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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64059 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64059)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, How They Succeeded, by Orison Swett Marden
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: How They Succeeded
- Life Stories of Successful Men Told by Themselves
-
-
-Author: Orison Swett Marden
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 16, 2020 [eBook #64059]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW THEY SUCCEEDED***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Tim Lindell, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 64059-h.htm or 64059-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/64059/64059-h/64059-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/64059/64059-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/howtheysucceeded00mardrich
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
-
-
-
-
-HOW THEY SUCCEEDED
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Life Stories of Successful Men Told by Themselves
-
-by
-
-ORISON SWETT MARDEN
-
-Editor of “Success.” Author of “Winning Out,” etc., etc. ❧
-
-Illustrated
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Lothrop Publishing Company
-Boston ❧
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Copyright,
-1901, by
-Lothrop Publishing Company.
-
-All Rights Reserved
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
- PAGE
-
- MARSHALL FIELD 19
-
- “Determined not to remain poor” 20
-
- “Saved my Earnings, and Attended 20
- strictly to Business”
-
- “I always thought I would be a 21
- Merchant”
-
- An Opportunity 21
-
- A Cash basis 23
-
- “Every Purchaser must be enabled to 24
- feel secure”
-
- The Turning-Point 25
-
- Qualities that make for Success 27
-
- A College Education and Business 27
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
- BELL TELEPHONE TALK 30
- HINTS ON SUCCESS BY ALEXANDER G.
- BELL.
-
- A Night Worker 30
-
- The Subject of Success 31
-
- Perseverance applied to a Practical 32
- End
-
- Concentration of Purpose 34
-
- Young American Geese 36
-
- Unhelpful Reading 36
-
- Inventions in America 37
-
- The Orient 38
-
- Environment and Heredity 38
-
- Professor Bell’s Life Story 40
-
- “I will make the World Hear it” 41
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
- WHY THE AMERICAN PEOPLE LIKE HELEN 44
- GOULD
-
- A Face Full of Character 45
-
- Her Ambitions and Aims 45
-
- A Most Charming Charity 46
-
- Her Practical Sympathy for the Less 49
- Favored
-
- Personal Attention to an Unselfish 52
- Service
-
- Her Views upon Education 55
-
- The Evil of Idleness 56
-
- Her Patriotism 56
-
- “Our Helen” 59
-
- “America” 60
-
- Unheralded Benefactions 60
-
- Her Personality 63
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
- PHILIP D. ARMOUR’S BUSINESS CAREER 65
-
- Footing it to California 68
-
- The Ditch 70
-
- He enters the Grain Market 71
-
- Mr. Armour’s Acute Perception of 72
- the Commercial Conditions for
- Building up a Great Business
-
- System and Good Measure 73
-
- Methods 74
-
- The Turning-Point 75
-
- Truth 75
-
- A Great Orator and a Great Charity 75
-
- Ease in His Work 77
-
- A Business King 78
-
- Training Youth for Business 79
-
- Prompt to Act 82
-
- Foresight 83
-
- Forearmed against Panic 84
-
- Some Secrets of Success 85
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
- WHAT MISS MARY E. PROCTOR DID TO 87
- POPULARIZE ASTRONOMY
-
- Audiences are Appreciative 88
-
- Lectures to Children 89
-
- A Lesson in Lecturing 90
-
- The Stereopticon 91
-
- “Stories from Starland” 93
-
- Concentration of Attention 94
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
- THE BOYHOOD EXPERIENCE OF PRESIDENT 96
- SCHURMAN OF CORNELL UNIVERSITY
-
- A Long Tramp to School 98
-
- He Always Supported Himself 100
-
- The Turning-Point of his Life 101
-
- A Splendid College Record 103
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
- THE STORY OF JOHN WANAMAKER 105
-
- His Capital at Fourteen 106
-
- Tower Hall Clothing Store 107
-
- His Ambition and Power as an 108
- Organizer at Sixteen
-
- The Y. M. C. A. 109
-
- Oak Hall 109
-
- A Head Built for Business 110
-
- His Relation to Customers 111
-
- The Merchant’s Organizing Faculty 113
-
- Attention to Details 115
-
- The Most Rigid Economy 115
-
- Advertising 116
-
- Seizing Opportunities 117
-
- Push and Persistence 117
-
- Balloons 119
-
- “To what, Mr. Wanamaker, do you 120
- Attribute your Great Success?”
-
- His Views on Business 121
-
- Public Service 124
-
- Invest in Yourself 124
-
- At Home 126
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
- GIVING UP FIVE THOUSAND A YEAR TO 129
- BECOME A SCULPTOR
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS BUSINESS 139
- POINTERS BY DARIUS OGDEN MILLS.
-
- Work 139
-
- Self-Dependence 140
-
- Thrift 141
-
- Expensive Habits—Smoking 141
-
- Forming an Independent Business 142
- Judgment
-
- The Multiplication of Opportunities 142
- To-day in America
-
- Where is One’s Best Chance? The 143
- Knowledge of Men
-
- The Bottom of the Ladder 144
-
- The Beneficent Use of Capital 145
-
- Wholesome Discipline of Earning and 146
- Spending
-
- Personal: A Word about Cheap Hotels 146
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
- NORDICA: WHAT IT COSTS TO BECOME A 149
- QUEEN OF SONG
-
- The Difficulties 150
-
- “The World was Mine, if I would 152
- Work”
-
- “It put New Fire into me” 154
-
- “I was Traveling on Air” 156
-
- In Europe 159
-
- “Why don’t you Sing in Grand 161
- Opera?”
-
- This was her Crowning Triumph 162
-
- She was Indispensable in “Aida” 166
-
- The Kindness of Frau Wagner 167
-
- Musical Talent of American Girls 169
-
- The Price of Fame 170
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
- HOW HE WORKED TO SECURE A FOOT-HOLD 171
- WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS.
-
- A Lofty Ideal 172
-
- Acquiring a Literary Style 174
-
- My Workshop 175
-
- How to Choose Between Words 177
-
- The Fate following Collaboration 179
-
- Consul at Venice 180
-
- My Literary Experience 182
-
- As to a Happy Life 184
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
- JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER 185
-
- His Early Dream and Purpose 186
-
- School Days 188
-
- A Raft of Hoop Poles 191
-
- The Odor of Oil 192
-
- His First Ledger and the Items in 193
- it
-
- $10,000 196
-
- He Remembered the Oil 197
-
- Keeping his Head 197
-
- There was Money in a Refinery 198
-
- Standard Oil 200
-
- Mr. Rockefeller’s Personality 201
-
- At the Office 202
-
- Foresight 203
-
- Hygiene 204
-
- At Home 205
-
- Philanthropy 206
-
- Perseverance 207
-
- A Genius for Money-Making 207
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
- THE AUTHOR OF THE BATTLE HYMN OF 209
- THE REPUBLIC HER VIEWS OF
- EDUCATION FOR YOUNG WOMEN.
-
- “Little Miss Ward” 211
-
- She was Married to a Reformer 212
-
- Story of the “Battle Hymn of the 214
- Republic”
-
- “Eighty Years Young” 215
-
- The Ideal College 217
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
- A TALK WITH EDISON DRAMATIC 220
- INCIDENTS IN HIS EARLY LIFE.
-
- The Library 221
-
- A Chemical Newsboy 223
-
- Telegraphy 225
-
- His Use of Money 227
-
- Inventions 228
-
- His Arrival at the Metropolis 231
-
- Mental Concentration 232
-
- Twenty Hours a Day 233
-
- A Run for Breakfast 234
-
- Not by accident and Not for Fun 235
-
- “I like it—I hate it” 236
-
- Doing One Thing Eighteen Hours is 237
- the Secret
-
- Possibilities in the Electrical 238
- Field
-
- Only Six Hundred Inventions 238
-
- His Courtship and his Home 239
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
- A FASCINATING STORY BY GENERAL LEW 241
- WALLACE.
-
- A Boyhood of Wasted Opportunities 242
-
- His Boyhood Love for History and 244
- Literature
-
- A Father’s Fruitful Warning 245
-
- A Manhood of Splendid Effort 246
-
- “The Regularity of the Work was a 247
- Splendid Drill for me”
-
- Self-Education by Reading and 247
- Literary Composition
-
- “The Fair God” 249
-
- The Origin of “Ben-Hur” 250
-
- Influence of the Story of the 251
- Christ upon the Author
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
- CARNEGIE AS A METAL WORKER 253
-
- Early Work and Wages 254
-
- Colonel Anderson’s Books 255
-
- His First Glimpse of Paradise 256
-
- Introduced to a Broom 258
-
- An Expert Telegrapher 259
-
- What Employers Think of Young Men 261
-
- The Right Men in Demand 262
-
- How to Attract Attention 263
-
- Sleeping-Car Invention 264
-
- The Work of a Millionaire 266
-
- An Oil Farm 267
-
- Iron Bridges 268
-
- Homestead Steel Works 269
-
- A Strengthening Policy 270
-
- Philanthropy 271
-
- “The Misfortune of Being Rich Men’s 273
- Sons”
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
- JOHN B. HERRESHOFF, THE YACHT 276
- BUILDER
-
- PART I.
-
- “Let the Work Show” 278
-
- The Voyage of Life 279
-
- A Mother’s Mighty Influence 280
-
- Self Help 281
-
- Education 282
-
- Apprentices 283
-
- Prepare to Your Utmost: then Do 284
- Your Best
-
- Present Opportunities 284
-
- Natural Executive Ability 285
-
- The Development of Power 286
-
- “My Mother” 287
-
- A Boat-Builder in Youth 288
-
- He Would Not be Discouraged 288
-
- The Sum of it All 289
-
- PART II. What the Herreshoff
- Brothers have been Doing.
-
- Racing Jay Gould 291
-
- The “Stiletto” 293
-
- The Blind Brother 296
-
- Personality of John B. Herreshoff 297
-
- Has he a Sixth Sense? 299
-
- Seeing with His Fingers 300
-
- Brother Nat 301
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
- A SUCCESSFUL NOVELIST: FAME AFTER 304
- FIFTY PRACTICAL HINTS TO YOUNG
- AUTHORS, BY AMELIA E. BARR.
-
- Value of Biblical and Imaginative 305
- Literature
-
- Renunciation 306
-
- Delightful Studies 307
-
- Fifteen Hours a Day 308
-
- An Accident 309
-
- Vocation 310
-
- Words of Counsel 310
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
- HOW THEODORE THOMAS BROUGHT THE 314
- PEOPLE NEARER TO MUSIC
-
- “I was Not an Infant Prodigy” 315
-
- Beginning of the Orchestra 316
-
- Music had No Hold on the Masses 320
-
- Working Out His Idea 323
-
- The Chief Element of his Success 326
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
- JOHN BURROUGHS AT HOME: THE HUT ON 327
- THE HILL TOP
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
- VREELAND’S ROMANTIC STORY HOW HE 341
- CAME TO TRANSPORT A MILLION
- PASSENGERS A DAY.
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
- HOW JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY CAME TO BE 357
- MASTER OF THE HOOSIER DIALECT
-
- Thrown on His Own Resources 357
-
- Why he Longed to be a Baker 359
-
- Persistence 361
-
- Twenty Years of Rejected 362
- Manuscripts
-
- A College Education 364
-
- Riley’s Popularity 365
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- INTRODUCTORY NOTE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-THE GREAT INTEREST manifested in the life-stories of successful men and
-women, which have been published from time to time in the magazine
-SUCCESS, has actuated their production in book form. Many of these
-sketches have been revised and rewritten, and new ones have been added.
-They all contain the elements that make men and women successful; and
-they are intended to show that character, energy, and an indomitable
-ambition will succeed in the world, and that in this land, where all men
-are born equal and have an equal chance in life, there is no reason for
-despair. I believe that the ideal book for youth should deal with
-concrete examples; for that which is taken from real life is far more
-effective than that which is culled from fancy. Character-building, its
-uplifting, energizing force, has been made the basic principle of this
-work.
-
-To all who have aided me I express a grateful acknowledgment; and to
-none more than to those whose life-stories are here related as a lesson
-to young people. Among those who have given me special assistance in
-securing those life-stories are, Mr. Harry Steele Morrison, Mr. J.
-Herbert Welch, Mr. Charles H. Garrett, Mr. Henry Irving Dodge, and Mr.
-Jesse W. Weik. I am confident that the remarkable exhibit of successful
-careers made in this book—careers based on sound business principles and
-honesty—will meet with appreciation on the part of the reading public.
-
- ORISON SWETT MARDEN.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- I
-
-MARSHALL FIELD
-
-
-THIS world-renowned merchant is not easily accessible to interviews, and
-he seeks no fame for his business achievements. Yet, there is no story
-more significant, none more full of encouragement and inspiration for
-youth.
-
-In relating it, as he told it, I have removed my own interrogations, so
-far as possible, from the interview.
-
-“I was born in Conway, Massachusetts,” he said, “in 1835. My father’s
-farm was among the rocks and hills of that section, and not very
-fertile. All the people were poor in those days. My father was a man who
-had good judgment, and he made a success out of the farming business. My
-mother was of a more intellectual bent. Both my parents were anxious
-that their boys should amount to something in life, and their interest
-and care helped me.
-
-“I had but few books, scarcely any to speak of. There was not much time
-for literature. Such books as we had, I made use of.
-
-“I had a leaning toward business, and took up with it as early as
-possible. I was naturally of a saving disposition: I had to be. Those
-were saving times. A dollar looked very big to us boys in those days;
-and as we had difficult labor in earning it, we did not quickly spend
-it. I however,
-
-
- DETERMINED NOT TO REMAIN POOR.”
-
-“Did you attend both school and college?”
-
-“I attended the common and high schools at home, but not long. I had no
-college training. Indeed, I cannot say that I had much of any public
-school education. I left home when seventeen years of age, and of course
-had not time to study closely.
-
-“My first venture in trade was made as clerk in a country store at
-Pittsfield, Massachusetts, where everything was sold, including
-dry-goods. There I remained for four years, and picked up my first
-knowledge of business. I
-
-
- SAVED MY EARNINGS AND ATTENDED STRICTLY TO BUSINESS,
-
-and so made those four years valuable to me. Before I went West, my
-employer offered me a quarter interest in his business if I would remain
-with him. Even after I had been here several years, he wrote and offered
-me a third interest if I would go back.
-
-“But I was already too well placed. I was always interested in the
-commercial side of life. To this I bent my energies; and
-
-
- I ALWAYS THOUGHT I WOULD BE A MERCHANT.
-
-“In Chicago, I entered as a clerk in the dry-goods house of Cooley,
-Woodsworth & Co., in South Water street. There was no guarantee at that
-time that this place would ever become the western metropolis; the town
-had plenty of ambition and pluck, but the possibilities of greatness
-were hardly visible.”
-
-It is interesting to note in this connection how closely the story of
-Mr. Field’s progress is connected with Chicago’s marvelous growth. The
-city itself in its relations to the West, was
-
-
- AN OPPORTUNITY.
-
-A parallel, almost exact, may be drawn between the individual career and
-the growth of the town. Chicago was organized in 1837, two years after
-Mr. Field was born on the far-off farm in New England, and the place
-then had a population of a little more than four thousand. In 1856, when
-Mr. Field, fully equipped for a successful mercantile career, became a
-resident of the future metropolis of the West, the population had grown
-to little more than eighty-four thousand. Mr. Field’s prosperity
-advanced with the growth of the city; with Chicago he was stricken but
-not crushed by the great fire of 1871; and with Chicago he advanced
-again to higher achievement and far greater prosperity than before the
-calamity.
-
-“What were your equipments for success when you started as a clerk here
-in Chicago, in 1856?”
-
-“Health and ambition, and what I believe to be sound principles;”
-answered Mr. Field. “And here I found that in a growing town, no one had
-to wait for promotion. Good business qualities were promptly discovered,
-and men were pushed forward rapidly.
-
-“After four years, in 1860, I was made a partner, and in 1865, there was
-a partial reorganization, and the firm consisted after that of Mr.
-Leiter, Mr. Palmer and myself (Field, Palmer, and Leiter). Two years
-later Mr. Palmer withdrew, and until 1881, the style of the firm was
-Field, Leiter & Co. Mr. Leiter retired in that year, and since then it
-has been as at present (Marshall Field & Co.).”
-
-“What contributed most to the great growth of your business?” I asked.
-
-“To answer that question,” said Mr. Field, “would be to review the
-condition of the West from the time Chicago began until the fire in
-1871. Everything was coming this way; immigration, railways and water
-traffic, and Chicago was enjoying ‘flush’ times.
-
-“There were things to learn about the country, and the man who learned
-the quickest fared the best. For instance, the comparative newness of
-rural communities and settlements made a knowledge of local solvency
-impossible. The old State banking system prevailed, and speculation of
-every kind was rampant.
-
-
- A CASH BASIS
-
-“The panic of 1857 swept almost everything away except the house I
-worked for, and _I learned that the reason they survived was because
-they understood the nature of the new country, and did a cash business_.
-That is, they bought for cash, and sold on thirty and sixty days;
-instead of giving the customers, whose financial condition you could
-hardly tell anything about, all the time they wanted. _When the panic
-came, they had no debts, and little owing to them_, and so they
-weathered it all right. _I learned what I consider my best lesson, and
-that was to do a cash business._”
-
-“What were some of the _principles_ you applied to your business?” I
-questioned.
-
-“_I made it a point that all goods should be exactly what they were
-represented to be. It was a rule of the house that an exact scrutiny of
-the quality of all goods purchased should be maintained, and that
-nothing was to induce the house to place upon the market any line of
-goods at a shade of variation from their real value. Every article sold
-must be regarded as warranted, and_
-
-
- EVERY PURCHASER MUST BE ENABLED TO FEEL SECURE.”
-
-“Did you suffer any losses or reverses during your career?”
