings in American civilization today,
because through their teaching they have been the means of saving thousands of homes
and have made happy and comfortable tens of thousands of people
who might otherwise be living in poverty and wretchedness.
This ignorance of practical business principles is very common among professional men.
I know clergymen, journalists, authors, doctors, teachers,
men in every profession who are constantly subjected to serious embarrassment
by their incapacity in business matters.
Some of them do not know how to interpret the simplest business forms.
Not long ago, a Harvard graduate, occupying a very important position as a teacher,
went to the president of a commercial school and asked to give him some lessons on how to handle money,
notes, etc.
He said that when he went to his bank and asked them how much money he had there, they left at him,
and that when the bank draft came to him, he did not know what to do with it.
Nothing will stand you in better stead in the hard, cold, practical, everyday world than a good, sound business education.
You will find that your success in any trade, occupation, or profession will depend as much on your general knowledge of men and affairs as on your technical training.
No matter what your vocation may be, you must be a businessman first, or you will always be placed at a great disadvantage in the practical affairs of life.
We cannot entirely ignore the money side of existence any more than we can the food side,
and the very foundation of a practical, successful life is the ability to know how to manage the money side effectively.
It is infinitely harder to save money and to invest it wisely than it is to make it.
And if, even the most practical men, men who have had a long training in scientific business methods,
find it a difficult thing to hold on to money after they make it.
What is likely to happen to people who have no practical training in business methods?
End of Chapter 13
Chapter 14 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Sizing Up People
After Alexander the Great had conquered the Persians, he became suddenly very ill.
One of his generals sent him a letter saying that his attending physician had resolved to poison him.
He read the letter without the slightest sign of emotion and put it under his pillow.
When the physician came and prepared medicine,
Alexander said he would not take it just then,
but told him to put it where he could reach it,
and at the same time gave him the letter from his general.
Alexander raised himself on his elbow
and watched the physician's face with the most searching scrutiny,
looking into his very soul, but he did not see in it the slightest evidence of fear or guilt.
He immediately reached for the medicine bottle and without a word drank its contents.
The amazed physician asked him how he could do that after receiving such a letter.
Alexander replied,
Because you are an honest man.
Alexander was a remarkable student of human nature.
He knew men and the motives which actuated them.
He could read the human heart as an open book.
the art of all arts for the leader is this ability to measure men to weigh them to size them up to estimate their possibilities to place them so as to call out their strength and eliminate their weakness
this is the epitaph which andrew carnegie has chosen for himself here lies a man who knew how to get around him men much cleverer than himself people wonder how a morgan a harryman a ryan a wannamaker can carry on such production
religious enterprises the secret lies in their ability to project themselves through a mighty system and to choose men who will fit the places they are put in men who can carry out their employers program to the letter
Marshall field was always studying his employees and trying to read their futures nothing escaped his keen eye even when those about him did not know what he was thinking of them he was taking their measure at every opportunity his ability to place men to weigh in measure
them. To pierce all pretense, amounted to genius. When he missed a man from a certain counter,
he would often ask his manager what had become of him. When told that he was promoted,
he would keep track of him until he missed him again, and then would ask where he was. He always
wanted to see how near the man came to his estimate of him. He thus kept track of men of
promise in his employ and watched their advancement. In this way, he became an expert in human
nature reading. Mr. Field would sometimes pick out a man for a position the choice of whom his
advisors would tell him they thought was a mistake. But he was nearly always right, because he had
a greater power of discernment than the others. He did not pay much attention to the claims of the
applicant or to what he said, because he could see through the surface and measure the real man.
He had a wonderful power for taking a man's mental caliber. He could see in which direction
and his strength lay, and he could see his weak points as few men could.
A man who had been his general manager for many years,
once resigned very suddenly to go into business for himself.
Without the slightest hesitation or concern,
Mr. Field called to his office a man whom he had been watching,
unknown to the man, for a long time.
With very few words he made him general manager,
and so great was his confidence that he had measured the man correctly
that the very next day he sailed for Europe.
He did not think it necessary to wait and see how this new manager turned out.
He believed he had the right man and that he could trust him.
He was not disappointed.
Men who are capable of succeeding in a large way are shrewd enough to know that they do not know it all,
shrewd enough to employ men who are strong, where they are weak,
to surround themselves with men who have the ability which they lack,
who can supplement their weakness and shortcomings with strength
and ability. Thus, in their
combined power, they make an effective
force. Many men,
because of their inability to read
human nature, duplicate their own
weaknesses in their employees,
thus multiplying their chances of failure.
Few men are able to see
their own weaknesses and limitations,
and those who do not
surround themselves with men who have the
same weak links in their character,
and the result is that their whole
institution is weak.
The leader must not only be able to
others but he must also be able to read himself to take an inventory of his own strong
points and weak points men who have been elected to high office or to fill very important
positions at the head of great concerns because of their recognized ability have often
disappointed the expectation of those who placed their hopes in them simply because they
could not read people they may have been well educated well posted strong
intellectually may have had a great deal of general ability but they lacked the skill to read
men to measure them to weigh them to place them where they belonged grant was cut out for a
general a military leader but when he got into the white house he fell out of place he was
shorn of his great power he could not use his greatest ability he was obliged to depend
too much upon the advice of friends the result was that as president he did not
the high reputation he had made as a general.
If he had had the same ability to read politicians
and to estimate men for government positions
that he had for judging of military ability,
he would have made a great president.
But he felt his weakness in the position
which he was not fitted by nature to fill
and made the fatal mistake of putting himself
into the hands of his friends.
The young man, starting out for himself,
ought to make a study of his power
of penetration of his character reading ability he ought to make it a business to study men to estimate
their capabilities and the motives which actuate them he should scrutinize their actions watch their
tendencies in little things and learn to read them as an open book the involuntary acts and natural
manner of a man indicate more than does his studied conversation the eye cannot lie it speaks the truth in
all languages it often contradictions
the tongue. While the man is trying to deceive you with words, his eyes are telling you the truth.
