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- Acres Of Diamonds By Russell Conwell
- Orison Swett Marden
- How to Succeed, (Table Of Contents) by Orison Swett Marden
- Chapter 2 Seize Your Opportunity
- Chapter 1 First, Be A Man
- Chapter 3 How Did He Begin
- Chapter 4 Out Of Place
- Chapter 5 What Shall I Do?
- Chapter 6 Will You Pay The Price
- Chapter 7 Foundation Stones
- Chapter 8 The Conquest Of Obstacles
- Chapter 9 Dead In Earnest
- Chapter 10 To Be Great, Concentrate
- Chapter 11 At Once!
- Chapter 12 Thoroughness
- Chapter 13 Trifles
- Chapter 14 Courage
- Chapter 15 Will Power
- Chapter 16 Guard Your Weak Point
- Chapter 17 Stick
- Chapter 18 Save
- Chapter 19 Live Upward
- Chapter 20 Sand
- Chapter 21 Above Rubies
- Chapter 22 Moral Sunshine
- Chapter 23 Hold Up Your Head
- Chapter 24 Books And Success
- Chapter 25 Riches Without Wings
- Pushing to the Front (Table of Contents) by Orison Swett Marden
- Chapter 66 Rich Without Money
- Chapter 65 Why Some Succeed and Others Fail
- Chapter 65 Reading A Spur To Ambition
- Chapter 63 Discrimination In Reading
- Forward
- Chapter 1 The Man and the opportunity
- Chapter 2 Wanted – A Man
- Chapter 3 Boys With No Chance
- Chapter 4 The Country Boy
- Chapter 5 Opportunities Where You Are
- Chapter 6 Possibilities In Spare Moments
- Chapter 7 How Poor Boys and Girls Go to College
- Chapter 8 Your Opportunity Confronts you – What Will You Do With It?
- Chapter 9 Round Boys In Square Holes
- Chapter 10 What Career?
- Chapter 11 Choosing A Vocation
- Chapter 12 Concentrated Energy
- Chapter 13 The Triumphs Of Enthusiasm
- Chapter 14 On Time or The Triumph Of Promptness
- Chapter 15 – What A Good Appearance Will Do
- Chapter 16 Personality As A Success Asset
- Chapter 17 If You Can Talk Well
- Chapter 18 A Good Fortune In Manners
- Chapter 19 Self-consciousness and Timidity Foes To Success
- Chapter 20 Tact or Common Sense
- Chapter 21 Enamoured Of Accuracy
- Chapter 22 Do It To A Finish
- Chapter 23 The Reward For Persistence
- Chapter 24 Nerve – Grip, Pluck
- Chapter 25 Clear Grit
- Chapter 26 Success Under Difficulties
- Chapter 27 Uses Of Obstacles
- Chapter 28 Decision
- Chapter 29 Observation AS A Success Factor
- Chapter 30 Self-help
- Chapter 32 Raising Of Values
- Chapter 31 The Self-Improvement Habit
- Chapter 34 The Triumphs Of The Common Virtues
- Chapter 35 Getting Aroused
- Chapter 33 Self-Improvement Through Public Speaking
- Chapter 36 The Man With An Idea
- CHapter 37 Dare
- Chapter 38 the Will And The Way
- Chapter 34 One Unwavering Aim
- Chapter 41 The Might Of Little Things
- Chapter 40 Work And Wait
- Chapter 43 Expect Great Things Of Yourself
- Chapter 42 The Salary You Do Not Find In Your Pay Envelope
- Chapter 45 Stand For Something
- Chapter 44 The Next Time You Think You Are A Failure
- Chapter 46 Nature’s Little Bill
- CHapter 47 Habit – The Servant – The Master
- Chapter 49 The Power Of Purity
- Chapter 48 The Cigarette
- Chapter 51 Put Beauty Into Your Life
- Chapter 50 The Habit Of Happiness
- Chapter 52 Education By Absorption
- Chapter 53 The Power Of Suggestion
- Chapter 54 The Curse Of Worry
- Chapter 55 Take A Pleasant Thought To Bed With You
- Chapter 56 The Conquest Of Poverty
- Chapter 58 The Home As A School Of Good Manners
- Chapter 57 A New Way Of Bringing Up Children
- Chapter 60 Why So Many Married Women Deteriorate
- Chapter 59 Mother
- Chapter 62 A College Education At Home
- Chapter 61 Thrift
- How to Succeed, (Table Of Contents) by Orison Swett Marden
- Napoleon Hill
- How to overcome failure and achieve success
- The Law Of Success
- The Sixth Step
- A Sound Plan
- Planning the sale of services
- The 11 major attributes of leadership
- Leadership by consent – or by force
- The 10 major causes of failure in leadership
- Where Is “new leadership” required
- When and how to apply for a position
- How to get the exact position you desire
- Marketing services “jobs” are now “partnerships”
- What is your “QQS” rating?