-
-“No loss except by the fire of 1871. It swept away everything,—about
-three and a half millions. We were, of course, protected by insurance,
-which would have been sufficient against any ordinary calamity of the
-kind. But the disaster was so sweeping that some of the companies which
-had insured our property were blotted out, and a long time passed before
-our claims against others were settled. We managed, however, to start
-again. There were no buildings of brick or stone left standing, but
-there were some great shells of horse-car barns at State and Twentieth
-streets which were not burned, and I hired those. We put up signs
-announcing that we would continue business uninterruptedly, and then
-rushed the work of fitting things up and getting in the stock.”
-
-“Did the panic of 1873 affect your business?”
-
-“Not at all. We did not have any debts.”
-
-“May I ask, Mr. Fields, what you consider to have been
-
-
- THE TURNING POINT
-
-in your career,—the point after which there was no more danger?”
-
-“Saving the first five thousand dollars I ever had, when I might just as
-well have spent the moderate salary I made. Possession of that sum, once
-I had it, gave me _the ability to meet opportunities_. That I consider
-the turning-point.”
-
-“What trait of character do you look upon as having been the most
-essential in your career?”
-
-“_Perseverance_,” said Mr. Field. But Mr. Selfridge, his most trusted
-lieutenant, in whose private office we were, insisted upon the addition
-of “_good judgment_” to this.
-
-“If I am compelled to lay claim to such traits,” added Mr. Fields, “it
-is because I have tried to practise them, and the trying has availed me
-much. I have tried to make all my acts and commercial moves the result
-of definite consideration and sound judgment. _There were never any
-great ventures or risks._ I practised honest, slow-growing business
-methods, and tried to back them with energy and good system.”
-
-At this point, in answer to further questions, Mr. Field disclaimed
-having overworked in his business, although after the fire of ’71 he
-worked about eighteen hours a day for several weeks:—
-
-“My fortune, however, has not been made in that manner. I believe in
-reasonable hours, but close attention during those hours. I never worked
-very many hours a day. People do not work as many hours now as they once
-did. The day’s labor has shortened in the last twenty years for
-everyone.”
-
-
- QUALITIES THAT MAKE FOR SUCCESS
-
-“What, Mr. Field,” I said, “do you consider to be the first requisite
-for success in life, so far as the young beginner is concerned?”
-
-“The qualities of _honesty_, _energy_, _frugality_, _integrity_, are
-more necessary than ever to-day, and there is no success without them.
-They are so often urged that they have become commonplace, but they are
-really more prized than ever. And any good fortune that comes by such
-methods is deserved and admirable.”
-
-
- A COLLEGE EDUCATION AND BUSINESS
-
-“Do you believe a college education for the young man to be a necessity
-in the future?”
-
-“Not for business purposes. Better training will become more and more a
-necessity. The truth is, with most young men, a college education means
-that just at the time when they should be having business principles
-instilled into them, and be getting themselves energetically pulled
-together for their life’s work, they are sent to college. Then
-intervenes what many a young man looks back on as the jolliest time of
-his life,—four years of college. Often when he comes out of college the
-young man is unfitted by this good time to buckle down to hard work, and
-the result is a failure to grasp opportunities that would have opened
-the way for a successful career.”
-
-_As to retiring from business_, Mr. Field remarked:—
-
-“I do not believe that, when a man no longer attends to his private
-business in person every day, he has given up interest in affairs. He
-may be, in fact should be, doing wider and greater work. There certainly
-is no pleasure in idleness. A man, upon giving up business, does not
-cease laboring, but really does or should do more in a larger sense. He
-should interest himself in public affairs. There is no happiness in mere
-dollars. After they are acquired, one can use but a moderate amount. It
-is given a man to eat so much, to wear so much, and to have so much
-shelter, and more he cannot use. When money has supplied these, its
-mission, so far as the individual is concerned, is fulfilled, and man
-must look further and higher. It is only in the wider public affairs,
-where money is a moving force toward the general welfare, that the
-possessor of it can possibly find pleasure, and that only in constantly
-doing more.”
-
-“What,” I said, “in your estimation, is the greatest good a man can do?”
-
-“The greatest good he can do is to cultivate himself, develop his
-powers, in order that he may be of greater use to humanity.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- II
-
-BELL TELEPHONE TALK
-
-
- HINTS ON SUCCESS BY ALEXANDER G. BELL.
-
-EXTREMELY polite, always anxious to render courtesy, no one carries
-great success more gracefully than Alexander G. Bell, the inventor of
-the telephone. His graciousness has won many a friend, the admiration of
-many more, and has smoothed many a rugged spot in life.
-
-
- A NIGHT WORKER
-
-When I first went to see him, it was about eleven o’clock in the
-morning, and he was in bed! The second time, I thought I would go
-somewhat later,—at one o’clock in the afternoon. He was eating his
-breakfast, I was told; and I had to wait some time. He came in
-apologizing profusely for keeping me waiting. When I told him I had come
-to interview him, in behalf of young people, about success—its
-underlying principles,—he threw back his large head and laughingly said:
-
-“‘Nothing succeeds like success.’ Success did you say? Why, that is a
-big subject,—too big a one. You must give me time to think about it; and
-you having planted the seed in my brain, will have to wait for me.”
-
-When I asked what time I should call, he said: “Come any time, if it is
-only late. I begin my work at about nine or ten o’clock in the evening,
-and continue until four or five in the morning. Night is a more quiet
-time to work. It aids thought.”
-
-So, when I went to see him again, I made it a point to be late. He
-cordially invited me into his studio, where, as we both sat on a large
-and comfortable sofa, he talked long on
-
-
- THE SUBJECT OF SUCCESS.
-
-The value of this article would be greatly enhanced, if I could add his
-charming manner of emphasizing what he says, with hands, head, and eyes;
-and if I could add his beautiful distinctness of speech, due, a great
-deal, to his having given instruction to deaf-mutes, who must read the
-lips.
-
-“What do you think are the factors of success?” I asked. The reply was
-prompt and to the point.
-
-
- PERSEVERANCE APPLIED TO A PRACTICAL END
-
-“Perseverance is the chief; but perseverance must have some practical
-end, or it does not avail the man possessing it. A person without a
-practical end in view becomes a crank or an idiot. Such persons fill our
-insane asylums. The same perseverance that they show in some idiotic
-idea, if exercised in the accomplishment of something practicable, would
-no doubt bring success. Perseverance is first, but practicability is
-chief. The success of the Americans as a nation is due to their great
-practicability.”
-
-“But often what the world calls nonsensical, becomes practical, does it
-not? You were called crazy, too, once, were you not?”
-
-“There are some things, though, that are always impracticable. Now,
-take, for instance, this idea of perpetual motion. Scientists have
-proved that it is impossible. Yet our patent office is continually beset
-by people applying for inventions on some perpetual motion machine. So
-the department has adopted a rule whereby a working model is always
-required of such applicants. They cannot furnish one. The impossible is
-incapable of success.”
-
-“I have heard of people dreaming inventions.”
-
-“That is not at all impossible. I am a believer in unconscious
-cerebration. The brain is working all the time, though we do not know
-it. At night, it follows up what we think in the daytime. When I have
-worked a long time on one thing, I make it a point to bring all the
-facts regarding it together before I retire; and I have often been
-surprised at the results. Have you not noticed that, often, what was
-dark and perplexing to you the night before, is found to be perfectly
-solved the next morning? We are thinking all the time; it is impossible
-not to think.”
-
-“Can everyone become an inventor?”
-
-“Oh, no; not all minds are constituted alike. Some minds are only
-adapted to certain things. But as one’s mind grows, and one’s knowledge
-of the world’s industries widens, it adapts itself to such things as
-naturally fall to it.”
-
-Upon my asking the relation of health to success, the professor
-replied:—
-
-“I believe it to be a primary principle of success; ‘mens sana in
-corpore sano,’—a sound mind in a sound body. The mind in a weak body
-produces weak ideas; a strong body gives strength to the thought of the
-mind. Ill health is due to man’s artificiality of living. He lives
-indoors. He becomes, as it were, a hothouse plant. Such a plant is never
-as successful as a hardy garden plant is. An outdoor life is necessary
-to health and success, especially in a youth.”
-
-“But is not hard study often necessary to success?”
-
-“No; decidedly not. You cannot force ideas. Successful ideas are the
-result of slow growth. Ideas do not reach perfection in a day, no matter
-how much study is put upon them. It is _perseverance_ in the pursuit of
-studies that is really wanted.
-
-
- CONCENTRATION OF PURPOSE
-
-“Next must come concentration of purpose and study. That is another
-thing I mean to emphasize. Concentrate all your thought upon the work in
-hand. The sun’s rays do not burn until brought to a focus.
-
-“I am now thinking about flying machines. Everything in regard to them,
-I pick out and read. When I see a bird flying in the air, I note its
-manner of flight, as I would not if I were not constantly thinking about
-artificial flight, and concentrating all my thought and observation upon
-it. It is like a man who has made the acquaintance of some new word that
-has been brought forcibly to his notice, although he may have come
-across it many times before, and not have noticed it particularly.
-
-“_Man is the result of slow growth_; that is why he occupies the
-position he does in animal life. What does a pup amount to that has
-gained its growth in a few days or weeks, beside a man who only attains
-it in as many years. A horse is often a grandfather before a boy has
-attained his full maturity. The most successful men in the end are those
-whose success is the result of steady accretion. That intellectuality is
-more vigorous that has attained its strength gradually. It is the man
-who carefully advances step by step, with his mind becoming wider and
-wider,—and progressively better able to grasp any theme or
-situation,—persevering in what he knows to be practical, and
-concentrating his thought upon it, who is bound to succeed in the
-greatest degree.
-
-
- YOUNG AMERICAN GEESE
-
-“If a man is not bound down, he is sure to succeed. He may be bound down
-by environment, or by doting parental petting. In Paris, they fatten
-geese to create a diseased condition of the liver. A man stands with a
-box of very finely prepared and very rich food beside a revolving stand,
-and, as it revolves, one goose after another passes before him. Taking
-the first goose by the neck, he clamps down its throat a large lump of
-the food, whether the goose will or no, until its crop is well stuffed
-out, and then he proceeds with the rest in the same very mechanical
-manner. Now, I think, if those geese had to work hard for their own
-food, they would digest it better, and be far healthier geese. How many
-young American geese are stuffed in about the same manner at college and
-at home, by their rich and fond parents!”
-
-
- UNHELPFUL READING
-
-“Did everything you ever studied help you to attain success?”
-
-“On the contrary, I did not begin real study until I was over sixteen.
-Until that time, my principal study was—reading novels.” He laughed
-heartily at my evident astonishment. “They did not help me in the least,
-for they did not give me an insight into real life. It is only those
-things that give one a grasp of practical affairs that are helpful. To
-read novels continuously is like reading fairy stories or “Arabian
-Nights” tales. It is a butterfly existence, so long as it lasts; but,
-some day, one is called to stern reality, unprepared.”
-
-
- INVENTIONS IN AMERICA
-
-“You have had experience in life in Europe and in America. Do you think
-the chances for success are the same in Europe as in America?”
-
-“It is harder to attain success in Europe. There is hardly the same
-appreciation of progress there is here. Appreciation is an element of
-success. Encouragement is needed. My thoughts run mostly toward
-inventions. In England, people are conservative. They are well contented
-with the old, and do not readily adopt new ideas. Americans more quickly
-appreciate new inventions. Take an invention to an Englishman or a Scot,
-and he will ask you all about it, and then say your invention may be all
-right, but let somebody else try it first. Take the same invention to an
-American, and if it is intelligently explained, he is generally quick to
-see the feasibility of it. America is an inspiration to inventors. It is
-quicker to adopt advanced ideas than England or Europe. The most
-valuable inventions of this century have been made in America.”
-
-
- THE ORIENT
-
-“Do you think there is a chance for Americans in the Orient?”
-
-“There is only a chance for capital in trade. American labor cannot
-compete with Japanese and Chinese. A Japanese coolie, for the hardest
-kind of work, receives the equivalent of six cents a day; and the whole
-family, father, mother and children, work and contribute to the common
-good. A foreigner is only made use of until they have absorbed all his
-useful ideas; then he is avoided. The Japanese are ahead of us in many
-things.”
-
-
- ENVIRONMENT AND HEREDITY
-
-“Do you think environment and heredity count in success?”
-
-“Environment, certainly; heredity, not so distinctly. In heredity, a man
-may stamp out the faults he has inherited. There is no chance for the
-proper working of heredity. If selection could be carried out, a man
-might owe much to heredity. But as it is, only opposites marry. Blonde
-and light-complexioned people marry brunettes, and the tall marry the
-short. In our scientific societies, men only are admitted. If women who
-were interested especially in any science were allowed to affiliate with
-the men in these societies, we might hope to see some wonderful workings
-of the laws of heredity. A man, as a general rule, owes very little to
-what he is born with. A man is what he makes of himself.
-
-“Environment counts for a great deal. A man’s particular idea may have
-no chance for growth or encouragement in his community. Real success is
-denied that man, until he finds a proper environment.
-
-“_America is a good environment for young men. It breathes the very
-spirit of success. I noticed at once, when I first came to this country,
-how the people were all striving for success, and helping others to
-attain success. It is an inspiration you cannot help feeling._ AMERICA
-IS THE LAND OF SUCCESS.”
-
-
- PROFESSOR BELL’S LIFE STORY
-
-Alexander Graham Bell was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, March 3, 1847.
-His father, Alexander Melville Bell, now in Washington, D.C., was a
-distinguished Scottish educator, and the inventor of a system of
-“visible speech,” which he has successfully taught to deaf-mutes. His
-grandfather, Alexander Bell, became well known by the invention of a
-method of removing impediments of speech.
-
-The younger Bell received his education at the Edinburgh High School and
-University; and, in 1867, he entered the University of London. Then, in
-his twenty-third year, his health failing from over-study, he came with
-his father to Canada, as he expressed it, “to die.” Later, he settled in
-the United States, becoming first a teacher of deaf-mutes, and
-subsequently professor of vocal physiology in Boston University. In
-1867, he first began to study the problem of conveying articulate sound
-by electric currents; which he pursued during his leisure time. After
-nine long years of research and experiment, he completed the first
-telephone, early in 1876, when it was exhibited at the Centennial
-Exposition, and pronounced the “wonder of wonders in electric
-telegraphy.” This was the judgment of scientific men who were in a
-position to judge, and not of the world at large. People regarded it
-only as a novelty, as a curious scientific toy; and most business men
-doubted that it would ever prove a useful factor in the daily life of
-the world, and the untold blessing to mankind it has since become. All
-this skepticism he had to overcome. “A new art was to be taught to the
-world, a new industry created, business and social methods
-revolutionized.”
-
-
- “I WILL MAKE THE WORLD HEAR IT”
-
-“It does speak,” cried Sir William Thompson, with fervid enthusiasm; and
-Bell’s father-in-law added: “I will make the world hear it.” In less
-than a quarter of a century, it is conveying thought in every civilized
-tongue; Japan being the first country outside of the United States to
-adopt it. In the first eight years of its existence, the Bell Telephone
-Company declared dividends to the extent of $4,000,000; and the great
-sums of money the company earns for its stockholders is a subject of
-current comment and wonder. Some fierce contests have been waged over
-the priority of his invention, but Mr. Bell has been triumphant in every
-case.
-
-He has become very wealthy from his invention. He has a beautiful winter
-residence in Washington; fitted up with a laboratory, and all sorts of
-electrical conveniences mostly of his own invention. His summer
-residence is at Cambridge, Massachusetts.
-
-His wife, Mabel, the daughter of the late Gardiner G. Hubbard, is a
-deaf-mute, of whose education he had charge when she was a child.
-
-Mr. Bell, with one of his beautiful daughters, recently made a visit to
-Japan. The Order of the Rising Star, the highest order in the gift of
-the Japanese Emperor, was bestowed upon him. He is greatly impressed by
-the character of the people; believing them capable of much greater
-advancement.
-
-Mr. Bell is the inventor of the photophone, aiming to transmit speech by
-a vibratory beam of light. He has given much time and study to problems
-of multiplex telegraphy, and to efforts to record speech by
-photographing the vibrations of a jet of water.
-
-Few inventors have derived as much satisfaction and happiness from their
-achievements as Mr. Bell. In this respect, his success has been ideal,
-and in impressive contrast with the experience of Charles Goodyear, the
-man who made india-rubber useful, and of some other well-known
-inventors, whose services to mankind brought no substantial reward to
-themselves.
-
-Mr. Bell is in nowise spoiled by his good fortune; but is the same
-unpretending person to-day, that he was before the telephone made him
-wealthy and famous.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- III
-
-Why the American People Like Helen Gould
-
-
-MISS HELEN GOULD has won a place for herself in the hearts of Americans
-such as few people of great wealth ever gain. Her strong character,
-commonsense, and high ideals, have made her respected by all, while her
-munificence and kindness have won for her the love of many.
-
-Upon my arrival at her Tarrytown home, I was made to feel that I was
-welcome, and everyone who enters her presence feels the same. The grand
-mansion, standing high on the hills overlooking the Hudson, has a
-home-like appearance. Chickens play around the little stone cottage at
-the grand entrance, and the grounds are not unlike those of any other
-country house, with trees in abundance, and beautiful lawns. There are
-large beds of flowers, and in the gardens all the summer vegetables were
-growing.
-
-Miss Gould takes a very great interest in her famous greenhouses, the
-gardens, the flowers, and the chickens, for she is a home-loving woman.
-It is a common thing to see her in the grounds, digging and raking and
-planting, like some farmer’s girl. That is one reason why her neighbors
-all like her; she seems so unconscious of her wealth and station.
-
-
- A FACE FULL OF CHARACTER
-
-When I entered Lyndhurst, she came forward to meet me in the pleasantest
-way imaginable. Her face is not exactly beautiful, but has a great deal
-of character written upon it, and it is very attractive. She held out
-her hand for me to shake in the good old-fashioned way, and then we sat
-down in the wide hall to talk. Miss Gould was dressed very simply. Her
-gown was of dark cloth, close-fitting, and her skirt hung several inches
-above the ground, for she is a believer in short skirts for walking. Her
-entire costume was very becoming. She never over-dresses, and her
-garments are neat, and naturally of excellent quality.