His actions are indicative of the real man, while the tongue may only represent the diplomat,
the man who is acting. A very successful businessman in New York, noted for his ability to read
men, will sometimes study an applicant for an important position for a long time, talking very
little himself, but all the time trying to call the man out, watching every moment, scrutinizing
every word, trying to read the motive behind every glance of the eye. His manner, everything,
are all letters of the alphabet by which he spells out the real man. I have been in his office
when he was measuring a man. It was a great lesson to watch his face as he seemed to read the applicant
through and through, weigh him on the scale of his judgment, penetrate to the very marrow of
his being and estimate his capabilities and possibilities to a nicety after a few minutes conversation
and the man had passed out he would tell me just how large that man was what he was capable of doing
what his future would be and what were his limitations and he seldom makes a mistake i have never
known a man to succeed to any extent when he said there was nothing in him and i've never known one
to turn out badly when he endorsed him without reserve
We all know heads of business houses who work like slaves, dig and save, and yet do not make much headway, simply because they do not know how to surround themselves with the right men.
Some men seem incapable of projecting system and order through their establishments.
They may do their own work well, and then they strike their limitations.
They are not good judges of human nature.
Their discernment is not sharp.
They are misled by conversational powers, display of education.
education and often place a theoretical man where only practical talent could succeed they are likely to place a man of great refinement
sensitiveness delicate makeup in a position where a strong robust thick-skinned man is required where an oversensitive soul will chafe and shrink from the cold aggressive business methods necessary to effective efficient management people are continually being led into all sorts of unfortunate positions
entangling alliances and mortifying, embarrassing situations
because of their lack of ability to read human nature
and to estimate character at a glance.
Good people everywhere are being imposed upon
and are losing their money in all sorts of foolish investments
because of their ignorance of human nature.
They are not able to see the rascal, the scoundrel behind the mask.
They have not developed the power of discernment,
the abilities who see the wolf in sheep's clothing,
the knowledge of human nature as a protector of money of character as a protector against frauds and imposition is inestimable gullible people are proverbial poor readers of human nature and hence they are always open to imposition
oily cunning promoters are keen observers of human nature and they can tell very quickly when they strike a good-natured large-hearted professor scholar clergyman or artist who knows very little about business matters and who trusts everybody
They know that if they can only get an opportunity, they can very quickly make such a man believe almost anything.
They know he will be an easy prey to their wiles and their keener knowledge of men.
These promoters would not think of tackling a shrewd, level-headed businessman for their nefarious schemes,
because he is too keen, too sharp, too good a judge of human nature.
Such a man would be likely to penetrate the mask and see the real motive beneath the oil,
honeyed words, the smooth, seductive manner.
The ability to read people at sight is a great business asset.
Expertness in reading human nature is just as valuable to a young lawyer as a knowledge of law.
It is as valuable to a physician as a knowledge of medicine.
The man who can read human nature, who can size up a person quickly,
who can arrive at an accurate estimate of character, no matter what is vocation or profession,
has a great advantage over others.
with some men the power to read people aright amounts to an instinct they look through all pretenses they tear off all masks they see the man as he is his reality and measure him for what he is worth
a man possessing this power of character reading pays little attention to what a person seeking employment may say of himself he can see for himself human nature is to him an open book while to others it is a sealed book they do not
have the faculty of going back of pretensions they are largely at the mercy of what he
claims for himself and they are always being duped they make very poor employers i know a popular
businessman a very able man in many respects and one much beloved by everybody who knows him but he has
always been the victim of his ignorance of human nature he cannot read motives weigh or estimate the
ability of others to do certain things if an applicant for a position
well he immediately jumps to the conclusion that he is a good man for the position and hires him usually to be disappointed he has a great weakness for clergymen who have lost their positions through failing health or for other reasons and also for ex-teachers and professors the result is that he has a lot of impractical people about him who know nothing of progressive scientific business building it is an education in itself to form the habit of measuring
weighing, estimating the different people we meet, for in this way we are improving our own
powers of observation, sharpening our prospective faculties, improving our judgment.
The ability to read human nature is a cultivable quality, and we have a great opportunity
in this country with its conglomerate population to study the various types of character.
What a wonderful school most of us are in practically all of the time, especially in large
cities where we are constantly coming in contact with strangers. What a chance to become experts
in reading human nature in studying motives. The face, the eye, the manners, the gestures,
the walk. All these are hieroglyphics which, if we can only decipher them, spell out the
character. Sometimes a single glance of the eye, when one is unconscious, will give you a glimpse
into his intermost soul and reveal secrets which he would never dare to utter with his tongue.
The facial expression and the manner, especially when people are off their guard,
or unconscious that they are being watched, are great revealers of character.
You will find, as you become an expert in face study, in reading character, human nature,
that you will develop marvelous skill in seeing things which you never noticed before.
You will be able to protect yourself from the promoter,
the insinuating man who is trying to persuade you into something which may not be to your benefit,
but which will be to his.
You will be able to discriminate between friendship and duplicity.
You will be able to protect yourself from a thousand annoyances and embarrassments and humiliations,
which might cripple your career.
How many people are living in poverty, are wretched, homeless today because they could not read
human nature and were robbed of their property and their rights?
To discern the difference between the false and the true, to place the right values upon men,
to emphasize the right thing in them, to discriminate between the genuine and the pretended,
is an accomplishment which may be worth infinitely more to you than a college education without this practical power,
and may make all the difference to you between success and failure, happiness, and misery.
End of Chapter 14
Chapter 15 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Does the world owe you a living?
A 15-year-old bellboy was arrested in Cleveland for stealing $8.
When asked in court why he stole, he said,
Because the world owes me a living.
No doubt the youth had heard this many times from older lips.
When the armies of Louis VIII
were devastated in Flanders, the monarch exclaimed,
Has God forgotten all that I have done for him?
A vast number of people seem to think that God and the world are under great obligation to them,
and that the world owes them a living without any return service from them.