- The capital value of your services
- The 30 major causes of failure
- 28 questions you should answer
- Rendering Services To Accumulate Riches
- Opportunity
- Earl Nightingale
- Wallace D. Wattles
- Elbert Hubbard
- A Message To Garcia by Elbert Hubbard
- Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great Businessmen, Volume 11 (of 14), by Elbert Hubbard
- Robert Owen – A famous Successful businessmen biography By Elbert hubbard
- James Oliver – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- Stephen Girad – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- Mayer A. Rothschild – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- Philip D. Armour – A Famous Businessmen Biography By Elbert Hubbard
- John Jacob Astor – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- Peter Cooper – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- Andrew Carnegie – A famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- George Peabody – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- A. T. Stewart – A Famous Businessmen Biography by Elbert Hubbard
- H.H. Rogers – A famous businessmen biography by Elbert Hubbard
- James Jerome Hill – A Famous businessmen biography by Elbert Hubbard
- P.T Barnum
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Theron Q. Dumont
- The Power of Concentration by Theron Q. Dumont
- LESSON 1. CONCENTRATION FINDS THE WAY
- INTRODUCTORY – The Power of Concentration by Theron Q. Dumont
- LESSON 2. THE SELF-MASTERY. SELF-DIRECTION POWER OF CONCENTRATION
- LESSON 3. HOW TO GAIN WHAT YOU WANT THROUGH CONCENTRATION
- LESSON 4. CONCENTRATION, THE SILENT FORCE THAT PRODUCES RESULTS IN ALL BUSINESS.
- LESSON 5. HOW CONCENTRATED THOUGHT LINKS ALL HUMANITY TOGETHER
- LESSON 6. THE TRAINING OF THE WILL TO DO
- LESSON 7. THE CONCENTRATED MENTAL DEMAND
- LESSON 8. CONCENTRATION GIVES MENTAL POISE
- LESSON 9. CONCENTRATION CAN OVERCOME BAD HABITS.
- LESSON 10. BUSINESS RESULTS GAINED THROUGH CONCENTRATION
- LESSON 11. CONCENTRATE ON COURAGE
- LESSON 12. CONCENTRATE ON WEALTH
- LESSON 13. YOU CAN CONCENTRATE, BUT WILL YOU?
- LESSON 14. ART OF CONCENTRATING WITH 19 PRACTICAL EXERCISEs
- LESSON 15. CONCENTRATE SO YOU WILL NOT FORGET
- LESSON 16. HOW CONCENTRATION CAN FULFILL YOUR DESIRE.
- LESSON 17. IDEALS DEVELOP BY CONCENTRATION
- LESSON 18. MENTAL CONTROL THROUGH CREATION
- LESSON 19. A CONCENTRATED WILL DEVELOPMENT
- LESSON 20. CONCENTRATION REVIEWED
- The Power of Concentration by Theron Q. Dumont
- Modern Authors
- Brian Tracy
- Planning Your Year By Brian Tracy
- Three Factors for Financial Success – By Brian Tracy
- Make Every Minute Count By Brian Tracy
- The ABCDE Method for Setting Priorities By Brian Tracy
- The Winning Edge by Brian Tracy
- The Five A’s of Secret of Charm by Brian Tracy
- Making Course Corrections by Brian Tracy
- The Current Best Brian Tracy Deal!