-
-
- HER AMBITIONS AND AIMS
-
-In the conversation that followed, I was permitted to learn much of her
-ambitions and aims. She is ambitious to leave an impression on the world
-by good deeds well done, and this ambition is gratified to the utmost.
-She is modest about her work.
-
-“I cannot find that I am doing much at all,” she said, “when there is so
-very much to be done. I suppose I shouldn’t expect to be able to do
-everything, but I sometimes feel that I want to, nevertheless.”
-
-
- A MOST CHARMING CHARITY
-
-One of her most charming charities is “Woody Crest,” two miles from
-Lyndhurst, a haven of delight where some twoscore waifs are received at
-a time for a two weeks’ visit.
-
-Years before Miss Gould’s name became associated throughout the country
-with charity, she was doing her part in trying to make a world happier.
-Every summer she was hostess to scores of poor children, who were guests
-at one of the two Gould summer homes; little people with pinched, wan
-faces, and crippled children from the tenements, were taken to that home
-and entertained. They came in relays, a new company arriving once in two
-weeks, the number of children thus given a taste of heaven on earth
-being limited only by the capacity of the Gould residence. This was her
-first, and, I am told, her favorite charity.
-
-Little children do things naturally. It was when a child that Helen
-Gould commenced the work that has given her name a sacred significance.
-When a little girl, she could see the less fortunate little girls
-passing the great Gould home on Fifth avenue, and she pitied them and
-loved them, and from her own allowance administered to their comfort.
-
-“My father always encouraged me in charitable work,” she writes a
-friend. How much the American people owe to that encouragement. A frown
-from that father, idolized as he was by his daughter, would have frosted
-and killed that budding philanthropy which has made a great fortune a
-fountain of joy, and carried sunshine into many lives.
-
-“Woody Crest” is a sylvan paradise, a nobly wooded hill towering above
-the sumptuous green of Westchester, a place with wild flowers and
-winding drives, and at its crest a solid mansion built of the native
-rock. One can look out from its luxuriant lawns to the majestic Hudson,
-or turn aside into the shadiest of nooks among the trees. What a place
-for the restful breezes to fan the tired brows from the tenements. Do
-the little folks enjoy it? Ask them, and their eyes will sparkle with
-gladness for answer. Ask those, too, who are awaiting their turn in hot
-New York, and watch the eagerness of their anticipation. For two long
-and happy weeks they become as joyous as mortals are ever permitted to
-be.
-
-Miss Gould has a personal oversight of the place, and, by her frequent
-visits, makes friends with the wee visitors, who look upon her as a
-combination of angel and fairy godmother. Every day, a wagonette drawn
-by two horses takes the children, in relays, for long drives into the
-country. Amusements are provided, and some of those who remain for an
-entire season at Woody Crest are instructed in different branches. Twice
-a month some of the older boys set the type for a little magazine which
-is devoted to Woody Crest matters. There are several portable cottages
-erected there, one for the sick, one for servants’ sleeping rooms, and a
-third for a laundry.
-
-And the munificent hostess of these children of the needy gets her
-reward in eyes made bright, in cheeks made ruddy, in the “God bless
-you,” that falls from the lips of grateful parents.
-
-All winter long, instead of closing “Woody Crest” and waiting for the
-summer sunshine to bring about a return of her charitable opportunities,
-Miss Gould has kept the place running at full expense. During the winter
-she herself occupies her town residence. Ordinarily she would not keep
-“Woody Crest” open longer than Thanksgiving Day, but in the past winter
-fifteen small boys were entertained for six months. Six of these were
-cripples, and nine were sound of limb. Though it required many servants,
-I am told that the little guests were given as much consideration as the
-same number of grown people would have received. They had nurses and
-physicians for those who needed them, governesses and instructors for
-those who were well.
-
-
- HER PRACTICAL SYMPATHY FOR THE LESS FAVORED
-
-When, one day, I was privileged to meet Miss Gould at Woody Crest, I saw
-a hundred children scattered around the lawn in front of the stately
-mansion. It had been an afternoon of labor and anxiety on her part, for
-she felt the responsibility of entertaining and caring for so many
-little ones. As she finally cooled herself on the piazza and looked at
-her little charges romping around on the lawn, I asked her if she
-thought any of the little ones before her would ever make their mark in
-the world.
-
-“That’s hard to say,” she replied, after a moment’s hesitation, “but no
-one can tell what may be in children until they have grown up and
-developed. But the hardest thing to me is to see genius struggling under
-obstacles and in surroundings that would discourage almost anybody. I do
-not see, for my part, how any child from the poorest tenements could
-ever grow up and develop into strong, successful men or women. Many of
-them, of course, have no gifts or endowments to do this, but even if
-they had, the surroundings are enough to stifle every spark of ambition
-in them. It is a mystery to me how they can preserve such bright and
-eager faces. What would we do if we were brought up in such
-environments! I know I should never be able to survive it, and would
-never succeed in rising above my surroundings. And it is harder on the
-girls than the boys! The boys can go forth into the world and probably
-secure a position which in time will bring them different companionship
-and surroundings; but the poor girls have so few opportunities. They
-must drudge and drag along for the bare necessities of life. My heart
-aches sometimes for them, and I wish I had the power to lighten the
-burdens of everyone.”
-
-“The hardest thing, I suppose, is to see real ability fighting against
-odds, with no one to help and encourage?”
-
-“Yes, that seems the worst, and I think we all ought to make it possible
-for such ones to get a little encouragement and help. When a boy is
-deserving of credit it should be given unstintedly. It goes a long way
-toward making him more hopeful for the future. We don’t as a rule
-receive enough encouragement in this world. Certainly not the poor.
-Everybody seems so busy and intent upon making his own way in the world
-that he forgets to drop a word of cheer for those who have not been so
-fortunate by birth or surroundings.”[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- NOTE.—For four paragraphs preceding I am indebted to GEORGE ETHELBERT
- WALSH, whose interview was published in the _Boston Transcript_, Oct.
- 12, 1900.
-
-For a number of years, Miss Gould has supported certain beds in the
-Babies’ Shelter, in connection with the Church of the Holy Communion,
-New York, and the Wayside Day Nursery, near Bellevue Hospital, has
-always found in her a good friend. Once a year she makes a tour through
-the day nurseries of New York, noting the special needs of each, and
-often sending money or materials for meeting those needs.
-
-
- PERSONAL ATTENTION TO AN UNSELFISH SERVICE
-
-Her charities, says Mr. Walsh, in the article above cited, are probably
-the most practical on record. She does not go “slumming,” as so many
-fashionable girls do, but she does go and investigate personal charities
-herself and apply the medicine as she thinks best. She puts herself out
-in more ways to relieve distress around than she would to accommodate
-her wealthiest friend. Not only has she always pitied the sufferers in
-the world less fortunate than herself, but she has always had a great
-desire to help those struggling for a living in practical ways to get
-along. It is this side of her noble work that stands out most
-conspicuously to-day. The public realizes for the first time that this
-young woman, who first came into actual fame at the time of our war with
-Spain, has been supporting and encouraging young people in different
-parts of the country for years past. These protéges are all worthy of
-her patronage, and _they have been sought out by her. Not one has ever
-approached Miss Gould for help, and in fact such an introduction would
-undoubtedly operate against her inclination to help them_. _She has
-discovered them_; and then through considerable tact and discretion
-obtained from them their ambitious desires and hopes. Through equally
-good tact and sense she has then placed them in positions where they
-could work out their own destinies without feeling that they were
-accepting charity. This is distinctly what Miss Gould wishes to avoid in
-helping her little protéges. She does not offer them charity or do
-anything to make them dependent upon her if it can be helped. By her
-money and influence she obtains for them positions which will give them
-every chance in the world to rise and develop talents which she thinks
-she has discovered in them.
-
-Some of her protéges, continues Mr. Walsh, have been sent away to
-schools and colleges. One of the easiest ways to accomplish this is to
-offer a scholarship in some institution and then place her young protége
-in such a position that he or she can win it, and in this way have four
-years of tuition free. Fully a dozen different scholars are now enjoying
-the benefits of Miss Gould’s kindness in this and other respects. Four
-others have been enabled to attend art schools, and two are studying
-music under the best teachers through the instrumentality of this young
-woman. Two of these scholars were literally rescued from the tenement
-dregs of New York, and they showed such aptitude for study and work that
-Miss Gould undertook to give them a fair start in the world. Unusual
-aptitude, brightness, or kindness on the part of children always attract
-Miss Gould, and she has become the patron saint of more than a hundred.
-When her name is mentioned they show their interest and concern, not by
-looks of awe and fear but of eagerness and happiness. Those of their
-number who have been lifted from their low estate and put in high
-positions to carve out a life of success through their common patron
-saint, bring back stories of her kindness and consideration that make
-the children look upon her as they would the Madonna. But she is a
-youthful Madonna, and the very idea of posing as such, even before the
-poor and ignorant of her little friends, would amuse her. Nevertheless,
-that is the nearest that one can interpret their ideas concerning her.
-
-Miss Gould’s beneficiaries have been sometimes aided in obtaining the
-most advanced schooling in the land; and she visits with equal interest
-the industrial classes of Berea and the favored students of the College
-Beautiful.
-
-
- HER VIEWS UPON EDUCATION
-
-Miss Gould is well educated, and a graduate of a law school. I tried to
-ascertain her views regarding the education of young women of to-day,
-and what careers they should follow. This is one of her particular
-hobbies, and many are the young girls she has helped to attain to a
-better and more satisfactory life.
-
-“I believe most earnestly in education for women,” she said; “not
-necessarily the higher education about which we hear so much, but a
-good, common-school education. As the years pass, girls are obliged to
-make their own way in the world more and more; and to do so, they must
-have good schooling.”
-
-“And what particular career do you think most desirable for young
-women?”
-
-“Oh, as to careers, there are many that young women follow, nowadays. I
-think, if I had my own way to make, I should fit myself to be a private
-secretary. That is a position which attracts nearly every young woman;
-but, to fill it, she must study hard and learn, and then work hard to
-keep the place. Then there are openings for young women in the fields of
-legitimate business. Women know as much about money affairs as men, only
-most of them have not had much experience. In that field, there are
-hundreds of things that a woman can do.
-
-
- THE EVIL OF IDLENESS
-
-“But I don’t think it matters much what a girl does so long as she is
-active, and doesn’t allow herself to stagnate. There’s nothing, to my
-mind, so pathetic as a girl who thinks she can’t do anything, and is of
-no use to the world.”
-
-
- HER PATRIOTISM
-
-The late Admiral Philip, he of the “Texas” in the Santiago fight,
-regarded Miss Gould as an angel, and the sailors of the Brooklyn navy
-yard fairly worship her. A hustling Y. M. C. A. chap, Frank Smith by
-name, started a little club-house for “Jack Ashore,” near the Brooklyn
-navy yard. Miss Gould heard of this club, and visited it. At a glance
-she grasped the meaning, and, on her return home she wrote a letter and
-a check for fifty thousand dollars, and there sprang from that letter
-and check, a handsome building in which there are sixty beds, a library,
-a pipe organ, a smoking-room, and a restaurant. Do you wonder that the
-“Jackies” adore her, and that the gale that sweeps over the ship out in
-the open sea is often freighted with the melody of her name?
-
-“When I visited Cuba and Porto Rico,” says Congressman Charles B.
-Landis, of Indiana,—to whom I am greatly indebted in preparing this
-article,—“I talked with officers and privates everywhere along the
-journey, visited camps and hospitals in cities and isolated towns, and
-everywhere it seemed that the sickness and suffering and heart yearning
-of the American soldier had been anticipated by Helen Gould. Voices that
-quivered and eyes that moistened at the mention of the name of this
-young American girl were one continuous tribute to her heart and work.
-She cannot fully realize how far-reaching have been her efforts.”
-
-A business man looks for results. What impressed me most with Miss
-Gould’s work was the visible, tangible results. Every dollar spent by
-her seemed to go, straight as a cannon-ball, to some mark. Miss Gould
-has a business head, and is not hysterical in her work. She gives, but
-follows the gift and sees that it goes to the spot. She has studied
-results and knows which charity pays a premium in smiles, and tears, and
-joy, and better life, and very little of her money will be wasted in
-impracticable schemes. She has a happy faculty of getting in actual
-touch with conditions, realizing that she cannot hit an object near at
-hand by aiming at a star.
-
-Miss Gould’s practical business sense was beautifully exemplified at
-Montauk Point. Hundreds of soldiers from the hospitals in Cuba and Porto
-Rico were suddenly unloaded there. Elsewhere were government
-supplies—tents and cots and rations,—but there the sick soldiers were
-without shelter, were hungry, had no medicine, and were sleeping on the
-ground.
-
-Why? Because of red tape. This young lady appeared in person and amazed
-the strutters in shoulder-straps and the slaves to discipline by having
-the sick soldier boys made comfortable on army cots, placed in army
-tents, and fed on army rations,—and this, too, without any
-“requisition.” She grasped a situation, cut the ropes of theory and
-introduced practice. From her own purse she provided nurses and
-dainties, and bundled up scores of soldier boys and sent them to her
-beautiful villa on the Hudson.
-
-The camp rang with this refrain:—
-
- You’re the angel of the camp,
- Helen Gould,
- In the sun-rays, in the damp,
- On the weary, weary tramp,
- To our darkness you’re a lamp,
- Helen Gould.
-
- Thoughts of home and gentle things,
- Helen Gould,
- To the camp your coming brings;
- All the place with music rings
- At the rustle of your wings,
- Helen Gould.
-
-
- “OUR HELEN”
-
-On the day of the Dewey parade in New York, Miss Gould was in front of
-her house, on a platform she had erected for the small children of
-certain Asylums. Mayor Van Wyck told Admiral Dewey who she was, and the
-Admiral stood up in his carriage and bowed to her three times. Then the
-word went down the line that Miss Gould was there, and every company
-saluted her as it passed.
-
-But it was when a body of young recruits stopped for a moment before her
-door that the real excitement began.
-
-“She shan’t marry a foreign prince,” they cried, tossing their hats and
-stamping their feet. “She’s Helen, our Helen, and she shall not marry a
-foreign prince.”
-
-
- “AMERICA”
-
-Miss Gould’s patriotism is very real and intense, and is not confined to
-times of war. Two years ago, she caused fifty thousand copies of the
-national hymn, “America,” to be printed and distributed among the pupils
-of the public schools of New York.
-
-“I believe every one should know that hymn and sing it,” she declared,
-“if he sings no other. I would like to have the children sing it into
-their very souls, till it becomes a part of them.”
-
-She strongly favors patriotic services in the churches on the Sunday
-preceding the Fourth of July, when she would like to hear such airs as
-“America,” “Hail Columbia,” and “The Star Spangled Banner,” and see the
-sacred edifices draped in red, white, and blue.
-
-
- UNHERALDED BENEFACTIONS
-
-Miss Gould has a strong prejudice against letting her many gifts and
-charities be known, and even her dearest friends never know “what
-Helen’s doing now.” Of course, her great public charities, as when she
-gives a hundred thousand dollars at a time, are heralded. Her recent
-gift of that sum to the government, for national defense, has made her
-name beloved throughout the land; but, had she been able, she would have
-kept that secret also.
-
-The place Helen Gould now holds in the love and esteem of the republic
-exemplifies how quickly the nation’s heart responds to the touch of
-gentleness, and how easy it is for wealth to conquer and rise
-triumphant, if only it be seasoned with common sense and sympathy.
-
-I will not attempt to specify the numerous projects of charity that have
-been given life and vigor by Miss Gould. I know her gifts in recent
-years have passed the million-dollar mark.
-
-“It seems so easy to do things for others,” said Miss Gould, recently.
-It is easy to do good, if the doing is natural and without thought of
-self-glorification.
-
-Miss Gould’s views upon “How to Make the Most of Wealth,” are well set
-forth in her admirable letter to Dr. Louis Klopsch, as published in the
-_Christian Herald_:—
-
-“The Christian idea that wealth is a stewardship, or trust, and not to
-be used for one’s personal pleasure alone, but for the welfare of
-others, certainly seems the noblest; and those who have more money or
-broader culture owe a debt to those who have had fewer opportunities.
-
-“And there are so many ways one can help. Children, the sick and the
-aged especially, have claims on our attention, and the forms of work for
-them are numerous; from kindergartens, day-nurseries and industrial
-schools, to ‘homes’ and hospitals. Our institutions for higher education
-require gifts in order to do their best work, for the tuition fees do
-not cover the expense of the advantages offered; and certainly such
-societies as those in our churches, and the Young Woman’s Christian
-Association and the Young Men’s Christian Association, deserve our
-hearty cooperation. The earnest workers who so nobly and lovingly give
-their lives to promote the welfare of others, give far more than though
-they had simply made gifts of money, so those who cannot afford to give
-largely need not feel discouraged on that account. After all, sympathy
-and good-will may be a greater force than wealth, and we can all extend
-to others a kindly feeling and courteous consideration, that will make
-life sweeter and better.
-
-“Sometimes it seems to me we do not sufficiently realize the good that
-is done by money that is used in the different industries in giving
-employment to great numbers of people under the direction of clever men
-and women; and surely it takes more ability, perseverance and time to
-successfully manage such an enterprise than to merely make gifts.”
-
-
- HER PERSONALITY
-
-Miss Gould’s life at Tarrytown is an ideal one. She runs down to the
-city at frequent intervals, to attend to business affairs; but she lives
-at Lyndhurst. She entertains but few visitors, and in turn visits but
-seldom. The management of her property, to which she gives close
-attention, makes no inconsiderable call upon her time. “I have no time
-for society,” she said, “and indeed I do not care for it at all; it is
-very well for those who like it.”