Not long ago, I heard a young woman say that she did not consider that she owed the world anything,
that she was thrust into it without being consulted,
that she proposed to get out of it what she could with as a little.
little effort as possible, and that she did not feel under the slightest obligation to the past.
Did you ever think, my idle friend, what you really owe the world for the privilege of living in it?
Did you ever think that all the civilizations of the globe have been working for you through all
the ages up to the present moment, and that you are reaping the harvest of all the hardworking,
sacrificing, suffering, drudging sores that have preceded you?
Can you look the workers of the world in the face and tell them that you intend to have all the benefits of their labor,
to enjoy all the good things of the world without doing anything to compensate for them?
The man who does not feel his heart throb with gratitude every day of his life for being born in the very golden age of the world,
and who does not feel that he owes a tremendous debt to the past,
to all the people who have struggled and striven and sacrificed before him,
is not made of the right kind of stuff.
In other words, he is not a man,
and he ought to be treated as a drone,
a thief of other men's labors.
Everything that has gone before you
enters into your life and time.
You enjoy the sum of all the past
every moment of your life.
Think of the untold thousands
who have laid down their lives
to make possible the comforts, the blessings,
and the immunities you now enjoy.
Think of the rivers of blood
that have been spilt, of the thousands who have perished or lived in the misery of prison
and dungeon, to purchase the liberties of speech and freedom of action which you enjoy
today.
How many lives have been lived in solitude and misery in order to develop sciences, which are
today beacon lights of the world?
And think what multitudes of people are engaged in producing, manufacturing, and forwarding
your clothing, your furniture, your food, the tropical fruits on your table, the foreturb.
foreign textiles, the bric-a-brac, and all the things which come from foreign lands to minister
to your comfort and convenience. You buy an orange on the street for two or three cents, but did you
ever think of what it had cost to bring it to you? Did you ever think of the number of people
who have aided in its production and its transportation so that you might buy it for a few pennies?
You get a yard of cotton for ten cents, but did you ever think of the toil and hardships of the people
in the south, of the operatives in the mill, the packers, shippers, and clerks who have handled
and re-handled and shipped it by steamship and railroad that you might buy it for song?
Suppose these people who say that they owe the world nothing were obliged to make all
the comforts and luxuries they enjoy. How long would it take them to produce even a lead
pencil, a sheet of writing paper, a jackknife, a pair of spectacles, a pair of shoes, or a suit
of clothes, representing an untold amount of drudgery and sacrifice. There is toil, struggle,
and sacrifice in everything you purchase, everything you enjoy. How many thousands of people
have worked like slaves to make it even possible for you to ride on a railroad or on a steamship,
and how many lives have been sacrificed in order to reach the perfection and safety attained
by modern trains and steamers, and to enable you to enjoy the comforts and luxuries which they
provide wherever you go tens of thousands of people have been preparing the way and getting
things ready guarding against danger saving you trouble and drudgery and yet you say that you do not
consider yourself in debt to the world if all the workers and all the wealth of the world today
had been employed for thousands of years for your special benefit to prepare for your
reception upon the earth they could not have provided the comforts the conveniences the
facilities, the immunities, the luxuries which you found waiting for you when you were born,
and for which you gave not even a penny or a thought. And yet you say that the world owes you
this and the other, and that you owe it nothing. Did you ever think, my idle friend,
that there are some things which are not purchasable with money? Do not deceive yourself by thinking
that you will get something for nothing. All the laws of the universe are fighting such a theory. You must
open an account with the world personally. No one else can pay the debt you owe. Whatever money
or advantages your father or anyone else gets by his own efforts nature has stamped untransferable.
The law of the universe recognizes only one legal tender, and that is personal service.
Whatever you get of real value you must pay for. The things that are done for you are delusions.
You are a personal debtor to the world. When you were born, civilization,
open an account with you.
On one side of the ledger you find,
John Smith,
debtor to all the past ages
for the sum total of the results
of the toil of the men and women
who have lived and toil before him.
Debtor to the privations,
the sufferings,
and the sacrifices of those who have bought freedom from bondage,
immunity from slavery,
emancipation from drudgery.
You are debtor to all the inventions
that have ameliorated the hard condition,
of mankind and which have emancipated you from the same hard drudgery and stern conditions the same narrow limited life of your prehistoric ancestors who are you mr idler that you claim a living from the world when you have not earned the clothing you have on your back or the shelter which covers your head why should tens of thousands of people drudge and endure hardships and privations to produce all of the useful things the beautiful things
the luxuries for you to enjoy without effort.
You say the world owes you a living.
What if the sheep should refuse to furnish its wool to cover your lazy back?
The earth refused to produce crops to fill your lazy stomach.
The army of laborers refused to let you take all the good things out of the world's great
granary without putting anything back.
What would become of you who have never lifted a finger to learn a trade
or to prepare yourself for a career or to do work of any kind of,
kind, if an edict were to come from the skies that would force you henceforth to do your share
of the world's work or starve. Is he not a thief, an enemy of civilization, who thrusts his
arm into the great world storehouse, pulling out all the good things he wishes, and refusing
to put anything back in exchange? We hear a great deal about indiscriminate giving, making poppers,
but what shall we say about the giving of fortunes to youth who have never been taught that they should
give anything in return for all they receive? What are the chances of growth in character,
in sturdy manhood, for the boy who knows that a fortune is waiting for him when he was 21,
and who was told every day that his father is rich and that he is a fool to work, that he should
just make a business of having a good time? What are the chances of his developing a rugged,
sturdy independence, resourcefulness, originality, inventiveness, and all the other
other qualities that make for vigorous manhood it is cruel little less than criminal to leave
vast fortunes to youth without stamina of character a superb practical training or the experience or
wisdom to use them wisely things are so arranged in this world that happiness as a profession must
ever be a failure it cannot be found by seeking it is reflex action it is incidental a product
which comes from doing noble things.
It is impossible for a person to be really happy
by making pleasure a profession.