- Persuading Others By Brian Tracy
- How to become a Master Of Persuasion
- Your Major Definite Purpose by Brian Tracy
- How To Write A Book by Brian Tracy
- Nine Objections You Must Answer by Brian Tracy
- Yanik Silver
- 7 Hidden Psychological Secrets to MAXIMUM Sales
- 14 Point Web Copy Analysis Of A Winning Web site
- How to use the Power of the World’s Easiest and Most Effective Headline Format to Turbo Charge Your Business by Yanik Silver
- Three Inner Secrets of Internet Success by Yanik Silver
- 3 Overlooked Profit Opportunities on Your Site By Yanik Silver
- Are You Carrying Buckets? By Yanik Silver
- How to Sell High Priced Products Online and Offline By Yanik Silver
- When Is Your Independence Day? By Yanik Silver
- The Little Known Marketing Secret Weapon That’s Free For The Taking By Yanik Silver
- Italian Persuasion and Sales Secrets By Yanik Silver
- How to Make This Year Your Best Year Ever By Yanik Silver
- Why Working Hard Is Not Enough By Yanik Silver
- A Good Title Is A Work of Genius By Yanik Silver
- How To Use Testing For Breakthrough Marketing Results By Yanik Silver
- An Analysis of A Winning Sales Letter By Yanik Silver
- How To Skyrocket Your Sales and Crush Your Competition Even if They Sell the Exact Same Thing You Do By Yanik Silver
- How To Create Powerful Offers That Drive Your Sales Through the Roof By Yanik Silver
- Creating True “Win-Win” Joint Ventures Online By Yanik Silver
- How to Create a Profit Windfall When Launching a New Product By Yanik Silver
- Underground Affiliate Marketing Technique By Yanik Silver
- 12 Steps to Creating a Business Online – by Jim Edwards
- Ken Evoy
- Jim Rohn
- Lydia’s List – NINE THINGS MORE IMPORTANT THAN CAPITAL by Jim Rohn
- Ending Procrastination by Jim Rohn
- Ambitiously Pursuing Your Own Self-Direction by Jim Rohn
- You are a Genius – Unlocking the Power of the Mind by Jim Rohn
- Maintaining Honesty and Integrity by Jim Rohn
- S.M.A.R.T. Goals by Jim Rohn
- Personal Development – The Plan by Jim Rohn
- Preparation for Your Presentations by Jim Rohn
- The Formula for Failure and Success by Jim Rohn
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Chapter 19 Live Upward
"Do what thou dost as if the stake were heaven,
And this thy last deed ere the judgment day."
If you wish to reach the highest begin at the lowest.
—Publius Syrus.
What is a man,
If his chief good, and market of his time,
Be but to sleep, and feed? A beast, no more.
Sure He, that made us with such large discourse,
Looking before, and after, gave us not
That capability and godlike Reason
To rust in us unused.
—Shakespeare.
Ambition is the spur that makes man struggle with destiny. It is heaven’s own incentive to make purpose great and achievement greater. —Anonymous.
"Not failure, but low aim, is crime."
"Endeavor to be first in thy calling, whatever it
may be; neither let anyone go before thee in well
doing."
O may I join the choir invisible
Of those immortal dead who live again
In minds made better by their presence; live
In pulses stirred to generosity,
In deeds of daring rectitude, in scorn
For miserable aims that end with self,
In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars,
And with their mild persistence urge man’s search
To vaster issues.
—George Eliot.
"Alexander, Cæsar, Charlemagne and myself have founded empires," said Napoleon to Montholon at St. Helena; "but upon what did we rest the creations of our genius? Upon force. Jesus Christ alone founded his empire on love, and at this moment millions of men would die for Him. I die before my time and my body will be given back to worms. Such is the fate of him who has been called the great Napoleon. What an abyss between my deep misery and the eternal kingdom of Christ, which is proclaimed, loved and adored, and which is extended over the whole earth. Call you this dying? Is it not rather living? The death of Christ is the death of a God."
"No true man can live a half life," says Phillips Brooks, "when he has genuinely learned that it is a half life. The other half, the higher half, must haunt him."
"Ideality," says Horace Mann, "is only the avant courier of the mind; and where that in a healthy and normal state goes I hold it to be a prophecy that realization can follow."
"If the certainty of future fame bore Milton rejoicing through his blindness, or cheered Galileo in his dungeon," writes Bulwer, "what stronger and holier support shall not be given to him who has loved mankind as his brothers and devoted his labors to their cause?—who has not sought, but relinquished, his own renown?—who has braved the present censures of men for their future benefit, and trampled upon glory in the energy of benevolence? Will there not be for him something more powerful than fame to comfort his sufferings and to sustain his hopes?"