-
-Would you have an idea of her personality? “If so,” replies Landis, “you
-will think of a good young woman in your own town, who loves her parents
-and her home; who is devoted to the church; who thinks of the poor on
-Thanksgiving Day and Christmas; whose face is bright and manner
-unaffected; whose dress is elegant in its simplicity; who takes an
-interest in all things, from politics to religion; whom children love
-and day-laborers greet by reverently lifting the hat; and who, if she
-were graduated from a home seminary or college, would receive a bouquet
-from every boy in town. If you can think of such a young woman, and
-nearly every community has one (and ninety-nine times out of a hundred
-she is poor), you have a fair idea of the impression made on a plain man
-from a country town by Miss Gould.”
-
-Helen Miller Gould is just at the threshold of her beautiful career.
-What a promise is there in her life and work for the coming century?
-
-She has pledged a Hall of Fame for the campus of the New York
-University, overlooking the Harlem river. It will have tablets for the
-names of fifty distinguished Americans; and proud will be the
-descendants of those whose names are inscribed thereon.
-
-The human heart is the tablet upon which Miss Gould has inscribed her
-name, and her “Hall of Fame” is as broad and high as the republic
-itself.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- IV
-
-Philip D. Armour’s Business Career
-
-
-I MET Mr. Armour in the quiet of the Armour Institute, his great
-philanthropic school for young men and women. He was very courteous, and
-there was no delay. He took my hand with a firm grasp—reading with his
-steady gaze such of my characteristics as interested him,—and saying, at
-the same time, “Well, sir.”
-
-In stating my desire to learn such lessons from his business career as
-might be helpful to young men, I inquired whether the average American
-boy of to-day has equally _as good a chance to succeed in the world_ as
-he had, when he began life.
-
-“Every bit and better. The affairs of life are larger. There are greater
-things to do. There was never before such a demand for able men.”
-
-“Were the conditions surrounding your youth especially difficult?”
-
-“No. They were those common to every small New York town in 1832. I was
-born at Stockbridge, in Madison county. Our family had its roots in
-Scotland. My father’s ancestors were the Robertsons, Watsons, and
-McGregors of Scotland; my mother came of the Puritans, who settled in
-Connecticut.”
-
-“Dr. Gunsaulus says,” I ventured, “that _all these streams of heredity
-set toward business affairs_.”
-
-“Perhaps so. I like trading well. My father was reasonably prosperous
-and independent for those times. My mother had been a schoolteacher.
-There were six boys, and of course such a household had to be managed
-with the strictest economy in those days. My mother thought it her duty
-to bring to our home some of the rigid discipline of the school-room. We
-were all trained to work together, and everything was done as
-systematically as possible.”
-
-“Had you access to any books?”
-
-“Yes, the Bible, ‘Pilgrim’s Progress,’ and a History of the United
-States.”
-
-It is said of the latter, by those closest to Mr. Armour, that it was as
-full of shouting Americanism as anything ever written, and that Mr.
-Armour’s whole nature is yet colored by its stout American prejudices;
-also that it was read and re-read by the Armour children, though of this
-the great merchant did not speak.
-
-“Were you always of _a robust constitution_?” I asked.
-
-“Yes, sir. All our boys were. We were stout enough to be bathed in an
-ice-cold spring, out of doors, when at home. There were no bath tubs and
-warm water arrangements in those days. We had to be strong. My father
-was a stern Scotchman, and when he laid his plans they were carried out.
-When he set us boys to work, we worked. It was our mother who insisted
-on keeping us all at school, and who looked after our educational needs;
-while our father saw to it that we had plenty of good, hard work on the
-farm.”
-
-“How did you enjoy that sort of life?” I asked.
-
-“Well enough, but not much more than any boy does. Boys are always more
-or less afraid of hard work.”
-
-The truth is, I have heard, but not from Mr. Armour, that when he
-attended the district school, he was as full of pranks and capers as the
-best; and that he traded jack-knives in summer and bob-sleds in winter.
-Young Armour was often to be found, in the winter, coasting down the
-long hill near the schoolhouse. Later, he had a brief term of schooling
-at the Cazenovia Seminary.
-
-
- FOOTING IT TO CALIFORNIA
-
-“When did you leave the farm for a mercantile life?” I asked.
-
-“I was a clerk in a store in Stockbridge for two years, after I was
-seventeen, but was engaged with the farm more or less, and wanted to get
-out of that life. I was a little over seventeen years old when the
-California gold excitement of 1849 reached our town. Wonderful tales
-were told of gold already found, and the prospects for more on the
-Pacific coast. I brooded over the difference between tossing hay in the
-hot sun and digging up gold by handfuls, until one day I threw down my
-pitchfork and went over to the house and told mother that I had quit
-that kind of work.
-
-“People with plenty of money could sail around Cape Horn in those days,
-but I had no money to spare, and so decided to walk across the country.
-That is, we were carried part of the way by rail and walked the rest. I
-persuaded one of the neighbor’s boys, Calvin Gilbert, to go along with
-me, and we started.
-
-“I provided myself with an old carpet sack into which to put my clothes.
-I bought a new pair of boots, and when we had gone as far as we could on
-canals and wagons, I bought two oxen. With these we managed for awhile,
-but eventually reached California afoot.”
-
-Young Armour suffered a severe illness on the journey, and was nursed by
-his companion Gilbert, who gathered herbs and steeped them for his
-friend’s use, and once rode thirty miles in the rain to get a doctor.
-When they reached California, he fell in with Edward Croarkin, a miner,
-who nursed him back to health. The manner in which he remembered these
-men gives keen satisfaction to the friends of the great merchant.
-
-“Did you have any money when you arrived at the gold-fields?”
-
-“Scarcely any. I struck right out, though, and found a place where I
-could dig, and I struck pay dirt in a little time.”
-
-“Did you work entirely alone?”
-
-“No. It was not long before I met Mr. Croarkin at a little mining camp
-called Virginia. He had the next claim to mine, and we became partners.
-After a little while, he went away, but came back in a year. We then
-bought in together. The way we ran things was ‘turn about.’ Croarkin
-would cook one week, and I the next, and then we would have a clean-up
-every Sunday morning. We baked our own bread, and kept a few hens, which
-kept us supplied with eggs. There was a man named Chapin who had a
-little store in the village, and we would take our gold dust there and
-trade it for groceries.”
-
-
- THE DITCH
-
-“Did you discover much gold?” I asked.
-
-“Oh, I worked with pretty good success,—nothing startling. _I didn’t
-waste much, and tried to live carefully._ I also _studied the business
-opportunities_ around, and persuaded some of my friends to join me in
-buying and developing a ‘ditch,’—a kind of aqueduct, to convey water to
-diggers and washers. That proved more profitable than digging for gold,
-and at the end of the year, the others sold out to me, took their
-earnings and went home. I stayed, and bought up several other
-water-powers, until, in 1856, I thought I had enough, and so I sold out
-and came East.”
-
-“How much had you made, altogether?”
-
-“About four thousand dollars.”
-
-This was when Mr. Armour was twenty-four years old,—his capital for
-beginning to do business.
-
-
- HE ENTERS THE GRAIN MARKET
-
-“Did you return to Stockbridge?”
-
-“A little while, but my ambition set in another direction. I had been
-studying the methods then used for moving the vast and growing food
-products of the West, such as grain and cattle, and I believed that I
-could improve them and make money. The idea and the field interested me
-and I decided to enter it.
-
-“My standing was good, and I raised the money, and bought what was then
-the largest elevator in Milwaukee. This put me in contact with the
-movement of grain. At that time, John Plankington had been established
-in Milwaukee a number of years, and, in partnership with Frederick
-Layton, had built up a good pork-packing concern. I bought in with those
-gentlemen, and so came in contact with the work I liked. One of my
-brothers, Herman, had established himself in Chicago some time before,
-in the grain-commission business. I got him to turn that over to the
-care of another brother, Joseph, so that he might go to New York as a
-member of the new firm, of which I was a partner. It was important that
-the Milwaukee and Chicago houses should be able to ship to a house of
-their own in New York,—that is, to themselves. Risks were avoided in
-this way, and we were certain of obtaining all that the ever-changing
-markets could offer us.”
-
-“When did you begin to build up your Chicago interests?”
-
-“They were really begun, before the war, by my brother Herman. When he
-went to New York for us, we began adding a small packinghouse to the
-Chicago commission branch. It gradually grew with the growth of the
-West.”
-
-
-MR. ARMOUR’S ACUTE PERCEPTION OF THE COMMERCIAL CONDITIONS FOR BUILDING
- UP A GREAT BUSINESS
-
-“Is there any one thing that accounts for the immense growth of the
-packing industry here?” I asked.
-
-“System and the growth of the West did it. Things were changing at
-startling rates in those days. The West was growing fast. Its great
-areas of production offered good profits to men who would handle and
-ship the products. Railway lines were reaching out in new directions, or
-increasing their capacities and lowering their rates of transportation.
-These changes and the growth of the country made the creation of a
-food-gathering and delivering system necessary. Other things helped. At
-that time (1863), a great many could see that the war was going to
-terminate favorably for the Union. Farming operations had been enlarged
-by the war demand and war prices. The state banking system had been done
-away with, and we had a uniform currency, available everywhere, so that
-exchanges between the East and the West had become greatly simplified.
-Nothing more was needed than a steady watchfulness of the markets by
-competent men in continuous telegraphic communication with each other,
-and who knew the legitimate demand and supply, in order to sell all
-products quickly and with profit.”
-
-
- SYSTEM AND GOOD MEASURE
-
-“Do you believe that system does so much?” I ventured.
-
-“System and good measure. _Give a measure heaped full and running over,
-and success is_ _certain._ That is what it means to be the intelligent
-servants of a great public need. We believed in thoughtfully adopting
-every attainable improvement, mechanical or otherwise, in the methods
-and appliances for handling every pound of grain or flesh. Right
-liberality and right economy will do everything where a public need is
-being served. Then, too, our
-
-
- METHODS
-
-improved all the time. There was a time when many parts of cattle were
-wasted, and the health of the city injured by the refuse. Now, by
-adopting the best known methods, nothing is wasted; and buttons,
-fertilizers, glue and other things are made cheaper and better for the
-world in general, out of material that was before a waste and a menace.
-I believe in finding out the truth about all things—the very latest
-truth or discovery,—and applying it.”
-
-“You attribute nothing to good fortune?”
-
-“Nothing!” Certainly the word came well from a man whose energy,
-integrity, and business ability made more money out of a ditch than
-other men were making out of rich placers in the gold region.
-
-
- THE TURNING POINT
-
-“May I ask what you consider the turning-point of your career?”
-
-“The time when I began to save the money I earned at the gold-fields.”
-
-
- TRUTH
-
-“What trait do you consider most essential in young men?”
-
-“Truth. Let them get that. Young men talk about getting capital to work
-with. Let them get truth on board, and capital follows. It’s easy enough
-to get that.”
-
-
- A GREAT ORATOR, AND A GREAT CHARITY
-
-“Did you always desire to follow a commercial, rather than a
-professional life?”
-
-“Not always. I have no talent in any other direction; but I should have
-liked to be a great orator.”
-
-Mr. Armour would say no more on this subject, but his admiration for
-oratory has been demonstrated in a remarkable way.
-
-It was after a Sunday morning discourse by the splendid orator, Dr.
-Gunsaulus, at Plymouth Church, Chicago, in which the latter had set
-forth his views on the subject of educating children, that Mr. Armour
-came forward and said:—
-
-“You believe in those ideas of yours, do you?”
-
-“I certainly do,” said Dr. Gunsaulus.
-
-“And would you carry them out if you had the opportunity?”
-
-“I would.”
-
-“Well, sir,” said Mr. Armour, “if you will give me five years of your
-time, I will give you the money.”
-
-“But to carry out my ideas would take a million dollars!” exclaimed
-Gunsaulus.
-
-“I have made a little money in my time,” returned Mr. Armour. And so the
-famous Armour Institute of Technology, to which its founder has already
-given sums aggregating $2,800,000, was associated with Mr. Armour’s love
-of oratory.
-
-One of his lieutenants says that Gerritt Smith, the old abolitionist,
-was Armour’s boyhood’s hero, and that to-day Mr. Armour will go far to
-hear a good speaker, often remarking that he would have preferred to be
-a great orator rather than a great capitalist.
-
-
- EASE IN HIS WORK
-
-“There is no need to ask you,” I continued, “whether you believe in
-constant, hard labor?”
-
-“I should not call it hard. I believe in close application, of course,
-while laboring. Overwork is not necessary to success. Every man should
-have plenty of rest. I have.”
-
-“You must rise early to be at your office at half past seven?”
-
-“Yes, but I go to bed early. I am not burning the candle at both ends.”
-
-The enormous energy of this man, who is too modest to discuss it, is
-displayed in the most normal manner. Though he sits all day at a desk
-which has direct cable connection with London, Liverpool, Calcutta, and
-other great centers of trade, with which he is in constant
-connection,—though he has at his hand long-distance telephone connection
-with New York, New Orleans, and San Francisco, and direct wires from his
-room to almost all parts of the world, conveying messages in short
-sentences upon subjects which involve the moving of vast amounts of
-stock and cereals, and the exchange of millions in money, he is not,
-seemingly, an overworked man. The great subjects to which he gives calm,
-undivided attention from early morning until evening, are laid aside
-with the ease with which one doffs his raiment, and outside of his
-office the cares weigh upon him no more. His mind takes up new and
-simpler things.
-
-“What do you do,” I inquired, “after your hard day’s work,—think about
-it?”
-
-“Not at all. I drive, take up home subjects, and never think of the
-office until I return to it.”
-
-“Your sleep is never disturbed?”
-
-“Not at all.”
-
-
- A BUSINESS KING
-
-And yet the business which this man forgets, when he gathers children
-about him and moves in his simple home circle, amounts in one year, to
-over $100,000,000 worth of food products, manufactured and distributed;
-the hogs killed, 1,750,000; the cattle, 1,080,000; the sheep, 625,000.
-Eleven thousand men are constantly employed, and the wages paid them are
-over $5,500,000; the railway cars owned and moving about all parts of
-the country, four thousand; the wagons of many kinds and of large
-number, drawn by seven hundred and fifty horses. The glue factory,
-employing seven hundred and fifty hands, makes over twelve million
-pounds of glue. In his private office, it is he who takes care of all
-the general affairs of this immense world of industry, and yet at
-half-past four he is done, and the whole subject is comfortably off his
-mind.
-
-
- TRAINING YOUTH FOR BUSINESS
-
-“Do you believe in inherited abilities, or that any boy can be taught
-and trained, and made a great and able man?”
-
-“I recognize inherited ability. Some people have it, and only in a
-certain direction; but I think men can be taught and trained so that
-they become much better and more useful than they would be, otherwise.
-Some boys require more training and teaching than others. There is
-prosperity for everyone, according to his ability.”
-
-“What would you do with those who are naturally less competent than
-others?”
-
-“Train them, and give them work according to their ability. I believe
-that life is all right, and that this difference which nature makes is
-all right. Everything is good, and is coming out satisfactorily, and we
-ought to make the most of conditions, and try to use and improve
-everything. The work needed is here, and everyone should set about doing
-it.”
-
-When asked if he thought the chances for young men as good to-day as
-they were when he was young. “Yes,” he said, “I think so. The world is
-changing every day and new fields are constantly opening. We have new
-ideas, new inventions, new methods of manufacture, and new ways to-day
-everywhere. There is plenty of room for any man who can do anything
-well. The electrical field is a wonderful one. There are other things
-equally good, and the right man is never at a loss for an opportunity.
-Provided he has some ability and good sense to start with, is thrifty,
-honest and economical, there is no reason why any young man should not
-accumulate money and attain so called success in life.”
-
-When asked to what qualities he attributed his own success, Mr. Armour
-said: “I think that thrift and economy had much to do with it. I owe
-much to my mother’s training and to a good line of Scotch ancestors, who
-have always been thrifty and economical. As to my business education, I
-never had any. I am, in fact, a good deal like Topsy, ‘I just growed.’
-My success has been largely a matter of organization.
-
-“I have always made it a point to surround myself with good men. I take
-them when they are young and keep them just as long as I can. Nearly all
-of the men I now have, have grown up with me. Many of them have worked
-with me for twenty years. They have started in at low wages, and have
-been advanced until they have reached the highest positions.” Mr. Armour
-thinks that most men who accumulate a large amount of money, inherited
-the money-making instinct. The power of making and accumulating money,
-he says, is as much a natural gift as are those of a singer or an
-artist. “The germs of the power to make money must be in the mind. Take,
-for instance, the people we have working with us. I can get millions of
-good bookkeepers or accountants, but not more than one out of five
-hundred in all of those I have employed has made a great success as an
-organizer or trader.”
-
-Mr. Armour is a great believer in young men and young brains. He never
-discharges a man if he can possibly avoid it. If the man is not doing
-good work where he is, he puts him in some other department, but never
-discharges him if he can find him other work. He will not, however,
-tolerate intemperance, laziness or getting into debt. Some time ago a
-policeman entered his office. In answer to Mr. Armour’s question, “What
-do you want here?” he replied: “I want to garnishee one of your men’s
-wages for debt.” “Indeed,” said Mr. Armour, “and who is the man?” Asking
-the officer into his private room he sent for the debtor. “How long have
-you been in debt?” asked Mr. Armour. The clerk replied that he had been
-behind for twenty years and could not seem to catch up. “But you get a
-good salary, don’t you?” “Yes, but I can’t get out of debt.” “But you
-must get out, or you must leave here,” said Mr. Armour. “How much do you
-owe?” The clerk then gave the amount, which was less than a
-thousand-dollars. “Well,” said Mr. Armour, handing him a check, “there
-is enough to pay all your debts, and if I hear of you again getting into
-debt, you will have to leave.” The clerk paid his debts and remodeled
-his life on a cash basis.