No idle life can produce a real man.
A life of luxury calls out only the effeminate, destructive qualities.
The creative forces are developed only by stern endeavor
to better one's condition in the world.
No wealth or efforts of the parents
can bring the latent energies out in the sun
which make for sturdy manhood.
He must work out his problem.
himself it can never be done for him how little harry thaw's parents realized the
cruelty of bringing their son up in idleness without a trade or profession
helpless to earn his own living in case of necessity one would think they would
have learned wisdom from the tens of thousands of lessons which ruined
lives have taught that there is no getting around God's fiat no evading the
law that work exercise of faculty self-effort are the only thing
that will develop a real man.
The Creator has put an enormous penalty upon idleness,
the penalty of weakness, of deterioration,
of destruction, of annihilation.
Use or lose is nature's edict.
The idle man is like an idle machine.
It destroys itself very quickly.
A score of enemies are in readiness to attack anything
as soon as it is at rest.
Rust, decay, and all sorts of disintegrating processes
to start in a man just as soon as he becomes idle.
Self-destruction begins in the mind the moment it ceases to work.
There is no power in heaven or on earth
that can save an idle brain from deterioration.
No power that can make a man strong and vigorous
unless he obeys the natural laws of his life,
written in his very constitution.
Work, steady, persistent, with a purpose, with zeal,
with enthusiasm, with a love for it,
is the only thing that can save a man from the disgrace of being a nobody work is the inexorable law of growth there is no getting away from it the time will come when an able-bodied man who has the audacity
the presumption to try to get all the good things out of the world and give nothing in return will be looked upon as a monstrosity an enemy to civilization and will be ostracized by all decent people the youth who thinks he is going to go through this
world on what somebody else has produced or done and still develop into the highest type of a man
is attempting to fight against his maker. The very laws of the universe have made it forever impossible.
Leave this vast, living, complicated machine idle, if you will. Try to divert it to some other use.
Try to make a pleasure machine out of it when it was intended for a work machine, but all nature
protests. One of the most demoralizing features of our American civilization today is found in the
influence of the idle rich. Great human drones who refuse to work, but who demand the best
products of other men's labor and brains. I have heard rich fathers boast that necessity was the
spur which made men of them, which gave them the foresight, the stamina, the shrewdness,
the creative power, the ability necessary to make and protect the fortune.
And yet they turn right around and leave a fortune to a son, which is likely to take away his energy,
to take the spring out of his ambition, to rob him of the zest, the enthusiasm which can only come
from the exercise of earnest, honest effort.
No man is so rich, no matter how honestly he got his money, as to be able to confer immunity
from work upon his offspring.
The very nature of things, the eternal law of the universe has made it for every
impossible for you to transfer the stamina the vigorous manhood the stability the
character everything that is of real value which you have gained in your struggle to get on in the
world to your son or daughter your offspring owes a debt to civilization which goes back of the parent
it is a debt which can only be wiped out by the individual it cannot be discharged by proxy
personal effort is the condition of the child's development it is the inevitable price of
No, there are some things you rich fathers cannot do for your boy.
There is a law of nature which prohibits it, an omnipotent principle which protests against it.
If a phrenologist should examine the heads of the idol, grown-up sons of rich men,
he would find very marked deficiencies, an underdevelopment of nearly all of the qualities which
make strong men.
He would usually find selfishness very largely developed, self-reliance, originality,
inventiveness, resourcefulness, and all of the other qualities which are drawn out and strengthened
only by self-help and the struggle to make one's way in the world little developed.
If he should compare them with the heads of their self-made fathers, he would find very marked
inferiority, so marked that there would apparently be no relationship between the owners of the
heads. The contrast would be as great as that between the hard, tough, firm fiber of the mountain oak
and the fiber of soft, spongy sapling,
which never struggled with the storm and tempest
because sheltered by surrounding trees.
How little the father realizes
that it is one of the cruelest things
he could do to his boy
to practically rob him of the opportunity
of making a real man of himself,
of developing qualities which make strength, power,
which build vigorous stalwart manhood.
There is something about the actual making
of one's way in the world,
of burning behind one all bridges which others have built,
throwing away all crutches and refusing to lean,
to be boosted, refusing all assistance,
and standing erect upon one's own feet,
thinking his own thoughts,
fighting his own battles,
bringing out his own latent possibilities by actual exercise,
bringing into action every bit of one's inventiveness,
resourcefulness, ingenuity, and originality, tact,
that makes a man strong, vigorous and stalwart,
which indicates that this is the normal life of a man,
the only life which can develop the true man.
The army of inefficients, the nambi-pambies,
the dressed-up nobodies,
with soft hands and softer heads,
who are expert only in saying silly-nothings to silly women,
or in the practice of some useless fad,
the amount to nothings everywhere,
ought to convince you that there is no one,
way of getting something for nothing. If you will not do a man's work, if you will not pay a man's
price for manhood, you will be only an apology for a man. Of course, you can live the life of the
idol, if you will. If you are the son of a foolish rich father, no one may be able to hinder you,
but you must take the idler's reward. You must go through life branded with the shame,
labeled with the weakness, marked with the deformities of idleness. You must pay the penalty of
your choice and be a nobody.
End of chapter 15.
Chapter 16 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orson Sweat Martin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
What has luck done for you?
Fortune brings in some boats that are not steered.
People may say what they will about there not being such a thing as luck or chance,
but we must all admit there is such a thing.
We must all concede that things over which a man has no control,
unforeseen happenings or events with which he has had nothing to do
and on which he had not calculated,
often changed the whole course of his career.
Good position do not always come by merit,
or as the result of one's own direct efforts.
