Self-reliance.
Of all the elements of success, none is more essential than
self-reliance, determination to be one's own helper, and not to look to others
for support. God never intended that strong independent beings should be reared
by clinging to others, like the ivy to the oak, for support.
"God helps those who help themselves," and how true we find this quaint old
saying to be. Every youth should feel that his future happiness in life must
necessarily depend upon himself; the exercise of his own energies, rather than
the patronage of others. A man is in a great degree the arbiter of his own
fortune. We are born with powers and faculties capable of almost anything, but
it is the exercise of these powers and faculties that gives us ability and skill
in anything. The greatest curse that can befall a young man is to lean, while
his character is forming, upon others for support.[489]
a href="http://xtramoney4me.net/success_book/hidden-treasure/james-a-garfield.html">James A. Garfield, himself one of the greatest examples of the possibilities
in our glorious Republic, once said:
"The man who dares not follow his own independent judgment, but runs
perpetually to others for advice, becomes at last a moral weakling, and an
intellectual dwarf. Such a man has not self within him, but goes as a supplicant
to others, and entreats, one after another, to lend them theirs. He is, in fact,
a mere element of a human being, and is carried about the world an insignificant
cipher, unless he by chance fastens himself to some other floating elements,
with which he may form a species of corporation resembling a man." The best
capital with which a young man can start in life, nine times out of ten, is
robust health, good morals, fair ability and an iron will, strengthened by a
disposition to work at some honest vocation.
We have seen in the preceding pages that a vast majority of our great men
started life with these qualifications and none other. The greatest heroes in
battle, the greatest orators, ancient or modern, were sons of obscure parents.
The greatest fortunes ever accumulated on earth were the fruit of great
exertion. From Croesus down to Astor the story is the same. The oak that stands
alone to contend with the tempest's blast only takes deeper root and stands the
firmer for ensuing conflicts; while the forest tree, when the woodman's axe has
spoiled its surroundings, sways and bends and trembles, and perchance is
uprooted: so is it with man. Those who are trained to self-reliance are ready to
go out and contend in the sternest battles of life; while those who have always
leaned for support upon those around[490]
them are never prepared to breast the storms of life that arise.
How many young men falter and faint for what they imagine is necessary
capital for a start. A few thousands or even hundreds, in his purse, he fancies
to be about the only thing needful to secure his fortune. How absurd is this;
let the young man know now, that he is unworthy of success so long as he harbors
such ideas. No man can gain true success, no matter how situated, unless he
depends upon no one but himself; remember that. Does not history bear us out in
this? We remember the adage, "Few boys who are born with a silver spoon in their
mouth ever achieve greatness." By this we would not argue that wealth is
necessarily derogatory to the success of youth; to the contrary, we believe it
can be a great help in certain cases and conditions; but we have long since
discarded the idea that early wealth is a pre-eminent factor in success; if we
should give our unbiased opinion, we should say that, to a vast majority of
cases, it is a pre-eminent factor of failure. Give a youth wealth, and you only
too often destroy all self-reliance which he may possess.
Let that young man rejoice, rather, whom God hath given health and a faculty
to exercise his faculties. The best kind of success is not that which comes by
accident, for as it came by chance it will go by chance. The wisest charity, in
a vast majority of cases, is helping people to help themselves. Necessity is
very often the motive power which sets in motion the sluggish energies. We thus
readily see that poverty can be an absolute blessing to youth. A man's true
position in the world is that which he himself attains.
How detestable to us is the Briton's reverence of [491]pedigree. Americans reverence
achievement, and yet we are tending towards the opposite. Witness society, as it
bows with smile and honor to the eight-dollar clerk, while frowning on the
eighteen dollar laborer. This is wrong; work is work, and all work is honorable.
It is not only wrong, but disgraceful. It is better to make our ancestry proud
of us than to be proud of our ancestors. He is a man for what he does, not for
what his father or his friends have done. If they have given him a position, the
greater is his shame for sinking beneath that position. The person who is above
labor or despises the laborer, is himself one of the most despicable creatures
on God's earth. He not only displays a dull intelligence of those nobler
inspirations with which God has endowed us, but he even shows a lack of plain
common sense.
The noblest thing in this world is work. Wise labor brings order out of
chaos; it builds cities; it distinguishes barbarism from civilization; it
brings success. No man has a right to a fortune; he has no right to expect
success, unless he is willing to work for it. A brother of the great orator,
Edmund Burke, after listening to one of those eloquent appeals in Parliament,
being noticed as employed in deep thought, was asked of whom he was musing. He
replied: "I have been wondering how Ned contrived to monopolize all the talent
in the family; but I remember that all through childhood, while we were at play,
he was at study."
Ah! that's it. The education, moral or intellectual, must be chiefly his own
work. Education is education, no matter how obtained. We do not wish to be
understood as depreciating the usefulness of colleges; not at all. But a mere
college diploma will avail a young[492]
man but little. As before stated, education, no matter how obtained, is equally
valuable. Study like that of Webster and Greeley, by New Hampshire pine knots,
and that of Thurlow Weed before the sap-house fire, is just as valuable, when
once obtained, as if it had the sanction of some college president.
The world will only ask, "What can he do?" and will not care a fig for any
college certificate. The point is; if a young man be not endowed by
self-reliance and a firm determination, colleges will avail him nothing; but if
he have these, colleges will push him wonderfully. Nevertheless, colleges are
not essential to success—an educated idiot will never make a statesman. It is
said that when John C. Calhoun was attending Yale College he was ridiculed for
his intense application to his studies. He replied, "Why, sir, I am forced to
make the most of my time, that I may acquit myself creditably when in Congress."
A laugh followed which roused his Southern blood, and he exclaimed: "Do you
doubt it? I assure you that if I was not convinced of my ability to reach the
National Capitol as a representative within three years from my graduation, I
would leave college this very day." While there are some things in this speech
that were possibly unbecoming; yet the principle of self-reliance, this faith in
himself, this high aim in life, was undoubtedly the marked characteristic which
brought to Calhoun his splendid success.
No young man will ever succeed who will not cultivate a thinking mind. If he
is not original in aims and purposes he will not succeed. Witness the attempt of
others to continue the business of Stewart. They had not only his experience,
but the benefit of his great wealth; he succeeded without either—they failed
with[493]
both; he was obliged to establish a business—they had the benefit of his great
patronage.
It has been said that a lawyer cannot be a merchant. Why? While a lawyer he
thinks for himself: When a merchant he allows others to think for him. A certain
great manufacturer made "kid" gloves his specialty, and so well did he succeed
that to-day his trade mark imports to manufactured ratskins a value
incommunicable by any other talisman. It is a poor kind of enterprise which thus
depends upon the judgment of others. What can be more absurd than for a man to
hope to rank as a thundering Jupiter when he borrows all his thunder. Remember
that the world only crowns him as truly great who has won for himself that
greatness.