-
-
- PROMPT TO ACT
-
-In illustration of Mr. Armour’s aptitude for doing business, and his
-energy, it is related that when, in 1893, local forces planned to defeat
-him in the grain market, and everyone was crying that at last the great
-Goliath had met his David, he was all energy. He had ordered immense
-quantities of wheat. The opposition had shrewdly secured every available
-place of storage, and rejoiced that the great packer, having no place to
-store his property, would suffer immense loss, and must capitulate. He
-foresaw the fray and its dangers, and, going over on Goose Island,
-bought property at any price, and began the construction of immense
-elevators. The town was placarded with the truth that anyone could get
-work at Armour’s elevators. No one believed they could be done in time,
-but three shifts of men working night and day, often under the direct
-supervision of the millionaire, gradually forced the work ahead, and
-when, on the appointed day, the great grain-ships began to arrive, the
-opposition realized failure. The vessels began to pour the contents of
-their immense holds into these granaries, and the fight was over.
-
-
- FORESIGHT
-
-The foresight that sent him to New York in 1864, to sell pork, brought
-him back from Europe in 1893, months before the impending panic was
-dreamed of by other merchants. It is told of him that he called all his
-head men to New York, and announced to them:—
-
-“Gentlemen, there’s going to be financial trouble soon.”
-
-“Why, Mr. Armour,” they said, “you must be mistaken. Things were never
-better. You have been ill, and are suddenly apprehensive.”
-
-“Oh, no,” he said, “I’m not. There is going to be trouble;” and he gave
-as his reasons certain conditions which existed in nearly all countries,
-which none of those present had thought of. “Now,” said he to the first
-of his many lieutenants, “how much will you need to run your department
-until next year?”
-
-The head man named his need. The others were asked, each in turn, the
-same question, and, when all were through, he counted up, and, turning
-to the company, said:—
-
-“Gentlemen, go back and borrow all you need in Chicago, on my credit.
-Use my name for all it will bring in the way of loans.”
-
-
- FOREARMED AGAINST PANIC
-
-The lieutenants returned, and the name of Armour was strained to its
-utmost limit. When all had been borrowed, the financial flurry suddenly
-loomed up, but it did not worry the great packer. In his vaults were
-$8,000,000 in gold. All who had loaned him at interest then hurried to
-his doors, fearing that he also was imperiled. They found him supplied
-with ready money, and able to compel them to wait until the stipulated
-time of payment, or to force them to abandon their claims of interest
-for their money, and so tide him over the unhappy period. It was a
-master stroke, and made the name of the great packer a power in the
-world of finance.
-
-
- SOME SECRETS OF SUCCESS
-
-“Do you consider your financial decisions which you make quickly to be
-brilliant intuitions?” I asked.
-
-“I never did anything worth doing by accident, nor did anything I have
-come that way. No, I never decide anything without knowing the
-conditions of the market, and never begin unless satisfied concerning
-the conclusion.”
-
-“Not everyone could do that,” I said.
-
-“I cannot do everything. Every man can do something, and there is plenty
-to do,—never more than now. The problems to be solved are greater now
-than ever before. _Never was there more need of able men. I am looking
-for trained men all the time._ More money is being offered for them
-everywhere than formerly.”
-
-“Do you consider that _happiness_ consists in labor alone?”
-
-“_It consists in doing something for others._ If you give the world
-better material, better measure, better opportunities for living
-respectably, there is happiness in that. You cannot give the world
-anything without labor, and there is no satisfaction in anything but
-such labor as looks toward doing this, and does it.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- V
-
-What Miss Mary E. Proctor Did to Popularize Astronomy
-
-
-“YOU can never know what your possibilities are,” said Miss Proctor,
-“till you have put yourself to the test. There are many, many women who
-long to do something, and could succeed, if they would only banish their
-doubts, and plunge in. For example, I was not at all sure that I could
-interest audiences with talks on astronomy, but, in 1893, I began, and
-since then have given between four and five hundred lectures.”
-
-Miss Proctor is so busy spreading knowledge of the beauties and marvels
-of the heavens, that she was at home in New York for only a two days’
-interval between tours, when she consented to talk to me about her work.
-This talk showed such enthusiasm and whole-souled devotion to the theme
-that it is easy to understand Miss Proctor’s success as a lecturer,
-although she is physically diminutive, and is very domestic in her
-tastes.
-
-
- AUDIENCES ARE APPRECIATIVE
-
-“I am always nervous in going before an audience,” she said, “but there
-is so much I want to tell them that I have no time at all to think of
-myself. I find that if the lecturer is really interested in the subject,
-those who come to listen usually are; and it is certainly true, as I
-have learned by going upon the platform, tired out from a long journey,
-that you cannot expect enthusiasm in your audience, unless you are
-enthusiastic yourself. But I think that audiences are very responsive
-and appreciative of intelligent efforts to interest them, and,
-therefore, I am sure, that if a woman possesses, or can acquire a
-thorough knowledge of some practical, popular subject, and has
-enthusiasm and a fair knowledge of human nature, she can attain success
-on the lecture platform.
-
-“The field is broad, and far from over-crowded, and it yields
-bountifully to those who are willing to toil and wait. There is Miss
-Roberts, for instance, who commands large audiences for her lectures on
-music; and Mrs. Lemcke, who has been remarkably successful in her
-practical talks on cooking; and Mary E. Booth, who gives wonderfully
-instructive and entertaining lectures on the revelations of the
-microscope; and Miss Very, who takes audiences of children on most
-delightful and profitable imaginary trips to places of importance.
-
-
- LECTURES TO CHILDREN
-
-“Children, by the way, are my most satisfactory audiences. Grown-up
-people never become so absorbed. It is the greatest pleasure of my
-lecturing to talk to the little tots, and watch them drink it all in.
-Indeed, I prepared my very first lecture for children, but didn’t
-deliver it. That episode marked the beginning of my career as a
-lecturer.
-
-“Do you ask me to tell you about it? My father, Richard A. Proctor,
-wrote, as you know, many books on popular astronomy. When I was a girl I
-did not read them very carefully; my education at South Kensington,
-London, following a musical and artistic direction. In fact, I was
-ambitious to become a painter. But when my father died, in 1888, I found
-comfort in reading his books all over again; and as he had drilled me to
-write for his periodical, ‘_Knowledge_,’ I began to write articles on
-astronomy for anyone who would accept them. One day, in the spring of
-1893, I received a letter from Mrs. Potter Palmer, asking me if I would
-talk to an audience of children in the Children’s Building at the
-World’s Fair. The idea of lecturing was new to me, but I decided that I
-would try, at any rate, and so I took great pains to prepare a talk that
-I thought the children would understand, and be interested in. But when
-I reached the building, I found an audience, not of children, but of men
-and women. _There was hardly a child in all the assembled five hundred
-people._ It would never do to give them the childish talk I had
-prepared, and as it was my first attempt to talk from a platform, you
-can imagine my state of mind. I was determined, however, that my first
-effort should not be a fiasco, so I stepped out upon the platform and
-talked about the things that had most interested me in my father’s books
-and conversations.”
-
-
- A LESSON IN LECTURING
-
-“I have lectured a great many times since then, but my first lecture was
-the most trying. I am now glad that things happened as they did, for
-that experience taught me a valuable lesson. I learned not to commit my
-talks to memory, but merely to have the topics and facts and general
-arrangement of the lecture well in mind. By this method, I can change
-and adapt myself to my audience at any time; and I often have to do
-this. I am able to feel intuitively whether I have gained my listeners’
-sympathy and interest, and when I feel that I have not, I immediately
-take another tack. Another great advantage of not committing what you
-are going to say to memory, word for word, is the added color and
-animation and spontaneity which the conversational tone and manner gives
-the lecture.”
-
-
- THE STEREOPTICON
-
-“My stereopticon pictures of the heavenly bodies are of great help to
-me. They naturally add much to the interest, and are really a revelation
-to most of my audiences, for the reason that they show things that can
-never be seen with the naked eye. How my father would have delighted in
-them, and how effectively he would have used them. But celestial
-photography had not been made practical at the time of his death; it is,
-indeed, quite a new art, although its general principles are very
-simple. A special lens and photographic plate are adjusted in the
-telescope, and the plate is exposed as in an ordinary camera, except
-that the exposure is much longer. It usually continues for about four
-hours, the greater the length of time the greater being the number of
-stars that will be seen in the photograph. After the developing, these
-stars appear as mere specks on the plate. That they are so small is not
-surprising, for most of them are stars that are never seen by the eye
-alone. When the photograph is enlarged by the stereopticon, the result
-is like looking at a considerable portion of the heavens through a
-powerful telescope.
-
-“The children utter exclamations of delight when they see the
-pictures,—the children, dear, imaginative little souls, it is my
-ambition to devote more and more of my time to them, and finally talk
-and write for them altogether. They are greatly impressed with the new
-world in the skies which is opened to them, and I like to think that
-these early impressions will give them an understanding and appreciation
-of the wonders of astronomy that will always be a pleasure to them.”
-
-
- “STORIES FROM STAR LAND”
-
-“For the children, my first book, ‘Stories From Starland,’ was written.
-I tried to weave into it poetical and romantic ideas, that appeal to the
-imaginative mind of the child, and quicken the interest without any
-sacrifice of accuracy in the facts with which I deal. I wrote the book
-in a week. The publisher came to me one Saturday, and told me that he
-would like a children’s book on astronomy. I devoted all my days to it
-till the following Saturday night, and on Monday morning took the
-completed manuscript to the publishing house. They seemed very much
-surprised that it should be finished so soon; but as a matter of fact it
-was not much more than the manual labor of writing out the manuscript
-that I did in that week. _The little book itself is the result of ten
-years’ thought and study._
-
-“It is much the same with my lectures. I deliver them in a hasty,
-conversational tone, and they seem, as one of my listeners told me
-recently, to be ‘just offhand chats.’ But in reality I devote a great
-deal of labor to them, and am constantly adding new facts and new
-ideas.”
-
-
- CONCENTRATION OF ATTENTION
-
-“I learned very soon after I began my work, that _I must give myself up
-to it absolutely_ if I were to achieve success. There could be no side
-issues, nothing else to absorb any of my energy, or take any of my
-thought or time. One of the first things I did was to take a thorough
-course in singing, for the purpose of acquiring complete control of my
-voice. I put aside all social functions, of which I am rather fond and
-have since devoted my days and nights to astronomy,—not that I work at
-night, except when I lecture; I rest and retire early, so that in the
-morning I may have the spirit and enthusiasm necessary to do good work.
-
-“_Enthusiasm_, it seems to me, is an important factor in success. It
-combats discouragement, makes work a pleasure, and sacrifices easier.
-
-“A great many women fail in special fields of endeavor, who might
-succeed if they were willing to sacrifice something, and would not let
-the distractions creep in. There is more in a woman’s life to divert her
-attention from a single purpose than in a man’s; but if the woman has
-chosen some line of effort that is worthy to be called life work, and
-if—refusing to be drawn aside,—she keeps her eyes steadfastly upon the
-goal, I believe that she is almost certain to achieve success.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VI
-
-The Boyhood Experience of President Schurman of Cornell University
-
-
-AT ten years of age, he was a country lad on a backwoods farm on Prince
-Edward Island.
-
-At thirteen, he had become a clerk in a country store, at a salary of
-thirty dollars a year.
-
-At eighteen, he was a college student, supporting himself by working in
-the evenings as a bookkeeper.
-
-At twenty, he had won a scholarship in the University of London, in
-competition with all other Canadian students.
-
-At twenty-five, he was professor of philosophy, Acadia College, Nova
-Scotia.
-
-At thirty-eight, he was appointed President of Cornell University.
-
-At forty-four, he was chairman of President McKinley’s special
-commission to the Philippines.
-
-In this summary is epitomized the career of Jacob Gould Schurman. It is
-a romance of real life such as is not unfamiliar in America. Mr.
-Schurman’s career differs from that of some other self-made men,
-however. Instead of heaping up millions upon millions, he has applied
-his talents to winning the intellectual prizes of life, and has made his
-way, unaided, to the front rank of the leaders in thought and learning
-in this country. His career is a source of inspiration to all poor boys
-who have their own way to make in the world, for he has won his present
-honors by his own unaided efforts.
-
-President Schurman says of his early life:—
-
-“It is impossible for the boy of to-day, no matter in what part of the
-country he is brought up, to appreciate the life of Prince Edward Island
-as it was forty years ago. At that time, it had neither railroads nor
-daily newspapers, nor any of the dozen other things that are the merest
-commonplaces nowadays, even to the boys of the country districts. I did
-not see a railroad until late in my ’teens. I was never inside of a
-theatre until after I was twenty. The only newspaper that came to my
-father’s house was a little provincial weekly. The only books the house
-contained were a few standard works,—such as the Bible, Bunyan’s
-‘Pilgrim’s Progress,’ Fox’s ‘Book of Martyrs,’ and a few others of that
-class. Remember, too, that this was not back at the beginning of the
-century, but little more than a generation ago, for I was born in the
-year 1854.
-
-“My father had cleared away the land on which our house stood. He was a
-poor man, but no poorer than his neighbors. No amount of land, and no
-amount of work could yield much more than the necessaries of life in
-that time and place. There were eight children in our family, and there
-was work for all of us.”
-
-
- A LONG TRAMP TO SCHOOL
-
-“Our parents were anxious to have their children acquire at least an
-elementary education; and so, summer and winter, we tramped the mile and
-a half that lay between our house and the district school, and the snow
-often fell to the depth of five or six feet on the island, and
-sometimes, when it was at its worst, our father would drive us all to
-school in a big sleigh. But no weather was bad enough to keep us away.
-
-“That would be looked upon as a poor kind of school, nowadays, I
-suppose. The scholars were of all ages, and everything, from A,-B,-C, to
-the Rule of Three, was taught by the one teacher. But whatever may have
-been its deficiencies, the work of the school was thorough. The teacher
-was an old-fashioned drillmaster, and whatever he drove into our heads
-he put there to stay. I went to this school until I was thirteen, and by
-that time I had learned to read and write and spell and figure with
-considerable accuracy.
-
-“At the age of thirteen, I left home. I had formed no definite plans for
-the future. I merely wanted to get into a village, and to earn some
-money.
-
-“My father got me a place in the nearest town,—Summerside,—a village of
-about one thousand inhabitants. For my first year’s work I was to
-receive thirty dollars and my board. Think of that, young men of to-day!
-Thirty dollars a year for working from seven in the morning until ten at
-night! But I was glad to get the place. It was a start in the world, and
-the little village was like a city to my country eyes.”
-
-
- HE ALWAYS SUPPORTED HIMSELF
-
-“From the time I began working in the store until to-day, I have always
-supported myself, and during all the years of my boyhood I never
-received a penny that I did not earn myself. At the end of my first
-year, I went to a larger store in the same town, where I was to receive
-sixty dollars a year and my board. I kept this place for two years, and
-then I gave it up, against the wishes of my employer, because I had made
-up my mind that I wanted to get a better education. I determined to go
-to college.
-
-“I did not know how I was going to do this, except that it must be by my
-own efforts. I had saved about eighty dollars from my store-keeping, and
-that was all the money I had in the world.” _Out of a hundred and fifty
-dollars, the only cash he received as his first earnings during three
-years, young Schurman had saved eighty dollars; this he invested in the
-beginnings of an education._
-
-“When I told my employer of my plan, he tried to dissuade me from it. He
-pointed out the difficulties in the way of my going to college, and
-offered to double my pay if I would stay in the store.”
-
-
- THE TURNING-POINT OF HIS LIFE
-
-“That was the turning-point in my life. On one side was the certainty of
-one hundred and twenty dollars a year, and the prospect of promotion as
-fast as I deserved it. Remember what one hundred and twenty dollars
-meant in Prince Edward Island, and to a poor boy who had never possessed
-such a sum in his life. On the other side was my hope of obtaining an
-education. I knew that it involved hard work and self-denial, and there
-was the possibility of failure in the end. But my mind was made up. I
-would not turn back. I need not say that I do not regret that early
-decision, although I think that I should have made a successful
-storekeeper.
-
-“With my eighty dollars capital, I began to attend the village high
-school, to get my preparation for college. I had only one year to do it
-in. My money would not last longer than that. I recited in Latin, Greek
-and algebra, all on the same day, and for the next forty weeks I studied
-harder than I ever had before or have since. At the end of the year I
-entered the competitive examination for a scholarship in Prince of Wales
-College, at Charlotte Town, on the island. I had small hope of winning
-it, my preparation had been so hasty and incomplete. But when the result
-was announced, I found that I had not only won the scholarship from my
-county, but stood first of all the competitors on the island.
-
-“The scholarship I had won amounted to only sixty dollars a year. It
-seems little enough, but I can say now, after nearly thirty years, that
-the winning of it was the greatest success I have ever had. I have had
-other rewards, which, to most persons, would seem immeasurably greater,
-but with this difference: that first success was essential; without it I
-could not have gone on. The others I could have done without, if it had
-been necessary.”
-
-For two years young Schurman attended Prince of Wales College. He lived
-on his scholarship and what he could earn by keeping books for one of
-the town storekeepers, spending less than one hundred dollars during the
-entire college year. Afterwards, he taught a country school for a year,
-and then went to Acadia College in Nova Scotia to complete his college
-course.
-
-
- A SPLENDID COLLEGE RECORD
-
-One of Mr. Schurman’s fellow-students in Acadia says that he was
-remarkable chiefly for taking every prize to which he was eligible. In
-his senior year, he learned of a scholarship in the University of
-London, to be competed for by the students of Canadian colleges. The
-scholarship paid five hundred dollars a year for three years. The young
-student in Acadia was ambitious to continue his studies in England, and
-saw in this offer his opportunity. He tried the examination and won the
-prize.