It is now a poor laboring man or washerwoman
who falls heir to a fortune by the death of some relative,
or again it is a poor girl who is sick,
suddenly raised to wealth and what the world calls high position by marrying a man of rank
or fortune. Every schoolboy knows that there is a great advantage in being in the right place
in just the nick of time, and that being there is often a matter of chance. Men are constantly
being moved up into positions which they did not get wholly by merit. Their elevation is due,
perhaps, to a railroad accident, a stroke of paralysis, or the death of men in high places.
had a striking instance of this recently in the death of two presidents of the Long Island
Railroad within a few months, which led to unexpected promotions. Everyone knows that men
are constantly being put at the head of large concerns because of kinship with the owners
of the business, when perhaps a score of those who are working in the establishments at the time
are much better fitted to fill the positions. But after all, who will be foolish enough
to say that man is the toy of chance, or that true success is a good success is a good success.
is the result of accident or fate.
No, luck is not God's price for success,
nor does he dicker with men.
When we consider the few who owe fortune or position to accident or luck,
in comparison with the masses who have to fight every inch of the way to their own loaves,
what are they in reality but the exceptions to the rule that character merit,
not fate or luck, or any other bogey of the imagination,
controls the destinies of men,
the only luck that plays any great part in a man's life is that which inheres in a stout heart a willing hand and an alert brain what has chance ever done in the world has it invented a telegraph or telephone has it laid an ocean cable
has it built steamships or established universities asylums or hospitals has it tunnelled mountains built bridges or brought miracles out of the soil what did luck have to do with making the
the career of Washington, of Lincoln, of Daniel Webster, of Henry Clay, of Grant, of Garfield,
or of Elihu Root? Did it help Edison or Marconi with his inventions? Did it have anything
to do with the making of the fortunes of our great merchant princes? Do such men as John Wanamaker,
Robert Ogden, or Marshall Field owe their success to luck? Many a man has tried to justify
his failure on the ground that he was doomed by the cards which fate dealt him, that he must
pick up and play the game, and that no effort, however great on his part, could materially
change the result.
But my young friend, the fate that deals your cards is in the main your own resolution.
The result of the game does not rest with fate or destiny, but with you.
You will take the trick if you have the superior energy, ability, and determination requisite
to take it. You have the power within yourself to change the value of the cards which you say
fate has dealt you. The game depends upon your training, upon the way you are disciplined to seize
and use your opportunities, and upon your ability to put grit in the place of superior
advantages. Just because circumstances sometimes give clients to lawyers and patients to physicians,
put commonplace clergymen in uncommon pulpits, and place the sons of the rich at the head.
of great corporations even when they only have average ability and scarcely any experience while poor youths with greater ability and more experience often have to fight their way for years to obtain ordinary situations are you justified in starting out without a chart or in leaving a place for luck in your program what would you think of a captain of a great liner who would start out to sea without any port in view and trust too luck to land his precious cargo safely
Did you ever know of a strong young man making out his life program and depending upon chance to carry out any part of it?
Men who depend upon luck do not think it worthwhile to make a thorough preparation for success.
They are not willing to pay the regular price for it.
They are looking for bargains.
They are hunting for shortcuts to success.
We hear a great deal about Roosevelt's luck, but what would have it availed him if he was not ready for the opportunity when it came?
if he had not trained himself through years of persistent drill to grasp it,
if he had not been prepared to make the best use of it.
I have never known a man to amount too much
until he cut out of his vocabulary such words as,
good luck and bad luck,
and from his life maxims, all the I can't words,
and the I can't philosophy.
There is no word in the English language more misused and abused than luck.
More people have excused themselves for poor work,
and mean, stingy, poverty-stricken careers
by saying luck was against them
than by any other plea.
That door ahead of you, young man,
is probably closed because you have closed it,
closed it by lack of training,
by lack of ambition, energy, and push.
While perhaps you have been waiting
for luck to open it,
a pluckier, grittier fellow
has stepped in ahead of you
and opened it himself.
Power gravitates to the man who knows how.
Luck is the tide, nothing more.
The strong man rose with it, if it makes toward his port.
He rose against it if it flows the other way.
When Governor John A. Johnson of Minnesota was asked,
How do you account for your success?
He answered simply,
I just tried to make good.
You will find 999 times out of a thousand
that the man who tries to make good is the lucky man.
Young Johnson had to fight against poverty, heredity,
in an environment, everything that could be put forward as an excuse for bad luck or no chance.
Yet in his hard battle with fate, he never once faltered or whined or complained that luck was
against him. One of the most unfortunate delusions that ever found its way into a youth's brain
is that there is some force or power outside of himself that will, in some mysterious way,
and with very little effort on his part, lift him into a position of comfort and luxury.
I never knew anyone who followed the ignis fatuous,
luck, who did not follow it to his ruin.
Good luck follows good sense, good judgment, good health,
a gritty determination, a lofty ambition, and downright hard work.
When you see horses in a race,
you know perfectly well that the one in the lead is ahead
because he has run faster than the others,
and you would not have much sympathy for the horse behind it
if he should bemoan his fate and declare that the horse,
a horse ahead had a snap. When you see anyone doing better than you are doing under similar circumstances,
just say to yourself, there must be some reason for it. There is a secret back of it, and I must
find it out. Do not try to ease your conscience or lull your ambition by pleading hard luck
for yourself or good fortune for another. Napoleon said that, God is always on the side of the
strongest battalions. He is always on the side of the best prepared, the best trained,
the most vigilant, the pluckiest, and the most determined.
If we should examine the career of most men who are called lucky,
we should find that their success has its roots far back in the past
and has drawn its nourishment from many a battle
in the struggle for supremacy over poverty and opposition.
We should probably find that the lucky man is a closer thinker than the unlucky man,
that he has a finer judgment, that he has more system and order,
that his brain acts more definitely and concisely,
that he thinks more logically, more vigorously,
and that he is more practical.
Life is not a game of chance.
The Creator did not put us where we would be the sport of circumstances
to be tossed about by a cruel fate, regardless of our own efforts.
End of Chapter 16.
Chapter 17 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin.
Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Success with a flaw
Just now the American people are receiving some painful lessons in practical ethics,
said President Nicholas Murray Butler recently.
