THE RULERS OF DESTINY.
There is no chance,
no destiny, no fate,
Can circumvent,
or hinder, or control
The firm
resolve of a determined soul.
Gifts count for nothing;
will alone is great;
All things give way
before it soon or late.
What obstacle
can stay the mighty force
Of the sea-seeking
river in its course,
Or cause the ascending
orb of day to wait?
Each well-born
soul must win what it deserves.
Let the fool prate of
luck. The fortunate
Is he whose
earnest purpose never swerves,
Whose slightest
action or inaction serves
The one great
aim.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
There is always room for a man of force. Emerson.
The king is the man who can. Carlyle.
A strong, defiant purpose is many-handed,
and lays hold of whatever is near that can serve it;
it has a magnetic power that draws to itself whatever
is kindred. T.T. Munger.
What is will-power, looked at in a
large way, but energy of character? Energy of
will, self-originating force, is the soul of every
great character. Where it is, there is life;
where it is not, there is faintness, helplessness,
and despondency. “Let it be your first study
to teach the world that you are not wood and straw;
that there is some iron in you.” Men who
have left their mark upon the world have been men of
great and prompt decision. The achievements of
will-power are almost beyond computation. Scarcely
anything seems impossible to the man who can will
strongly enough and long enough. One talent with
a will behind it will accomplish more than ten without
it, as a thimbleful of powder in a rifle, the bore
of whose barrel will give it direction, will do greater
execution than a carload burned in the open air.
“The wills, the won’ts,
and the can’ts.”
“There are three kinds of people
in the world,” says a recent writer, “the
wills, the won’ts, and the can’ts.
The first accomplish everything; the second oppose
everything; the third fail in everything.”
The shores of fortune, as Foster says,
are covered with the stranded wrecks of men of brilliant
ability, but who have wanted courage, faith, and decision,
and have therefore perished in sight of more resolute
but less capable adventurers, who succeeded in making
port.
Were I called upon to express in a
word the secret of so many failures among those who
started out with high hopes, I should say they lacked
will-power. They could not half will: and
what is a man without a will? He is like an engine
without steam. Genius unexecuted is no more genius
than a bushel of acorns is a forest of oaks.
Will has been called the spinal column
of personality. “The will in its relation
to life,” says an English writer, “may
be compared at once to the rudder and to the steam
engine of a vessel, on the confined and related action
of which it depends entirely for the direction of its
course and the vigor of its movement.”
Strength of will is the test of a
young man’s possibilities. Can he will
strong enough, and hold whatever he undertakes with
an iron grip? It is the iron grip that takes
and holds. What chance is there in this crowding,
pushing, selfish, greedy world, where everything is
pusher or pushed, for a young man with no will, no
grip on life? The man who would forge to the
front in this competitive age must be a man of prompt
and determined decision.
A TAILOR’S NEEDLE.
It is in one of Ben Jonson’s
old plays: “When I once take the humor of
a thing, I am like your tailor’s needle I
go through with it.”
This is not different from Richelieu,
who said: “When I have once taken a resolution,
I go straight to my aim; I overthrow all, I cut down
all.”
And in business affairs the counsel
of Rothschild is to the same effect: “Do
without fail that which you determine to do.”
Gladstone’s children were taught
to accomplish to the end whatever they might
begin, no matter how insignificant the undertaking
might be.
WHAT IS WORSE THAN RASHNESS
It is irresolution that is worse than
rashness. “He that shoots,” says
Feltham, “may sometimes hit the mark; but he
that shoots not at all can never hit it. Irresolution
is like an ague; it shakes not this nor that limb,
but all the body is at once in a fit.”
The man who is forever twisting and
turning, backing and filling, hesitating and dawdling,
shuffling and parleying, weighing and balancing, splitting
hairs over non-essentials, listening to every new
motive which presents itself, will never accomplish
anything. But the positive man, the decided man,
is a power in the world, and stands for something;
you can measure him, and estimate the work that his
energy will accomplish.
Opportunity is coy, is swift, is gone,
before the slow, the unobservant, the indolent, or
the careless can seize her. “Vigilance in
watching opportunity,” said Phelps, “tact
and daring in seizing upon opportunity; force and
persistence in crowding opportunity to its utmost of
possible achievement these are the martial
virtues which must command success.” “The
best men,” remarked Chapin, “are not those
who have waited for chances, but who have taken them;
besieged the chance; conquered the chance; and made
chance the servitor.”