-
-During the three years in the University of London, Mr. Schurman became
-deeply interested in the study of philosophy, and decided that he had
-found in it his life work. He was eager to go to Germany and study under
-the great leaders of philosophic thought. A way was opened for him,
-through the offer of the Hibbard Society in London; the prize being a
-traveling fellowship with two thousand dollars a year. The honor men of
-the great English universities like Oxford and Cambridge were among the
-competitors, but the poor country boy from Prince Edward Island was
-again successful, greatly to the surprise of the others.
-
-At the end of his course in Germany, Mr. Schurman, then a Doctor of
-Philosophy, returned to Acadia College to become a teacher there. Soon
-afterwards, he was called to Dalhousie University, at Halifax, Nova
-Scotia. In 1886, when a chair of philosophy was established at Cornell,
-President White, who once met the brilliant young Canadian, called him
-to that position. Two years later, Dr. Schurman became Dean of the Sage
-School of Philosophy at Cornell; and, in 1892, when the President’s
-chair became vacant, he was placed at the head of the great university.
-At that time, he was only thirty-eight years of age.
-
-President Schurman is a man of great intellectual power, and an
-inspiring presence. Though one of the youngest college presidents in the
-country, he is one of the most successful, and under his leadership
-Cornell has been very prosperous. He is deeply interested in all the
-affairs of young men, and especially those who, as he did, must make
-their own way in the world. He said, the other day:—
-
-“Though I am no longer engaged directly in teaching, I should think my
-work a failure if I did not feel that my influence on the young men with
-whom I come in contact is as direct and helpful as that of a teacher
-could be.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VII
-
-The Story of John Wanamaker
-
-
-IN a plain two-story dwelling, on the outskirts of Philadelphia, the
-future merchant prince was born, July 11, 1837. His parents were
-Americans in humble station; his mother being of that sturdy
-Pennsylvania Dutch stock which has no parallel except the Scotch for
-ruggedness. His father, a hardworking man, owned a brickyard in the
-close vicinity of the family residence. Little John earned his first
-money, seven big copper cents, by assisting his father. He was too small
-to do much, but turned the bricks every morning as they lay drying in
-the summer sun. As he grew older and stronger, the boy was given harder
-tasks around the brickyard.
-
-He went to school a little, not much, and he assisted his mother in the
-house a great deal. His father died when John was fourteen, and this
-changed the whole course of his life. He abandoned the brickyard and
-secured a place in a bookstore owned by Barclay Lippincott, on Market
-Street, Philadelphia, at a salary of one dollar and twenty-five cents a
-week.
-
-It was a four-mile walk from his home to his place of business.
-Cheerfully he trudged this distance morning and night; purchasing an
-apple or a roll each noon for luncheon, and giving his mother all the
-money that he saved. He used to deny himself every comfort, and the only
-other money that he ever spent was on books for his mother. This seems
-to have been the boy’s chief source of pleasure at that period. Even
-to-day, he says of his mother: “Her smile was a bit of heaven, and it
-never faded out of her face till her dying day.” Mrs. Wanamaker lived to
-see her son famous and wealthy.
-
-
- HIS CAPITAL AT FOURTEEN
-
-John Wanamaker, the boy, had no single thing in all his surroundings to
-give him an advantage over any one of hundreds of other boys in the city
-of Philadelphia. Indeed, there were hundreds and hundreds of other boys
-of his own age for whom anyone would have felt safe in prophesying a
-more notable career. His capital was not in money. Very few boys in all
-that great city had less money than John Wanamaker, and comparatively
-few families of average position but were better off in the way of
-worldly goods. John Wanamaker’s capital, that stood him in such good
-stead in after life, comprised good health, good habits, a clean mind,
-thrift in money matters, and tireless devotion to whatever he thought to
-be duty.
-
-People who were well acquainted with John Wanamaker when he was a book
-publisher’s boy, say that he was exceptionally promising as a boy; that
-he was studious as well as attentive to business. He did not take kindly
-to rough play, or do much playing of any kind. He was earnest in his
-work, unusually earnest for a boy. And he was saving of his money.
-
-When, a little later, he went to a Market street clothing house and
-asked for a place, he had no difficulty in getting it, nor had he any
-trouble in holding it, and here he could earn twenty-five cents a week
-more wages.
-
-
- TOWER HALL CLOTHING STORE
-
-Men who worked with him in the Tower Hall Clothing Store say that he was
-always bright, willing, accommodating, and very seldom out of temper.
-His effort was to be first at the store in the morning, and he was very
-likely to be one of the last, if not the last, at the store in the
-evening. If there was an errand, he was always prompt and glad to do it.
-And so the store people liked him, and the proprietor liked him, and,
-when he began to sell clothing, the customers liked him. He was
-considerate of their interests. He did not try to force undesirable
-goods upon them. He treated them so that when they came again they would
-be apt to ask, “Where is John?”
-
-
- HIS AMBITION AND POWER AS AN ORGANIZER AT SIXTEEN
-
-Colonel Bennett, the proprietor of Tower Hall, said of him at this
-time:—
-
-“John was certainly the most ambitious boy I ever saw. I used to take
-him to lunch with me, and he used to tell me how he was going to be a
-great merchant.
-
-“He was very much interested in the temperance cause; and had not been
-with me long before he persuaded most of the employees in the store to
-join the temperance society to which he belonged. He was always
-organizing something. He seemed to be a natural-born organizer. This
-faculty is largely accountable for his great success in after life.”
-
-
- THE Y. M. C. A.
-
-Young Wanamaker’s religious principles were always at the forefront in
-whatever he did. His interest in Sunday School work, and his skill as an
-organizer became well known. And so earnestly did he engage in the work
-of the Young Men’s Christian Association, that he was appointed the
-first salaried secretary of the Philadelphia branch, at one thousand
-dollars a year. Never since has a secretary enrolled so many members in
-the same space of time. He passed seven years in this arduous work.
-
-
- OAK HALL
-
-He saved his money; and, at twenty-four, formed a partnership with his
-brother-in-law Nathan Brown, and opened Oak Hall Clothing store, in
-April, 1861. Their united capital was only $3,500; yet Wanamaker’s
-capital of popular good-will was very great. He was already a great
-power in the city. I can never forget the impression made upon my mind,
-after he had been in business but a few months, when I visited his
-Bethany Sunday School, established in one of the most unpromising
-sections of the city, which had become already a factor for good, with
-one of the largest enrollments in the world. And he was foremost in
-every form of philanthropic work.
-
-It was because of his great capacity to do business that Wanamaker had
-been able to “boom” the Young Men’s Christian Association work. He knew
-how to do it. And he could “boom” a Sunday School, or anything else that
-he took hold of. He had
-
-
- A HEAD BUILT FOR BUSINESS,
-
-whatever the business might be. And as for Oak Hall, he knew just what
-to do with it.
-
-_The first thing he did was to multiply his working capital by getting
-the best help obtainable for running the store._
-
-At the very outset, John Wanamaker did what almost any other business
-man would have stood aghast at. He chose the best man he knew as a
-salesman in the clothing business in Philadelphia,—the man of the most
-winning personality who could attract trade,—and agreed to pay him
-$1,350 for a year,—one-third of the entire capital of the new concern.
-
-It has been a prime principle with this merchant prince not only to deal
-fairly with his employees, but to make it an object for them to earn
-money for him and to stand by him. Capacity has been the first demand.
-_He engaged the very best men to be had._ There are to-day dozens of men
-in his employ who receive larger salaries than are paid to cabinet
-ministers. All the employees of the Thirteenth Street store, which he
-occupied in 1877, participate in _a yearly division of profits. Their
-share at the end of the first year amounted to $109,439.68._
-
-
- HIS RELATION TO CUSTOMERS
-
-A considerable portion of the trade of the new store came from people in
-the country districts. Mr. Wanamaker had a way of getting close to them
-and gaining their good will. He understood human nature. He put his
-customer at ease. He showed interest in the things that interested the
-farmer. An old employee of the firm says: “John used to put a lot of
-chestnuts in his pocket along in the fall and winter, and, when he had
-one of these countrymen in tow, he’d slip a few of the nuts into the
-visitor’s hand and both would go munching about the store.”
-
-Wanamaker was the first to introduce the “one-price system” into the
-clothing trade. It was the universal rule in those days, in the clothing
-trade, not to mark the prices plainly on the goods that were for sale.
-Within rather liberal bounds, the salesman got what he could from the
-customer. Mr. Wanamaker, after a time, instituted at Oak Hall the plan
-of “but one price and that plainly marked.” In doing this he followed
-the cue of Stewart, who was the first merchant in the country to
-introduce it into the dry-goods business.
-
-The great Wanamaker store of 1877 went much further:—
-
-He announced that _those who bought goods of him were to be satisfied
-with what they bought, or have their money back_.
-
-To the old mercantile houses of the city, this seemed like committing
-business suicide.
-
-It was, also, unheard-of that special effort should be made to add to
-the comfort of visitors; to make them welcome whether they cared to buy
-or not; to induce them to look upon the store as a meeting-place, a
-rendezvous, a resting-place,—a sort of city home, almost.
-
-
- THE MERCHANT’S ORGANIZING FACULTY
-
-was so great that General Grant once remarked to George W. Childs that
-Wanamaker would have been a great general if his lot had been that of
-army service.
-
-Wanamaker used to buy goods of Stewart, and the New York merchant
-remarked to a friend: “If young Wanamaker lives, he will be a greater
-merchant than I ever was.”
-
-Sometime in recent years, since Wanamaker bought the Stewart store, he
-said to Frank G. Carpenter:—
-
-“A. T. Stewart was a genius. I have been surprised again and again as I
-have gone through the Broadway and Tenth Street building, to find what a
-knowledge he had of the needs of a mercantile establishment. Mr. Stewart
-put up a building which is to-day, I believe, better arranged than any
-of the modern structures. He seemed to know just what was needed.
-
-“I met him often when I was a young man. I have reason to think that he
-took a liking to me. One day, I remember, I was in his woolen department
-buying some stuffs for my store here, when he came up to me and asked if
-I would be in the store for fifteen minutes longer. I replied that I
-would. At the end of fifteen minutes he returned and handed me a slip of
-paper, saying:—
-
-“‘Young man, I understand that you have a mission school in
-Philadelphia; use that for it.’
-
-“Before I could reply he had left. I looked down at the slip of paper.
-It was a check for one thousand dollars.”
-
-Wanamaker early showed himself the peer of the greatest merchants. He
-created the combination or department store. He lifted the retail
-clothing business to a higher plane than it had ever before reached. In
-ten years from the time he began to do business for himself, he had
-absorbed the space of forty-five other tenants and become the leading
-merchant of his native city. Four years later, he had purchased, for
-$450,000, the freight depot of the Pennsylvania Railroad, covering the
-entire square where his present great store is located. The firm name
-became simply John Wanamaker. His lieutenants and business partners
-therein are his son Thomas B. Wanamaker, and Robert C. Ogden. Their two
-Philadelphia establishments alone do a business of between $30,000,000
-and $40,000,000 annually. Mr. Wanamaker’s private fortune is one of the
-most substantial in America.
-
-
- ATTENTION TO DETAILS
-
-Yet in all these years he has been early and late at the store, as he
-was when a boy. He has always seen to it that customers have prompt and
-careful attention. He early made the rule that if a sale was missed, a
-written reason must be rendered by the salesman. There was no hap-hazard
-business in that store,—nothing of the happy-go-lucky style. Each man
-must be alert, wide-awake, attentive, or there was no place for him at
-Oak Hall.
-
-
- THE MOST RIGID ECONOMY
-
-has been always a part of the system. It is told of him that, in the
-earlier days of Oak Hall, he used to gather up the short pieces of
-string that came in on parcels, make them into a bunch, and see that
-they were used when bundles were to be tied. He also had a habit of
-smoothing out old newspapers, and seeing that they were used as wrappers
-for such things as did not require a better grade of paper.
-
-The story has been often related of the first day’s business at the
-original store in ’61, when Wanamaker delivered the sales by wheeling a
-push-cart.
-
-
- ADVERTISING
-
-The first day’s business made a cash profit of thirty-eight dollars; and
-the whole sum was invested in one advertisement in the next day’s
-“_Inquirer_.”
-
-His advertising methods were unique; he paid for the best talent he
-could get in this line.
-
-Philadelphia woke one morning to find “W. & B.” in the form of six-inch
-square posters stuck up all over the town. There was not another letter,
-no hint, just “W. & B.” Such things are common enough now, but then the
-whole city was soon talking and wondering what this sign meant. After a
-few days, a second poster modestly stated that Wanamaker & Brown had
-begun to sell clothing at Oak Hall. Before long there were great signs,
-each 100 feet in length, painted on special fences built in a dozen
-places about the city, particularly near the railroad stations. These
-told of the new firm and were the first of a class that is now seen all
-over the country. Afterwards
-
-
- BALLOONS
-
-more than twenty feet high were sent up, and a suit of clothes was given
-to each person who brought one of them back. Whole counties were stirred
-up by the balloons. It was grand advertising, imitated since by all
-sorts of people. When the balloon idea struck the Oak Hall management it
-was quickly found that the only way to get these air-ships was to make
-them, and so, on the roof of the store, the cotton cloth was cut and
-oiled and put together. Being well built, and tied very tightly at the
-neck, they made long flights and some of them were used over and over
-again. In one instance, a balloon remained for more than six months in a
-cranberry swamp, and when the great bag was discovered, slowly swaying
-in the breeze, among the bushes, the frightened Jerseymen thought they
-had come upon an elephant, or, maybe, a survivor of the mastodons. This
-made more advertising of the very best kind for the clothing store,—the
-kind that excites interested, complimentary talk.
-
-
- SEIZING OPPORTUNITIES
-
-Genius consists in taking advantage of opportunities quite as much as in
-making them. Here was a young man doing things in an advertising way
-regardless of the custom of the business world, and with a wonderful
-knowledge of human nature. He took commonsense advantage of
-opportunities that were open to everybody.
-
-Soon after the balloon experience, tally-ho coaching began to be a
-Philadelphia fad of the very exclusives. Immediately afterwards a crack
-coach was secured, and six large and spirited horses were used instead
-of four, and Oak Hall employees, dressed in the style of the most ultra
-coaching set, traversed the country in every direction, scattering
-advertising matter to the music of the horn. Sometimes they would be a
-week on a trip. No wonder Oak Hall flourished. It was kept in the very
-front of the procession all the time.
-
-A little later, in the yachting season, the whole town was attracted and
-amused by processions and scatterings of men, each wearing a wire body
-frame that supported a thin staff from which waved a wooden burgee, or
-pointed flag reminding them of Oak Hall. Nearly two hundred of these
-prototypes of the “Sandwich man” were often out at one time.
-
-But it was not only in the quick catching of a novel advertising thought
-that the new house was making history; in newspaper advertising, it was
-even further in advance. The statements of store news were crisp and
-unhackneyed, and the first artistic illustrations ever put into
-advertisements were used there. So high was the grade of this
-picture-work that art schools regularly clipped the illustrations as
-models; and the world-famous Shakespearian scholar, Dr. Horace Howard
-Furness, treasured the original sketches of “The Seven Ages” as among
-the most interesting in his unique collection.
-
-
- PUSH AND PERSISTENCE
-
-“The chief reason,” said Mr. Wanamaker upon one occasion, “that
-everybody is not successful is the fact that they have not enough
-persistency. I always advise young men who write me on the subject to do
-one thing well, throwing all their energies into it.”
-
-To his employees he once said:—“We are very foolish people if we shut
-our ears and eyes to what other people are doing. I often pick up things
-from strangers. As you go along, pick up suggestions here and there, jot
-them down and send them along. Even writing them down helps to
-concentrate your mind on that part of the work. You need not be afraid
-of overstepping the mark. The more we push each other, the better.”
-
-
- “TO WHAT, MR. WANAMAKER, DO YOU ATTRIBUTE YOUR GREAT SUCCESS?”
-
-In reply to this question when asked, he replied:—“To thinking, toiling,
-trying, and trusting in God.”
-
-A serene confidence in a guiding power has always been one of the
-Wanamaker characteristics. He is always calm. Under the greatest stress
-he never loses his head.
-
-In one physical particular, Mr. Wanamaker is very remarkable. He can
-work continually for a long time without sleep and without evidence of
-strain, and make up for it by a good rest afterwards.
-
-When upon one occasion he was asked to name the essentials of success,
-he replied, curtly:—“I might write a volume trying to tell you how to
-succeed. _One way is to not be above taking a hint from a master._ I
-don’t care to tell why I succeeded; because I object to talking about
-myself,—it isn’t modest.”
-
-A feature of his make-up that has contributed largely to his success is
-his ability to concentrate his thoughts. No matter how trivial the
-subject brought before him, he takes it up with the appearance of one
-who has nothing else on his mind.
-
-
- HIS VIEWS ON BUSINESS
-
-When asked whether the small tradesmen has any “show” to-day against the
-great department stores, he said:—
-
-“All of the great stores were small at one time. Small stores will keep
-on developing into big ones. You wouldn’t expect a man to put an iron
-band about his business in order to prevent expansion, would you? There
-are, according to statistics, a greater number of prosperous small
-stores in the city than ever before. What better proof do you want?
-
-“The department store is a natural product, evolved from conditions that
-exist as a result of fixed trade laws. Executive capacity, combined with
-command of capital, finds opportunity in these conditions, which are
-harmonious with the irresistible determination of the producer to meet
-the consumer directly, and of merchandise to find distribution along the
-lines of least resistance. Reduced prices stimulate consumption, and
-increase employment; and it is sound opinion that the increased
-employment created by the department stores goes to women without
-curtailing that of men. In general it may be stated that large retail
-stores have shortened the hours of labor; and by systematic discipline
-have made it lighter. The small store is harder upon the sales-person
-and clerk. The effects upon the character and capacity of the employees
-are good. A well ordered, modern retail store is the means of education
-in spelling, writing, English language, system and method. Thus it
-becomes to the ambitious and serious employees, in a small way, a
-university, in which character is broadened by intelligent instruction
-practically applied.”