They are having brought home to them with severe emphasis
the distinction between character and reputation.
Of late, we have been watching reputations meld away like snow before the sun.
Put bluntly the situation which confronts the American people.
people today is due to the lack of moral principle.
Never before in the history of our country have the American people received a greater shock
to their faith in human nature than during the past year, by the exposure of the diabolical
methods practiced by men in high places upon an admiring and unsuspecting people.
Every little while the public press throws x-rays upon the characters of men who have long
stood high and spotless in the public eye and have been looked up to as models of
manhood men of honorable achievement revealing great ugly stains of dishonor which like the blood-spot on lady macbeth's hands all the oceans of the globe cannot wash out a tiny flaw sometimes cuts the value of another wise thousand-dollar diamond down to fifty dollars or less the defect is not noticeable to the average person it is only the fatal magnifying glass that will detect it and yet its presence is a perpetual menace to the commercial value of the
stone a great many human diamonds which a little while ago were thought to be
flawless brilliance of the first water and which dazzled the financial and social
world when the microscope of official scrutiny was turned upon them were found to
contain great ugly flaws a United States senator 70 years of age was
recently sentenced to serve a term in prison besides paying a fine for his
connection with great land frauds still another senator and several representatives
have been indicted for crooked work in connection with their exalted positions
congressmen have been convicted of land frauds and army officers of speculation
the exposure of post-office contracts and the notorious cotton statistics leak not long
ago showed that minor officials had sold themselves to manufacturers and
Wall Street brokers think of the men at the head of great public trust juggling
with sacred funds not only taking for themselves from the harder
savings of the poor salaries two or three times as great as that of the President of the
United States but also giving enormous salaries to a large number of the relatives
out of these same sacred funds of those who have struggled for years to make
possible a better condition for those who should survive them think of their
paying out hundreds of thousands of dollars for secret services of suspicious
nature and using trust funds to affect stock manipulations for private gain
Was there ever before such a shameful story spread before Americans?
Were people ever before so mercilessly betrayed by men they looked up to, admired, and implicitly trusted?
Never before has there been such colossal stealing carried on so brazenly and openly by men in high positions.
Some of these men, when they appeared in public a year ago, were applauded to the echo.
Wherever they went they were followed by admiring crowds.
Some months ago I saw one of them, a man who has been for many years a great public favorite, at a reception in the White House.
He was pointed out by guests and seemed to attract almost as much attention as the president himself.
People seemed to regard it as a great honor to be introduced to him.
Now he would hardly dare to appear before an audience for fear of being hissed.
What a humiliation for those whose names have been household words for a quarter of a century or more.
to be asked to withdraw from trusteeships or directorships in institutions which perhaps
work for years to secure these men on account of the great influence and high reputations
what is there left worth living for when a man has lost the finest the most sacred thing in him
and when he has forfeited the confidence and respect of his fellow men is there any quality
which inheres in dollars that can compensate for such a loss is there anything which ought to
held more precious than honor or more sacred than the esteem and confidence of friends and
acquaintances the man who has nothing which he holds dearer than money or some material
advantage is not a man the brute has not been educated out of him the abler a man and the more
money he has the more we despise him if he has gotten that money dishonestly because of the
tremendous contrast between what he has done and what he might have done what the world demands
of you, whatever your career, whether you make money or lose it, whether you are rich or poor,
is that you be a man. It is the man that gives value to achievement. You cannot afford success
with a flaw in it. You cannot afford to have people say of you, Mr. Blank has made money,
but there is a stain on it. It is smirged. It has cost him too much. He exchanged his
manhood for it. Every human being has it within his power to keep the foundation.
under him his manhood absolutely secure under all circumstances nothing can shake that but himself the citadel can never be taken until he himself surrenders the keys calumny
distraction slander or monetary failure cannot touch this sacred thing every man whether in private or public life should so carry himself before the world that he will show in his very face and manner that there is something within him not for
something so sacred that he would regard the slightest attempt to debauch it as an unpardonable
insult he should so carry himself that no one would even dare to suggest that he could
be bought or bribed who was so corrupt during the Civil War that he would have dared to
attempt to bribe Abraham Lincoln there was something in that face that would have
cowed the hardest character who would be bold enough to presume to bribe our present
president many a one has failed because he was not a man
before he was a merchant or a lawyer or a manufacturer or a statesman because character was not the
dominating influence in his life if you are not a man first if there is not a man behind your book
behind your sermon behind your law brief or your business transaction if you are not larger than the
money you make the world will expose and despise your pretense and discount your success
history will cover up your memory no matter how much money you leave
That is the lesson of the startling disclosures of late.
These men whose reputations have melded away so rapidly,
men who have had such a drop in the public regard,
were not real men to start with.
There were flaws in their character foundations,
and the superstructures of their achievement
have fallen before the flood of public indignation.
Those criminals in high places are beginning to realize
that no smartness, brilliancy, genius, scheming,
long-headed cunning,
bluffing or pretense can take the place of manhood or be a substitute for personal integrity.
There are men in New York today whose names have been a power,
who would give every dollar they have for a clean record,
if they could wipe off all of their underhanded, unquestionable methods from the slate and start anew.
But there is no way to buy a good name.
It is above riches and beyond the price of rubies.
How many men there are today in high positions who are in perpetual,
terror, less something should happen to expose the real facts of their lives, something which
would pierce their masks and reveal them in their true light. How must a man feel who is
conscious that he is walking all the time on the thin crust of a volcano, which is liable
to open at any moment and swallow him? There is one thing no money or influence can buy. That is
the heart's approval of a wrong deed or a questionable transaction. It will be bobbing up all
along the future to remind you of your theft, of your dishonesty, or of your unfair advantage.