"If I live," wrote Rufus Choate in his diary in September, 1844, "all blockheads which are shaken at certain mental peculiarities shall know and feel a reasoner, a lawyer and a man of business."
I have read that none of the humbler races have the muscle by which man turns his eye upward, though I am not anatomist enough to be sure of the fact.
"Show me a contented slave," says Burke, "and I will show you a degraded man."
"They truly are faithful," says one writer, "who devote their entire lives to amendment."
General Grant said of the Chinese Wall: "I believe that the labor expended on this wall could have built every railroad in the United States, every canal and highway, and most, if not all, our cities."
"The real benefactors of mankind," says Emerson, "are the men and women who can raise their fellow beings out of the world of corn and money, who make them forget their bank account by interesting them in their higher selves; who can raise mere money-getters into the intellectual realm, where they will cease to measure greatness and happiness by dollars and cents; who can make men forget their stomachs and feast on being’s banquet."
"Men are not so much mistaken in desiring to advance themselves," said Beecher, "as in judging what will be an advance, and what the right method of obtaining it. An ambition which has conscience in it will always be a laborious and faithful engineer, and will build the road and bridge the chasms between itself and eminent success by the most faithful and minute performances of duty. The liberty to go higher than we are is given only when we have fulfilled amply the duty of our present sphere. Thus men are to rise upon their performances and not upon their discontent. And this is the secret and golden meaning of the command to be content in whatever sphere we are placed. It is not to be the content of indifference, of indolence, of unambitious stupidity, but the content of industrious fidelity. When men are building the foundations of vast structures they must needs labour far below the surface, and in disagreeable conditions. But every course of stone which they lay raises them higher; and at length, when they reach the surface, they have laid such solid work under them that they need not fear now to carry up their walls, through towering stories, till they overlook the whole neighbourhood. A man proves himself fit to go higher who shows that he is faithful where he is. A man that will not do well in his present place, because he longs to be higher, is fit neither to be where he is nor yet above it; he is already too high and should be put lower."
Do that which is assigned thee and thou canst not hope too much, or dare too much. What a man does, that he has. In himself is his might. Don’t waste life on doubts and fears. Spend yourself on the work before you, well assured that the performance of this hour’s duties will be the best preparation for the hours or ages that follow it.
Tradition says that when Solomon received the gift of an emerald vase from the Queen of Sheba he filled it with an elixir which he only knew how to prepare, one drop of which would prolong life indefinitely. A dying criminal begged for a drop of the precious fluid, but Solomon refused to prolong a wicked life. When good men asked for it they were refused, or failed to obtain it when promised, as the king would forget or prefer not to open the vase to get but a single drop. When at last the king became ill, and bade his servants bring the vase, he found that the contents had all evaporated. So it is often with our hope, our faith, our ambition, our aspiration.
A man cannot aspire if he looks down. God has not created us with aspirations and longings for heights to which we cannot climb. Live upward. The unattained still beckons us toward the summit of life’s mountains, into the atmosphere where great souls live and breathe and have their being. Even hope is but a promise of the possibility of its own fulfillment. Life should be lived in earnest. It is no idle game, no farce to amuse and be forgotten. It is a stern reality, fuller of duties than the sky of stars. You cannot have too much of that yearning which we call aspiration, for, even though you do not attain your ideal, the efforts you make will bring nothing but blessing; while he who fails of attaining mere worldly goals is too often eaten up with the canker-worm of disappointed ambition. To all will come a time when the love of glory will be seen to be but a splendid delusion, riches empty, rank vain, power dependent, and all outward advantages without inward peace a mere mockery of wretchedness. The wisest men have taken care to uproot selfish ambition from their breasts. Shakespeare considered it so near a vice as to need extenuating circumstances to make it a virtue.
Who has not noticed the power of love in an awkward, crabbed, shiftless, lazy man? He becomes gentle, chaste in language, energetic. Love brings out the poetry in him. It is only an idea, a sentiment, and yet what magic it has wrought. Nothing we can see has touched the man, yet he is entirely transformed.