-
-When asked if a man with means but no experience would be safe in
-embarking in a mercantile business, he replied quickly:—
-
-“A man can’t drive a horse who has never seen one. No; a man must have
-training, must know how to buy and sell; only experience teaches that.”
-
-I have heard people marvel at the unbroken upward course of Mr.
-Wanamaker’s career, and lament that they so often make mistakes. But
-hear him:—
-
-“Who does not make mistakes? Why, if I were to think only of the
-mistakes I have made, I should be miserable indeed.”
-
-I have heard it said a hundred times that Mr. Wanamaker started when
-success was easy. Here is what he says himself about it:—
-
-“I think I could succeed as well now as in the past. It seems to me that
-the conditions of to-day are even more favorable to success than when I
-was a boy. There are better facilities for doing business, and more
-business to be done. Information in the shape of books and newspapers is
-now in the reach of all, and the young man has two opportunities where
-he formerly had one.
-
-“We are much more afraid of combinations of capital than we have any
-reason for being. Competition regulates everything of that kind. No
-organization can make immense profits for any length of time without its
-field soon swarming with competitors. It requires brain and muscle to
-manage any kind of business, and the same elements which have produced
-business success in the past will produce it now, and will always
-produce it.”
-
-
- PUBLIC SERVICE
-
-With the exception of his term of service as postmaster-general of the
-United States in President Harrison’s cabinet—a service which was marked
-by great executive ability and the institution of many reforms,—Mr.
-Wanamaker has devoted his attention almost entirely to his business and
-his church work.
-
-Yet as a citizen he has always taken a most positive course in
-opposition to the evils that threaten society. He has been forever
-prompted by his religious convictions to pursue vice either in the
-“dive,” or in municipal, state or national life. He hates a barroom, but
-he hates a treasury looter far more fiercely. His idea of Christian duty
-was evidently derived from the scene wherein the Master took a scourge
-and drove the corrupt traders and office-holders out of the temple. It
-is vigorous, it is militant; but it makes enemies. Consequently, Mr.
-Wanamaker is not without persistent maligners; getting himself well
-hated by the worst men in the community.
-
-
- INVEST IN YOURSELF
-
-Mr. Wanamaker’s views of what life is for are well expressed in the
-following excerpt from one of his addresses to young men.
-
-In the course of his address, he related that he was once called upon to
-invest in an expedition to recover Spanish mahogany and doubloons from
-the Spanish Main, which, for half a century, had lain under the rolling
-waves in sunken frigates. “But, young men,” he continued, “I know of
-better expeditions than this right at home, deep down under the sea of
-neglect and ignorance and discouragement. Near your own feet lie
-treasures untold, and you can have them all for your own by earnest
-watch and faithful study and proper care.
-
-“Let us not be content to mine the most coal, make the largest
-locomotives and 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 full-trained for the highest and
-noblest service.
-
-“This is the most enduring kind of property to acquire, a property of
-soul which no disaster can wreck or ruin. Whatever may be the changes
-that shall sweep over our fair land, no power can ever take away from
-you your investments in knowledge.”
-
-
- AT HOME
-
-Like all other magnetic and forceful men, Mr. Wanamaker is striking in
-appearance, strong rather than handsome. He has a full, round head, a
-broad forehead, a strong nose, heavy-lidded eyes that flash with energy,
-heavy jaws that denote strength of will, and tightly closed lips that
-just droop at the corners, giving an ever-present touch of sedateness.
-His face is as smooth as a boy’s and as mobile as an actor’s; and, when
-lighted up in discussion, it beams with expression. He wears a hat that
-is only six and seven-eighths in size, but is almost completely circular
-in form. He is almost six feet tall and finely built, and all his
-motions have in them the springiness of health. Nobody ever saw him
-dressed in any other color than black, with a black necktie under a
-“turn-down” collar. But he always looks as trim as if he were just out
-of the hands of both tailor and barber.
-
-It is his delight to pass much time at his country seat in Jenkintown.
-He is fond of the field and the river, the trees and flowers, and all
-the growths with which God has beautified the earth. His house is a
-home-like structure, with wide piazzas, standing upon the crest of a
-hill in the midst of a noble lawn. A big rosery and orchid house stand
-near by. The before-breakfast ramble of the proprietor is finished in
-the flower garden, and every guest is laden with floral trophies.
-
-Mr. Wanamaker was married, while he was the Secretary of the Y. M. C.
-A., to one whom he met at a church service, and who has been in full
-sympathy with his religious activities. He has been for forty years
-superintendent of the Bethany Sunday School in Philadelphia. He began
-with two teachers and twenty-seven pupils; and at the recent anniversary
-reported a school of 4,500, a church with 3,700 members, 500 having been
-added during the past year, several branches, and scores of department
-organizations.
-
-John Wanamaker says to-day that his business success is due to his
-religious training. He is first of all a Christian.
-
-The lesson of such a life should be precious to every young man. It
-teaches the value of untiring effort, of economy, of common sense
-applied to common business. I know of no career in this country that
-offers more encouragement to young people. It shows what persistency can
-do; it shows what intelligent, well-directed, tireless effort can do;
-and it proves that a man may devote himself to helping others, to the
-Sunday School, to the Church, to broad philanthropy, and still be
-wonderfully successful in a business way.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- VIII
-
-Giving up Five Thousand Dollars a Year to Become a Sculptor
-
-
-“MY life?” queried F. Wellington Ruckstuhl, one of the foremost
-sculptors of America, as we sat in his studio looking up at his huge
-figure of “Force.” “When did I begin to sculpture? As a child I was
-forever whittling, but I did not have dreams then of becoming a
-sculptor. It was not till I was thirty-two years of age. And
-love,—disappointment in my first love played a prominent part.”
-
-“But as a boy, Mr. Ruckstuhl?”
-
-“I was a poet. Every sculptor or artist is necessarily a poet. I was
-always reaching out and seeking the beautiful. My father was a foreman
-in a St. Louis machine shop. He came to this country in a sailing ship
-from Alsace, by way of the Gulf to St. Louis, when I was but six years
-old. He was a very pious man and a deacon in a church. One time, Moody
-and Sankey came to town, and my father made me attend the meetings; I
-think he hoped that I would become a minister. Between the ages of
-fourteen and nineteen, I worked in a photographic supply store; wrote
-one hundred poems, and read incessantly. I enlarged a view of the statue
-of Nelson in Trafalgar Square, London, into a ‘plaster sketch,’ ten
-times as large as the picture, but still I did not know my path. I began
-the study of philosophy, and kept up my reading for ten years. My
-friends thought I would become a literary man. I wrote for the papers,
-and belonged to a prominent literary club. I tried to analyze myself. ‘I
-am a man,’ I said, ‘but what am I good for? What am I to make of this
-life?’ I drifted from one position to another. Every one was sorry to
-part with my services, for I always did my duties as well as they could
-be done. When I was twenty-five years of age, the girl to whom I was
-attached was forced by her mother to marry a wealthy man. She died a
-year afterwards; and I ‘pulled up stakes,’ and started on a hap-hazard,
-reckless career. I went to Colorado, drifted into Arizona, prospected,
-mined, and worked on a ranch. I went to California, and at one time
-thought of shipping for China. My experiences would fill a book. Again I
-reached St. Louis. For a year, I could not find a thing to do, and
-became desperate.”
-
-“And you had done nothing at art so far?” I asked.
-
-“At that time, I saw a clay sketch. I said to myself, ‘I can do as well
-as that,’ and I copied it. My second sketch admitted me to the St. Louis
-Sketch Club. I told my friends that I would be a sculptor. They laughed
-and ridiculed me. I had secured a position in a store, and at odd times
-worked at what I had always loved, but had only half realized it.
-Notices appeared in the papers about me, for I was popular in the
-community. I entered the competition for a statue of General Frank R.
-Blair. I received the first prize, but when the committee discovered
-that I was only a bill clerk in a store, they argued that I was not
-competent to carry out the work; although I was given the first prize
-model and the one hundred and fifty dollars accompanying it.”
-
-“But that inspired you?”
-
-“Yes, but my father and mother put every obstacle in the way possible. I
-was driven from room to room. I was not even allowed to work in the
-attic.” Here Mr. Ruckstuhl laughed. “You see what genius has to contend
-with. I was advanced in position in the store, till I became assistant
-manager, at two thousand dollars a year. When I told the proprietor that
-I had decided to be a sculptor, he gazed at me in blank astonishment. ‘A
-sculptor?’ he queried, incredulously, and made a few very discouraging
-remarks, emphasized with dashes. ‘Why, young man, are you going to throw
-up the chance of a lifetime? I will give you five thousand dollars a
-year, and promote you to be manager if you will remain with me.’
-
-“But I had found my life’s work,” said Mr. Ruckstuhl, turning to me. “I
-knew it would be a struggle through poverty, till I attained fame. But I
-was confident in myself, which is half of the battle.”
-
-“And you went abroad?”
-
-“Yes, with but two hundred and fifty dollars,” he replied. “I traveled
-through Europe for five months and visited the French Salon. I said to
-myself, ‘I can do that, and that;’ and my confidence grew. But there was
-some work that completely ‘beat’ me. I returned to America penniless,
-but with a greater insight into art. I determined that I would retrace
-my steps to Paris, and study there for three years, and thought that
-would be sufficient to fully develop me. My family and friends laughed
-me to scorn, and I was discouraged by everyone. In four months, in St.
-Louis, I secured seven orders for busts, at two hundred dollars each, to
-be done after my return from France. That shows that some persons had
-confidence in me and in my talent.
-
-“O, the student life in Paris! How I look back with pleasure upon those
-struggling, yet happy days! In two months, I started on my female figure
-of ‘Evening,’ in the nude, that is now in the Metropolitan Museum of
-Art. I finished it in nine months, and positively sweat blood in my
-work. I sent it to the Salon, and went to Italy. When I returned to
-Paris, I saw my name in the paper with honorable mention. I suppose you
-can realize my feelings; I experienced the first flush of victory. I
-brought it to America, and exposed it in St. Louis. Strange to say, I
-rose in the estimation of even my family. My father actually
-congratulated me. A wealthy man in St. Louis gave me three thousand
-dollars to have my ‘Evening’ put into marble. I returned with it to
-Paris, and in a month and a quarter it was exhibited in the Salon. At
-the World’s Fair, at Chicago, it had the place of honor, and received
-one of the eleven grand medals given to American sculptors. In 1892, I
-came to New York. This statue of ‘Force’ will be erected, with my statue
-of ‘Wisdom,’ on the new Court of Appeals in New York.”
-
-We gazed at it, seated, and clothed in partial armor, of the old Roman
-type, and holding a sword across its knees. The great muscles spoke of
-strength and force, and yet, with it all, there was an almost benign
-look upon the military visage.
-
-“There is force and real action there withal, although there is repose.”
-I said in admiration.
-
-“Oh,” said Mr. Ruckstuhl, “that’s it, and that is what it is so hard to
-get! That is what every sculptor strives for; and, unless he attains it,
-his work, from my point of view, is worthless. There must be life in a
-statue; it must almost breathe. In repose there must be dormant action
-that speaks for itself.”
-
-“Is most of your work done under inspiration?” I asked.
-
-“There is nothing,—and a great deal,—in so-called inspiration. I firmly
-believe that we mortals are merely tools, mediums, at work here on
-earth. I peg away, and bend all my energies to my task. I simply
-accomplish nothing. Suddenly, after considerable preparatory toil, the
-mist clears away; I see things clearly; everything is outlined for me. I
-believe there is a conscious and a sub-conscious mind. The sub-conscious
-mind is the one that does original work; it cannot be affected by the
-mind that is conscious to all our petty environments. When the conscious
-mind is lulled and silenced, the sub-conscious one begins to work. That
-I call inspiration.”
-
-“Are you ever discouraged?” I asked out of curiosity.
-
-“Continually,” replied Mr. Ruckstuhl, looking down at his hands, soiled
-with the working clay. “Some days I will be satisfied with what I have
-done. It will strike me as simply fine. I will be as happy as a bird,
-and leave simply joyous. The following morning, when the cloths are
-removed, I look at my previous toil, and consider it vile. I ask myself:
-‘Are you a sculptor or not? Do you think that you ever will be one? Do
-you consider that art?’ So it is, till your task is accomplished. You
-are your own critic, and are continually distressed at your inability to
-create your ideals.”
-
-Mr. F. Wellington Ruckstuhl is forty-six years of age; neither short nor
-tall; a brilliant man, with wonderful powers of endurance, for his work
-is more exacting and tedious than is generally supposed.
-
-“I have simply worked a month and a quarter on that statue,” he said.
-“Certain work dissatisfied me, and I obliterated it. I have raised that
-head three times. My eyes get weary, and I become physically tired. On
-such occasions I sit down and smoke a little to distract my thoughts,
-and to clear my mind. Then my sub-conscious mind comes into play again,”
-he concluded with a smile.
-
-Mr. Ruckstuhl’s best known works are: “Mercury Teasing the Eagle of
-Jupiter,” which is of bronze, nine feet high, which he made in Paris; a
-seven-foot statue of Solon, erected in the Congressional Library, at
-Washington; busts of Franklin, Gœthe and Macaulay, on the front of the
-same library; and the eleven-foot statue of bronze of “Victory,” for the
-Jamaica soldiers’ and sailors’ monument. In competition, he won the
-contract for an equestrian statue of General John F. Hartrauft,
-ex-Governor of Pennsylvania, which he also made in Paris. It is
-considered the finest piece of work of its kind in America. Besides this
-labor, he has made a number of medallions and busts; and with the
-completion of his statue of “Force,” he will have made a wonderful
-record.
-
-“Art was in me as a child,” he said: “I was discouraged whenever it
-beckoned me, but finally claimed me. I surrendered a good position to
-follow it, whether it led through a thorny road or not. A sculptor is an
-artist, a musician, a poet, a writer, a dramatist,—to throw action,
-breath and life, music and a soul into his creation. I can pick up an
-instrument and learn it instantly; I can sing, and act, so I am in touch
-with the sympathies of the beings that I endeavor to create. You will
-find most sculptors and artists of my composite nature.
-
-“There,” said Mr. Ruckstuhl, and he stretched out his arm, with his palm
-downward, and moved it through the air, as he gazed into distance, “you
-strive to create the imagination of your mind, and it comes to you as if
-sent from another world.”
-
-“You strive.” That is the way to success.
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- IX
-
-Questions and Answers: Business Pointers by Darius Ogden Mills
-
-
-“WHAT is your idea, Mr. Mills,[2] of a successful life?” “If a bootblack
-does all the good he possibly can for his fellow-men, his life has been
-just as successful as that of the millionaire who helps thousands.”
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Mr. Mills was born in Western New York in 1825. He has been a leading
- financier for fifty years, in California, and in New York. He is
- connected with the management of eighteen important business and
- philanthropic corporations in New York City.
-
-
- WORK
-
-“What, Mr. Mills, do you consider the key-note of success?”
-
-“Work,” he replied, quickly and emphatically. “Work develops all the
-good there is in a man; idleness all the evil. Work sharpens all his
-faculties and makes him thrifty; idleness makes him lazy and a
-spendthrift. Work surrounds a man with those whose habits are
-industrious and honest; in such society a weak man develops strength,
-and a strong man is made stronger. Idleness, on the other hand, is apt
-to throw a man into the company of men whose object in life is usually
-the pursuit of unwholesome and demoralizing diversions.”
-
-
- SELF-DEPENDENCE
-
-“To what formative influence do you attribute your material success, Mr.
-Mills?” I asked.
-
-“I was taught very early that I would have to depend entirely upon
-myself; that my future lay in my own hands. I had that for a start, and
-it was a good one. I didn’t waste any time thinking about succession to
-wealth, which so often acts as a drag upon young men. Many persons waste
-the best years of their lives waiting for dead men’s shoes; and, when
-they get them, find them entirely too big to wear gracefully, simply
-because they have not developed themselves to wear them.
-
-“As a rule, the small inheritance, which, to a boy, would seem large,
-has a tendency to lessen his efforts, and is a great damage to him in
-the way of acquiring the habits necessary to success.”
-
-
- HABIT OF THRIFT
-
-“No one can acquire a fortune unless he makes a start; and the habit of
-thrift, which he learns in saving his first hundred dollars, is of
-inestimable value later on. It is not the money, but the habit which
-counts.
-
-“There is no one so helpless as a man who is ‘broke,’ no matter how
-capable he may be, and there is no habit so detrimental to his
-reputation among business men as that of borrowing small sums of money.
-This cannot be too emphatically impressed upon young men.”
-
-
- EXPENSIVE HABITS—SMOKING
-
-“Another thing is that none but the wealthy, and very few of them, can
-afford the indulgence of expensive habits; how much less then can a man
-with only a few dollars in his pocket? More young men are ruined by the
-expense of smoking than in any other way. The money thus laid out would
-make them independent, in many cases, or at least would give them a good
-start. A young man should be warned by the melancholy example of those
-who have been ruined by smoke, and avoid it.”
-
-
- FORMING AN INDEPENDENT BUSINESS JUDGMENT
-
-“What marked traits, Mr. Mills, have the influential men with whom you
-have been associated, possessed, which most impressed you?”
-
-“A habit of thinking and acting for themselves. No end of people are
-ruined by taking the advice of others. This may answer temporarily, but
-in the long run it is sure to be disastrous. Any man who hasn’t ability
-to judge for himself would better get a comfortable clerkship somewhere,
-letting some one of more ambition and ability do the thinking necessary
-to run the business.”
-
-
- THE MULTIPLICATION OF OPPORTUNITIES TO-DAY IN AMERICA
-
-“Are the opportunities for making money as numerous to-day as they were
-when you started in business?”