It will take the edge off your enjoyment. It will appear like Banquo's ghost at every feast
to which you sit down. Methinks that some men, who have been exposed recently, must have
had strange dreams and horrid nightmares during their sleep, when the ghosts of the poor people
whom they have wronged appeared to them and haunted the rest. Meethinks they must have had strange
visions as these dollars intended for widows and orphans slipped through their fingers for
luxuries and amusements, dollars which had been wrung out of the lives of those who trusted
them. What a pitiable picture those great financial giants made, under investigation in
courts of inquiry, squirming, ducking, dodging, and resorting to all sorts of ingenuity to avoid
telling the exact truth, to keep from uncovering their tracks or exposing their crooked methods.
No man has a right to put himself in a position where he has to cover up anything
or where he must be afraid of the truth.
Every man should live so that he can hold up his head,
look his kind in the face without wincing, and defy the world.
A man went to President Roosevelt before the last presidential election
and told him that someone had unearthed the letter of his
which would be extremely damaging to his canvas where it made public,
and that with a little diplomacy, the damage of his own.
part of the letter could be suppressed. After listening to the man, the great president said,
I have never written a letter which I am afraid to have published. Let them print the letter,
the whole of it. I have nothing to conceal. I am not afraid to face anything I have ever done.
How many of our public men dare take that attitude? Isn't it a disgrace to this fair land that there
are men in our Senate and House of Representatives, and in almost every legislature whose votes
and influence can be bought, and upon whose honor there is a price.
If there's anything which a man in a responsible position ought to prize,
it is the esteem of the young men who look up to him as their idol or hero.
Is it strange when our youth find their idol smashed,
and their heroes betraying them,
that their ideals should become blurred and twisted?
Is it strange that they should ignore the old-fashioned methods of slow fortune-making
when they see the smooth, oily, diplomatic,
schemers getting rich in a few months, and young men, who were mere clerks a year ago,
now riding in costly automobiles, giving expensive entertainments, and living in fine houses.
Why should they not catch the spirit and try to do the same thing themselves?
You wrongdoers in high places, if you should live as long as Methusla, should devote every
minute of balance of your lives to doing good, and should give every farthing of your wealth to
charity. You could not repair the damage you have done in crushing the ideals of these tens of
thousands of youths who have looked up to you as their models of successful men. How can you escape
responsibility for the crookedness which may be repeated in their lives when they shall come to
fill these high positions which you now hold? They thought that square dealing, honesty, and integrity
had been the secrets of your success, and now they see it was won by your smooth, oily,
cunning dishonesty, your ability to deceive, to cover your tracks, and to live a double life.
Who but yourselves will be responsible for the cracks in their characters which may come from
the terrible shaking of their confidence in humanity. But young men, don't lose your faith in
humanity. Don't let your fallen idol shake your faith in your fellow man, for the great
majority of people are honest. Let these terrible examples that have been recently held up to you
make you all the more determined to build your own superstructure on the eternal rock of right and justice let the man in you stand out so boldly in every transaction that the deed or task you do however great will look insignificant in comparison get what you can and keep your own good name not a penny more a dollar more than that would make your whole fortune valueless if there is a pitiful side in the world it is that of a man with executive
ability, sagacity, and foresight to make a clean fortune, yet using his energies and abilities
in making a dirty one, a fortune which denounces and condemns him and is a perpetual disgrace
to himself and his family. The right ought to thunder so loudly in a man's ears, no matter what
the business or transaction in which he is engaged, that he cannot hear the wrong or baser
suggestion. Men have two kinds of ambition. One for dollar-making, the other for life-making.
Some turn all their ability, education, health, and energy toward the first of these, dollar-making,
and call the result success. Others turn them toward the second, into character, usefulness,
helpfulness, life-making, and the world sometimes calls them failures, but history calls them
successes. No price is too great to pay for an untarnished name. The highest service you can ever
render the world, the greatest thing you can ever do, is to make yourself the largest,
completest, and squarest man possible. There is no other fame like that, no achievement like that.
End of Chapter 17. Chapter 18 of He Can Who Thinks He Can by Orison Sweat Martin. This Libra-Box
is in the public domain.
Getting away from poverty.
Those who have the misfortune to be rich men's sons
are heavily weighted in the race,
says Andrew Carnegie.
The vast majority of rich men's sons
are unable to resist the temptations
to which wealth subjects them,
and they sink to unworthy lives.
It is not from this class
that the poor beginner has rivalry to fear.
The partner's sons will never trouble you.
The poor boys. Much. But look out for some boys poorer, much poorer than yourselves,
whose parents cannot afford to give them any schooling. Do not challenge you at the post and pass you at the grandstand.
Look out for the boy who has to plunge into work directly from the common school, and who begins by sweeping out the office.
He is the probable dark horse that will take all the money and win all the applause.
The struggle to get away from poverty has been a great man developer.
Had every human being been born with a silver spoon in his mouth,
had there been no necessity put upon him to work,
the race would still be in its infancy.
Had everybody in this country been born wealthy,
ours would be one of the dark ages.
The vast resources of our land would be undeveloped.
The gold would still be in the mines,
and our great cities would still be in the forest and the quarry.
Civilization owes more to the perpetual struggle of man
to get away from poverty than to any,
else. We are so constituted that we make our greatest efforts and do our best work while
struggling to attain that for which the heart longs. It is practically impossible for most
people to make their utmost exertions without imperative necessity for it. It is the constant
necessity to improve his condition that has urged man onward and develop the stamina and
sterling character of the whole race. History abounds in stories of failures of men who started
with wealth and on the other hand it is illuminated with examples of those who owe everything to
the spur of necessity a glance at the history of our own country will show that the vast majority
of our successful men in every field were poor boys at the start benjamin frankland
alexander hamilton andrew jackson henry clay daniel webster abraham lincoln horace man
George Peabody, Ulysses S. Grant, James A. Garfield, to mention but a few of the great names of past generations, rose to distinction from an iron environment and direst poverty.
Our most useful and successful men of today have also been involved from the School of Want and Stern Necessity.
Our great merchants, railroad presidents, university presidents and professors, inventors, scientists, manufacturers, scientists, manufacturers, manufacturers, manufacturers, manufacturers, manufacturers,
Statesmen, men in every line of human activity, have for the most part been pushed forward
by the goad of necessity, and led onward by the desire to make the most of themselves.