Not less does ambition completely transform a human being, for a woman thirsting for fame can work where a man equally resolute would faint. He despises ease and sloth, welcomes toil and hardship, and shakes even kingdoms to gratify his master passion. Mere ambition has impelled many a man to a life of eminence and usefulness; its higher manifestation, aspiration, has led him beyond the stars. If the aim be right the life in its details cannot be far wrong. Your heart must inspire what your hands execute, or the work will be poorly done. The hand cannot reach higher than does the heart.
But do not strive to reach impossible goals. It is wholly in your power to develop yourself, but not necessarily so to make yourself a king. How many Presidents of the United States or Prime Ministers of England are chosen within the working lifetime of a man? What if a thousand young men resolve to become President or Prime Minister? While such prizes are within your reach, remember that your will must be tremendous and your qualifications of the highest order, or you cannot hope to secure them. Too many are deluded by ambition beyond their power of attainment, or tortured by aspirations totally disproportionate to their capacity for execution. You may, indeed, confidently hope to become eminent in usefulness and power, but only as you build upon a broad foundation of self-culture; while, as a rule, specialists in ambition as in science are apt to become narrow and one-sided. Darwin was very fond of poetry and music when young, but after devoting his life to science, he was surprised to find Shakespeare tedious. He said that, if he were to live his life again, he would read poetry and hear music every day, so as not to lose the power of appreciating such things.
God asks no man whether he will accept life. That is not the choice. You must take it. The only choice is how.
"When I found I was black," said Dumas, "I resolved to live as if I were white, and so force men to look below my skin."
In the collection of the Massachusetts Historical Society is a prospectus used by Longfellow in canvassing, on one of the blank leaves of which are the skeleton stanzas of "Excelsior," which he was evidently evolving as he trudged from house to house.
"Disregarding the honors that most men value and looking to the truth," said Plato, "I shall endeavor in reality to live as virtuously as I can; and, when I die, to die so. And I invite all other men to the utmost of my power; and you, too, I invite to this contest, which, I affirm, surpasses all contests here."
"Did you ever hear of a man who had striven all his life faithfully and singly toward an object, and in no measure obtained it?" asked Thoreau. "If a man constantly aspires, is he not elevated? Did ever a man try heroism, magnanimity, truth, sincerity, and find that there was no advantage in them,—that it was a vain endeavor?"
"O if the stone can only have some vision of the temple of which it is to be a part forever," exclaimed Phillips Brooks, "what patience must fill it as it feels the blows of the hammer, and knows that success for it is simply to let itself be wrought into what shape the master wills."
Man never reaches heights above his habitual thought. It is not enough now and then to mount on wings of ecstasy into the infinite. We must habitually dwell there. The great man is he who abides easily on heights to which others rise occasionally and with difficulty. Don’t let the maxims of a low prudence daily dinned into your ears lower the tone of your high ambition or check your aspirations. Hope lifts us step by step up the mysterious ladder, the top of which no eye hath ever seen. Though we do not find what hope promised, yet we are stronger for the climbing, and we get a broader outlook upon life which repays the effort. Indeed, if we do not follow where hope beckons, we gradually slide down the ladder in despair. Strive ever to be at the top of your condition. A high standard is absolutely necessary.
This article is part of the Marketing Yourself skills taught in Success Through Balance. You can read more about becoming successful through a balanced life here. You can read more about the Marketing Yourself skills here.
All The Articles In This Theme
- Chapter 25 Riches Without Wings
- Chapter 24 Books And Success
- Chapter 23 Hold Up Your Head
- Chapter 22 Moral Sunshine
- Chapter 21 Above Rubies
- Chapter 20 Sand
- Chapter 19 Live Upward (This post)
- Chapter 18 Save
- Chapter 17 Stick
- Chapter 16 Guard Your Weak Point
- Chapter 15 Will Power
- Chapter 14 Courage
- Chapter 13 Trifles
- Chapter 12 Thoroughness
- Chapter 11 At Once!
- Chapter 10 To Be Great, Concentrate
- Chapter 9 Dead In Earnest
- Chapter 8 The Conquest Of Obstacles
- Chapter 7 Foundation Stones
- Chapter 6 Will You Pay The Price
- Chapter 5 What Shall I Do?
- Chapter 4 Out Of Place
- Chapter 3 How Did He Begin
- Chapter 1 First, Be A Man
- Chapter 2 Seize Your Opportunity
- How to Succeed, (Table Of Contents) by Orison Swett Marden
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