to Get on in the World, by Major
A.R. Calhoon
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Title: How to Get on in the World A Ladder to Practical Success
Author: Major A.R. Calhoon
Release Date: February 16, 2007 [EBook #20608]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW TO
GET ON IN THE WORLD ***
Produced by Theresa Yarkoni
HOW TO GET ON IN THE WORLD; or, A LADDER TO
PRACTICAL SUCCESS.
[pic]
by MAJOR A. R. CALHOUN.
PUBLISHED BY THE CHRISTIAN HERALD, Louis KLOPSCH,
Proprietor, BIBLE HOUSE, NEW YORK.
Copyright 1895, BY LOUIS KLOPSCH.
PRESS AND BINDERY OF HISTORICAL PUBLISHING CO.,
PHILADELPHIA.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
I. What is Success?
II. The Importance of Character
III. Home Influences
IV. Association
V. Courage and Determined Effort
VI. The Importance of Correct Habits
VII. As to Marriage
VIII. Education as Distinguished from Learning
IX The Value of Experience
X. Selecting a Calling
XI. We Must Help Ourselves
XII. Successful Farming
XIII. As to Public Life
XIV. The Need of Constant Effort
XV. Some of Labor's Compensations
XVI. Patience and Perseverance
XVII. Success but Seldom Accidental
XVIII. Cultivate Observation and Judgment
XIX. Singleness of Purpose
XX. Business and Brains
XXI. Put Money in Thy Purse Honestly
XXII. A Sound Mind in a Sound Body
XXIII. Labor Creates the Only True Nobility
XXIV. The Successful Man is Self-Made
XXV. Unselfishness and Helpfulness
HOW TO GET ON IN THE WORLD
CHAPTER I
WHAT IS SUCCESS?
It has been said that "Nothing Succeeds Like Success." What is Success?
If we consult the dictionaries, they will give us the etymology of this
much used word, and in general terms the meaning will be "the
accomplishment of a purpose." But as the objects in nearly every life
differ, so success cannot mean the same thing to all men.
The artist's idea of success is very different from that of the business
man, and the scientist differs from both, as does the statesman from all
three. We read of successful gamblers, burglars or freebooters, but no
true success was ever won or ever can be won that sets at defiance the
laws of God and man.
To win, so that we ourselves and the world shall be the better for our
having lived, we must begin the struggle, with a high purpose, keeping
ever before our minds the characters and methods of the noble men
who have succeeded along the same lines.
The young man beginning the battle of life should never lose sight of
the fact that the age of fierce competition is upon us, and that this
competition must, in the nature of things, become more and more
intense. Success grows less and less dependent on luck and chance.
Preparation for the chosen field of effort, an industry that increasing, a
hope that never flags, a patience that never grows weary, a courage that
never wavers, all these, and a trust in God, are the prime requisites of
the man who would win in this age of specialists and untiring activity.
The purpose of this work is not to stimulate genius, for genius is law
unto itself, and finds its compensation in its own original productions.
Genius has benefited the world, without doubt, but too often its life
compensation has been a crust and a garret. After death, in not a few
cases, the burial was through charity of friends, and this can hardly be
called an adequate compensation, for the memorial tablet or monument
that commemorates a life of privation, if not of absolute wretchedness.
It is, perhaps, as well for the world that genius is phenomenal; it is
certainly well for the world that success is not dependent on it, and that
every young man, and young woman too, blessed with good health and
a mind capable of education, and principles that are true and abiding,
can win the highest positions in public and private life, and dying leave
behind a heritage for their children, and an example for all who would
prosper along the same lines. And all this with the blessed assurance of
hearing at last the Master's words: "Well done, good and faithful
servant!"
"Whatever your hand finds to do, do with all your might." There is a
manly ring in this fine injunction, that stirs like a bugle blast. "But what
can my hands find to do? How can I win? Who will tell me the work
for which I am best fitted? Where
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