A youth born and bred in the midst of luxury, who has always leaned upon others, who has never
been obliged to fight his way up to his own loaf, and who has been coddled from his infancy,
rarely develops great stamina or stain power.
He is like the weak sapling in the forest
compared with a giant oak which has fought every inch
of its way up from the acorn by struggling with storms and tempests.
Power is the result of force overcome.
The giant is made strong in wrestling with difficulties.
It is impossible for one who does not have to struggle
and to fight obstacles to develop fiber or stamina.
To live without trial is to die but half a man.
Strength of character is a thing which must be wrung out of obstacles overcome.
Life is a great gymnasium, and no man who sits in a chair and watches the parallel bars and other apparatus ever develops muscles or endurance.
A father, by exercising for his son while he sits down, will never develop his muscle.
The son will be a weakling until he uses the dumbbells and pulley weights himself.
How many fathers try to do the exercises for their body?
boys while they sit on soft benches or easy chairs watching the process. And still those fathers
wonder that their boys come out of the gymnasium week with as soft and flabby muscles as they
had when they entered. Isn't it strange that so many successful men who take pride in having
made themselves and consider it the most fortunate thing in the world that they were thrown upon
their own resources and were obliged to develop their independence and stamina and self-reliance
should work so hard to keep their children from having the same experience.
Isn't it strange that they should provide crutches
so that it will be all the more difficult for them to walk alone?
That they should take away the strongest possible motive for development of power
by making it unnecessary for them to strive,
by providing for every want and guarding them on all sides by wealth?
A famous artist who was asked if he thought a young man who was studying with him
would make a great painter replied,
never he has an income of six thousand pounds a year this artist knew how the great struggle
against thwarting difficulties brings out power and how hard it is to develop a strong
manly fiber in the sunshine of wealth how many young immigrants have come to this
country uneducated ignorant of our language friendless and penniless and yet have risen to
positions of distinction and wealth putting to shame tens of thousands of native-born
youths who possessed every advantage of wealth, education, and opportunity, but who have never been
heard from. I have in mind a young man of this class who came to this country a comparatively short
time ago, but who has already risen to a very important position wholly unaided. He is a remarkable
example of a self-educated, self-trained, self-disciplined man, and in the persistent process
of his development, he has evolved a very strong, positive, aggressive,
character. He has brought out his latent powers and strengthened his weaker faculties.
He has pruned out of his mentality and habits those things which would embarrass and hinder his
progress, and has gained such a strong momentum that there seems to be scarcely any limits to
what he is likely to become. His is an inspiring example of the possibilities of manhood in
America, one which explodes all excuses of the poor boy and girl who think they have absolutely
no chance to get up in the world. I am no advocate of the blessings of poverty, considered as a
finality. Poverty is of no value except as a vantage ground for a starting point. It is only good as
the apparatus in the gymnasium to develop the man. In itself it is a curse, slavery, but it is
the great thing to get away from, and it is the getting away from it, if honestly and consciously
done that calls out the man that develops the human giant we did not always see at the time that we got
incidentally on the way up from poverty was infinitely better and more precious than the thing we were
aiming for a living a competence that the development of a strong man in the mighty struggle with
necessity was a thousand times more valuable than the living the money or the property gained
Grover Cleveland, who once was a poor clerk at a salary of $50 per year,
in speaking of poverty as a developer says,
there is surely no development of mental straits
and no stimulation of the forces of true manhood
so thorough and so imperiously effective
as those produced by the combination of well-regulated ambition
with the healthful rigors of poverty.
It is the student who has to struggle hardest to obtain an education
that gets the most discipline and good out of it.
Boys who are born scholars
and who only need to read a lesson over to know it
and to be able to pass an examination upon it
do not derive half so much from their college course
as do those who have to fight hard for everything they get.
It is not, as a rule,
the youth who has a regular income
and every want supplied by indulgent parents
who make the most of his opportunities at college,
but the one who has to work his way through
who has to toil in college and out to make his expenses or else go without an education?
What would the average youth do if he were not compelled by necessity to work,
if he were not obliged to exert himself in order to get the thing he wants?
If he already has all he wants, why should he struggle for more?
Not one in ten thousand would go through the struggle with poverty,
the wrestling with necessity, just to produce character and make himself a strong,
stronger man. But he would do it for selfish reasons, to satisfy his ambition and get that which
he longs for himself and those he loves. I am not wasting my sympathy on the children of the poor,
says U.S. Senator J.P. Dulliver, once a poor boy himself. What little sympathy I have I will give
to the children of the rich. If you have $100,000 and give it to a boy to start him out in life,
he doesn't start. I suggest keeping that hundred thousand.
and that boy apart. It will be better for the boy. The cabin where Abraham Lincoln was born
did not shelter the childhood of a king. But something better than a king, a man. The boy, who is conscious
that he has a fortune awaiting him, says to himself, what is the use of getting up early in the
morning and working one's life out? I have money enough coming to me to take care of me as long as I live.
So he turns over and takes another nap,
while the boy who has nothing in the world
but his own self to depend upon
feels the spur of necessity forcing him out of bed in the morning.
He knows there's no other way open for him
but the way of struggle.
He has nobody to lean on, nobody to help him.
He knows that it is a question
either of being a nobody
or getting up and hustling for dear life.
Thus, shrewd nature,
in making man get that
which he wants most by the way of necessity,
brings about her great ends of civilization and character development of the race.
The money, the property, the position or small things in comparison with the man she's after.
What price will nature not pay for a man?
She will put him through the hardest school of discipline
and train him for years in the great university of experience in order to perfect her work.
The mere money or property the man gets on the way is only in the same.
incidental. Nature is after the man. She does not care a fig for the money in comparison,
but she will pay any price for a human giant. End of Chapter 18. End of He Can Who Thinks
He Can by Orson Sweat Marden.