Is it not possible to classify successes
and failures by their various degrees of will-power?
A man who can resolve vigorously upon a course of
action, and turns neither to the right nor to the left,
though a paradise tempt him, who keeps his eyes upon
the goal, whatever distracts him, is sure of success.
“Not every vessel that sails
from Tarshish will bring back the gold of Ophir.
But shall it therefore rot in the harbor? No!
Give its sails to the wind!”
CONSCIOUS POWER.
“Conscious power,” says
Melles, “exists within the mind of every one.
Sometimes its existence is unrealized, but it is there.
It is there to be developed and brought forth, like
the culture of that obstinate but beautiful flower,
the orchid. To allow it to remain dormant is to
place one’s self in obscurity, to trample on
one’s ambition, to smother one’s faculties.
To develop it is to individualize all that is best
within you, and give it to the world. It is by
an absolute knowledge of yourself, the proper estimate
of your own value.”
“There is hardly a reader,”
says an experienced educator, “who will not
be able to recall the early life of at least one young
man whose childhood was spent in poverty, and who,
in boyhood, expressed a firm desire to secure a higher
education. If, a little later, that desire became
a declared resolve, soon the avenues opened to that
end. That desire and resolve created an atmosphere
which attracted the forces necessary to the attainment
of the purpose. Many of these young men will
tell us that, as long as they were hoping and striving
and longing, mountains of difficulty rose before them;
but that when they fashioned their hopes into fixed
purposes aid came unsought to help them on the way.”
DO YOU BELIEVE IN YOURSELF?
The man without self-reliance and
an iron will is the plaything of chance, the puppet
of his environment, the slave of circumstances.
Are not doubts the greatest of enemies? If you
would succeed up to the limit of your possibilities,
must you not constantly hold to the belief that you
are success-organized, and that you will be successful,
no matter what opposes? You are never to allow
a shadow of doubt to enter your mind that the Creator
intended you to win in life’s battle. Regard
every suggestion that your life may be a failure,
that you are not made like those who succeed, and
that success is not for you, as a traitor, and expel
it from your mind as you would a thief from your house.
There is something sublime in the
youth who possesses the spirit of boldness and fearlessness,
who has proper confidence in his ability to do and
dare.
The world takes us at our own valuation.
It believes in the man who believes in himself, but
it has little use for the timid man, the one who is
never certain of himself; who cannot rely on his own
judgment, who craves advice from others, and is afraid
to go ahead on his own account.
It is the man with a positive nature,
the man who believes that he is equal to the emergency,
who believes he can do the thing he attempts, who
wins the confidence of his fellow-man. He is beloved
because he is brave and self-sufficient.
Those who have accomplished great
things in the world have been, as a rule, bold, aggressive,
and self-confident. They dared to step out from
the crowd, and act in an original way. They were
not afraid to be generals.
There is little room in this crowding,
competing age for the timid, vacillating youth.
He who would succeed to-day must not only be brave,
but must also dare to take chances. He who waits
for certainty never wins.
“The law of the
soul is eternal endeavor,
That bears the man onward
and upward forever.”
“A man can be too confiding
in others, but never too confident in himself.”
Never admit defeat or poverty.
Stoutly assert your divine right to hold your head
up and look the world in the face; step bravely to
the front whatever opposes, and the world will make
way for you. No one will insist upon your rights
while you yourself doubt that you have any. Believe
you were made for the place you fill. Put forth
your whole energies. Be awake, electrify yourself;
go forth to the task. A young man once said to
his employer, “Don’t give me an easy job.
I want to handle heavy boxes, shoulder great loads.
I would like to lift a big mountain and throw it into
the sea,” and he stretched out two
brawny arms, while his honest eyes danced and his
whole being glowed with conscious strength.
The world in its heart admires the
stern, determined doer. “The world turns
aside to let any man pass who knows whither he is going.”
“It is wonderful how even the apparent casualties
of life seem to bow to a spirit that will not bow
to them, and yield to assist a design, after having
in vain attempted to frustrate it.”
“The man who succeeds,”
says Prentice Mulford, “must always in mind or
imagination live, move, think, and act as if he gained
that success, or he never will gain it.”
“We go forth,” said Emerson,
“austere, dedicated, believing in the iron links
of Destiny, and will not turn on our heels to save
our lives. A book, a bust, or only the sound
of a name shoots a spark through the nerves, and we
suddenly believe in will. We cannot hear of personal
vigor of any kind, great power of performance, without
fresh resolution.”