-
-“Yes, the progress of science and invention has increased the
-opportunities a thousandfold, and a man can find them wherever he seeks
-them in the United States in particular. It has caused the field of
-employment of labor of all kinds to expand enormously, thus creating
-opportunities which never existed before. It is no longer necessary for
-a man to go to foreign countries or distant parts of his own country to
-make money. Opportunities come to him in every quarter. There is hardly
-a point in the country so obscure that it has not felt the
-revolutionizing influence of commercial enterprise. Probably railroads
-and electricity are the chief instruments in this respect. Other
-industries follow closely in their wake.”
-
-
- WHERE ONE’S BEST CHANCE IS—THE KNOWLEDGE OF MEN
-
-“In what part of the country do you think the best chances for young men
-may be found?”
-
-“The best place for a young man to make money is the town in which he
-was born and educated. There he learns all about everybody, and
-everybody learns about him. This is to his advantage if he bears a good
-character, and to the advantage of his towns-people if he bears a bad
-one. While a young man is growing up, he unconsciously absorbs a vast
-deal of knowledge of people and affairs, which would be equal to money
-if he only has the judgment to avail himself of it. A knowledge of men
-is the prime secret of business success. Upon reflection, how absurd it
-is for a man to leave a town where he knows everything and everybody,
-and go to some distant point where he doesn’t know anything about
-anybody or anything, and expect to begin on an equal footing with the
-people there who are thoroughly acquainted.”
-
-
- THE BOTTOM OF THE LADDER
-
-“What lesson, Mr. Mills, do you consider it most needful for young men
-to learn?”
-
-“The lesson of humility;—not in the sense of being servile or
-undignified, but in that of paying due respect to men who are their
-superiors in the way of experience, knowledge and position. Such a
-lesson is akin to that of discipline. Members of the royal families of
-Europe are put in subordinate positions in the navies or armies of their
-respective countries, in order that they may receive the training
-necessary to qualify them to take command. They must first know how to
-obey, if they would control others.
-
-“In this country, it is customary for the sons of the presidents of
-great railroads, or other companies, to begin at the bottom of the
-ladder and work their way up step by step, just the same as any other
-boy in the employ of the corporation. This course has become
-imperatively necessary in the United States, where each great business
-has become a profession in itself. Most of the big machine shops number
-among their employees, scions of old families who carry dinner pails,
-and work with files or lathes, the same as anyone else. Such
-shoulder-to-shoulder experience is invaluable to a man who is destined
-to command, because he not only masters the trade technically, but
-learns all about the men he works with and qualifies himself to grapple
-with labor questions which may arise.
-
-“There is no end of conspicuous examples of the wisdom of this system in
-America. There are also many instances of disaster to great industrial
-concerns due to the inexperience or the lack of tact of men placed
-suddenly in control.”
-
-
- THE BENEFICENT USE OF CAPITAL
-
-Upon this point, Mr. Mills said:—“A man can, in the accumulation of a
-fortune, be just as great a benefactor of mankind as in the distribution
-of it. In organizing a great industry, one opens up fields of employment
-for a multitude of people who might otherwise be practically helpless,
-giving them not only a chance to earn a living for themselves and their
-families, but also to lay by a competency for old age. All honest, sober
-men, if they have half a chance, can do that; but only a small
-percentage can ever become rich. Now the rich man, having acquired his
-wealth, knows better how to manage it than those under him would, and
-having actual possession, he has the power to hold the community of his
-employees and their interests together, and prevent disintegration,
-which means disaster so much oftener to the employee than to the
-employer.”
-
-
- THE WHOLESOME DISCIPLINE OF EARNING AND SPENDING
-
-“What is the responsibility of wealth, Mr. Mills?”
-
-“A man must learn not to think too much of money. It should be
-considered as a means and not an end; and the love for it should never
-be permitted to so warp a man’s mind as to destroy his interest in
-progressive ideas. Making money is an education, and the wide experience
-thus acquired teaches a man discrimination in both men and projects,
-where money is under consideration. Very few men who make their own
-money use it carelessly. Most good projects that fail owe their failure
-to bad business management, rather than to lack of intrinsic merit. An
-inventor may have a very good thing, and plenty of capital may be
-enlisted but if a man not acquainted with the peculiar line, or one who
-is not a good salesman or financier be employed as manager, the result
-is disastrous. A man should spend his money in a way that tends to
-advance the best interests of society in the country he lives in, or in
-his own neighborhood at least. There is only one thing that is a greater
-harm to the community than a rich spendthrift, and that is a miser.”
-
-
- PERSONAL: A WORD ABOUT CHEAP HOTELS
-
-“How did you happen to establish the system of hotels which bears your
-name, Mr. Mills?”
-
-“I had been looking around for several years to find something to do
-that would be for the good of the community. My mind was largely on
-other matters, but it occurred to me that the hotel project was the
-best, and I immediately went to work at it. My purpose was to do the
-work on so large a scale that it would be appreciated and spread all
-over the country; for as the sources of education extend, we find more
-and more need of assisting men who have a disposition for decency and
-good citizenship. _The mechanic is well paid, and the man who has
-learned to labor is much more independent than he who is prepared for a
-profession or a scientific career, or other objects in life that call
-for higher education._ Clerks commencing at small salaries need good
-surroundings and economy to give themselves a start. Such are the men
-for whom the hotels were established.”
-
-
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-
-
-
-
- X
-
-Nordica: What it Costs to Become a Queen of Song
-
-
-OF the internationally famous singers, none is a greater favorite than
-Madame Lillian Nordica. She has had honors heaped upon her by every
-music-loving country. Milan, St. Petersburg, Paris, London and New York,
-in turn accepted her. Jewel cases filled with bracelets, necklaces,
-tiaras and diadems, of gold and precious stones, attest the unaffected
-sincerity of her admirers in all the great music-centers of the world.
-She enjoys, in addition, the distinction of being one of the first two
-American women to attain to international fame as a singer in grand
-opera.
-
-Madame Nordica I met on appointment at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where
-she kindly detailed for me
-
-
- THE DIFFICULTIES
-
-she encountered at the outset:—“Distinction in the field of art is
-earned: it is not thrust upon anyone. The material for a great voice may
-be born in a person—it is, in fact,—but the making of it into a great
-voice is a work of the most laborious character.
-
-“In some countries the atmosphere is not very favorable to beginners.
-Almost any of the greater European nations is probably better in this
-respect than the United States: not much better, however, because nearly
-all depends upon strength of character, determination, and the will to
-work. If a girl has these, she will rise as high, in the end, anywhere.”
-
-Madame Nordica came of New England stock, being born at Farmington,
-Maine, and reared in Boston. Her parents, bearing the name Norton,
-possessed no musical talent. “Their opinion of music,” said Madame, “was
-that it is an airy, inviting art of the devil, used to tempt men’s feet
-to stray from the solemn path of right. They believed music, as a
-vocation, to be nearly as reprehensible as a stage career, and for the
-latter they had no tolerance whatever. I must be just, though, and own
-that they did make an exception in the case of church music, else I
-should never have received the slightest encouragement in my
-aspirations. They considered music in churches to be permissible,—even
-laudable, so when I displayed some ability as a singer, I was allowed to
-use it in behalf of religion, and I did. I joined the church choir and
-sang hymns about the house almost constantly.
-
-“But I needed a world of training. I had no conception of what work lay
-ahead of anyone who contemplates singing perfectly. I had no idea of how
-high I might go myself. All I knew was that I could sing, and that I
-would win my way with my voice if I could.”
-
-“How did you accomplish it?”
-
-“By devoting all my time, all my thought, and all my energy to that one
-object. I devoured church music,—all I could get hold of. I practised
-new and difficult compositions all the time I could spare.
-
-“I became a very good church singer; so much so that when there were
-church concerts or important religious ceremonies, I was always in
-demand. Then there began to be a social demand for my ability, and,
-later, a public demand in the way of concerts.
-
-“At first, I ignored all but church singing. My ambition ran higher than
-concert singing, and I knew my parents would not consent. I persuaded
-them to let me have my voice trained. This was not very difficult,
-because my church singing, as it had improved, became a source of
-considerable profit; and they saw even greater results for me in the
-large churches, and in the religious field. So I went to a teacher of
-vocal culture, Professor John O’Neill, one of the instructors in the New
-England Conservatory of Music, Boston. He was a fine old teacher, a man
-with the highest ideals concerning music, and of the sternest and most
-exacting method. He made me feel, at first, that
-
-
- THE WORLD WAS MINE, IF I WOULD WORK.
-
-Hard work was his constant cry. There must be no play, no training for
-lower forms of public entertainment, no anything but study and practice.
-I must work and perfect myself in private, and then suddenly appear
-unheralded in the highest class of opera and take the world by storm.
-
-“It was a fine fancy, but it would not have been possible. O’Neill was a
-fine musician. Under him I studied the physiology of the voice, and
-practiced singing oratorios. I also took up Italian, familiarizing
-myself with the language, with all the songs and endless _arias_. In
-fact, I made myself as perfect in Italian as possible. In _three years_
-I had been greatly improved. Mr. O’Neill, however, employed methods of
-making me work which discouraged me. He was a man who would magnify and
-storm over the slightest error, and make light of or ignore the
-sincerest achievements. He put his grade of perfection so high that I
-began to consider it unattainable, and lost heart. Finally, I gave it up
-and rested awhile, uncertain of everything.
-
-“After I had thought awhile and regained some confidence, I came to New
-York to see Mme. Maretzek. She was not only a teacher, but also a singer
-quite famous in her day, and she thoroughly knew the world of music. She
-considered my voice to be of the right quality for the highest grade of
-operatic success; and gave me hope that, with a little more training, I
-could begin my career. She not only did that, but also set me to
-studying the great operas, ‘Lucia’ and the others, and introduced me to
-the American musical celebrities. Together we heard whatever was worth
-hearing in New York.
-
-“When the renowned Brignola came to New York, she took me to the Everett
-House, where he was stopping and introduced me. They were good friends,
-and, after gaining his opinion on the character of my voice, she had him
-play ‘Faust.’ That was a wonderful thing for me. To hear the great
-Brignola! It fired my ambition. As I listened I felt that I could also
-be great and that people, some day, might listen to me as enraptured as
-I then was by him.”
-
-
- “IT PUT NEW FIRE INTO ME
-
-and caused me to fairly toil over my studies. I would have given up all
-my hours if only I had been allowed or requested.
-
-“So it went, until _after several years of study_, Madame Maretzek
-thought I was getting pretty well along and might venture some important
-public singing. We talked about different ways of appearing and what I
-would sing, and so on, until finally Gilmore’s band came to Madison
-Square Garden. He was in the heyday of his success then, and carried
-important soloists with him. Madame Maretzek decided that she would take
-me to see him and get his opinion; and so, one day, toward the very last
-of his Madison Square engagement, we went to see him. Madame Maretzek
-was on good terms with him also. I remember that she took me in, one
-morning, when he was rehearsing. I saw a stout, kindly, genial-looking
-man who was engaged in tapping for attention, calling certain
-individuals to notice certain points, and generally fluttering around
-over a dozen odds and ends. Madame Maretzek talked with him a little
-while and then called his attention to me. He looked toward me.
-
-“‘Thinks she can sing, eh? Yes, yes. Well, all right! Let her come right
-along.’
-
-“Then he called to me,—‘Come right along now. Step right up here on the
-stage. Yes, yes. Now, what can you sing?’
-
-“I told him I could sing almost anything in oratorio or opera, if he so
-wished. He said: ‘Well, well, have a little from both. Now, what shall
-it be?’
-
-“I shall never forget his kindly way. He was like a good father, gentle
-and reassuring, and seemed really pleased to have me there and to hear
-me. I went up on the platform and told him that I would begin with ‘Let
-the Bright Seraphim,’ and he called the orchestra to order and had them
-accompany me.”
-
-“I was slightly nervous at first, but recovered my equanimity and sang
-up to my full limit of power. When I was through, he remarked, ‘Very
-good! very good!’ and ‘Now, what else?’ I next sang an _aria_ from
-‘Somnambula.’ He did not hesitate to express his approval, which was
-always, ‘Very good! very good! Now, what you want to do,’ he said, ‘is
-to get some roses in your cheeks, and come along and sing for me.’ After
-that, he continued his conference with Madame Maretzek and then we went
-away together.”
-
-
- “I WAS TRAVELING ON AIR
-
-when I left, I can assure you. His company was famous. Its engagement
-had been most successful. Madame Poppenheim was singing with it, and
-there were other famous names. There were only two more concerts to
-conclude his New York engagement, but he had told Madame Maretzek that
-if I chose to come and sing on these occasions, he would be glad to have
-me. I was more than glad of the opportunity and agreed to go. We
-arranged with him by letter, and, when the evening came, I sang. My work
-made a distinct impression on the audience, and pleased Mr. Gilmore
-wonderfully. After the second night, when all was over, he came to me,
-and said: ‘Now, my dear, of course there is no more concert this summer,
-but I am going West in the fall. Now, how would you like to go along?’
-
-“I told him that I would like to go very much, if it could be arranged;
-and, after some negotiation, he agreed to pay the expenses of my mother
-and myself, and give me one hundred dollars a week besides. I accepted,
-and when the western tour began, we went along.
-
-“I gained thorough control of my nerves upon that tour, and learned
-something of audiences, and of what constitutes distinguished ‘stage
-presence.’ _I studied all the time_, and, with the broadening influence
-of travel, gained a great deal. At the end of the tour, my voice was
-more under my control than ever before, and I was a better singer all
-around.”
-
-“You did not begin with grand opera, after all?”
-
-“No, I did not. It was not a perfect conclusion of my dreams, but it was
-a great deal. My old instructor, Mr. O’Neill, took it worse than I did.
-He regarded my ambitions as having all come to naught. I remember that
-he wrote me a letter in which he thus called me to account:—
-
-“‘After all my training, my advice, that you should come to this! A
-whole lifetime of ambition and years of the hardest study consumed to
-fit you to go on the road with a brass band! Poh!’
-
-“I pocketed the sarcasm in the best of humor, because I was sure of my
-dear old teacher’s unwavering faith in me, and knew that he wrote only
-for my own good. Still, I felt that I was doing wisely in getting before
-the public, and so decided to wait quietly and see if time would not
-justify me.
-
-“When the season was over, Mr. Gilmore came to me again. He was the most
-kindly man I ever knew. His manner was as gentle and his heart as good
-as could be.
-
-“‘I am going to Europe,’ he said. ‘I am going to London and Paris and
-Vienna and Rome, and all the other big cities. There will be a fine
-chance for you to see all those places and let Europeans hear you. They
-appreciate good singers. Now, little girl, do you want to come? If you
-do, you can.’”
-
-“I talked it over with my mother and Madame Maretzek, and decided to go;
-and so, the next season, we were
-
-
- IN EUROPE.
-
-“We gave seventy-eight concerts in England and France. We opened the
-Trocadero at Paris, and mine was the first voice of any kind to sing
-there. This European tour of the American band was a great and
-successful venture. American musicians still recall the _furore_ which
-it created, and the prestige which it gained at home. Mr. Gilmore was
-proud of his leading soloists. In Paris, where the great audiences went
-wild over my singing, he came to praise me personally in unmeasured
-terms. ‘My dear,’ he said, ‘you are going to be a great singer. You are
-going to be crowned in your own country yet. Mark my words: they are
-going to put diamonds on your brow!’ [Madame Nordica had good occasion
-to recall this, in 1898, many years after, when her enthusiastic New
-York admirers crowned her with a diamond tiara as a tribute of their
-admiration and appreciation.]
-
-“It was at the time when Gilmore was at the height of his Paris
-engagement that his agent ran off with his funds and left the old
-bandmaster almost stranded. Despite his sincere trouble, he retained his
-imperturbable good nature, and came out of it successfully. He came to
-me, one morning, smiling good-naturedly, as usual. After greeting me and
-inquiring after my health, he said: ‘My dear child, you have saved some
-little money on this tour?’ I told him I had.
-
-“‘Now, I would like to borrow that little from you.’
-
-“I was very much surprised at the request, for he said nothing whatever
-of his loss. Still, he had been so uniformly kind and generous, and had
-won our confidence and regard so wholly, that I could not hesitate. I
-turned over nearly all I had, and he gathered it up and went away,
-simply thanking me. Of course, I heard of the defalcation later. It
-became generally known. Our salaries went right on, however, and in a
-few months the whole thing had been quite forgotten, when he came to me
-one morning with money ready in his hand.
-
-“‘To pay you what I owe you, my dear,’ he said.
-
-“‘Oh, yes!’ I said; ‘so and so much,’—naming the amount.
-
-“‘Here it is,’ he said; and, handing me a roll of bills, he went away.
-Of course, I did not count it until a little later; but, when I did, I
-found just double the amount I had named, and no persuasion would ever
-induce him to accept a penny of it back.”
-
-“When did you part with Gilmore?”
-
-“At the end of that tour. He determined to return to America, and I had
-decided to spend some of my earnings on further study in Italy.
-Accordingly, I went to Milan, to the singing teacher San Giovanni. On
-arriving there, I visited the old teacher and stated my object. I said
-that I wanted to sing in grand opera.”
-
-
- “‘WHY DON’T YOU SING IN GRAND OPERA?’
-
-“He answered; ‘let me hear your voice.’
-
-“I sang an _aria_ from ‘Lucia’; and, when I was through, he said, dryly:
-‘You want to sing in grand opera?’
-
-“‘Yes.’
-
-“‘Well, why don’t you?’
-
-“‘I need training.’
-
-“‘Nonsense!’ he answered. ‘We will attend to that. You need a few months
-to practice Italian methods,—that is all.’
-
-“So I spent three months with him. After much preparation, I made my
-_début_ as Violetta in Verdi’s opera, ‘La Traviata,’ at the Teatro
-Grande, in Brescia.”
-
-The details of Madame Nordica’s Italian appearance are very interesting.
-Her success was instantaneous. Her fame went up and down the land, and
-across the water—to her home. She next sang in Gounod’s “Faust,” at
-Geneva, and soon afterwards appeared at Navarro, singing Alice in
-Meyerbeer’s “Roberto,” the enthusiastic and delighted subscribers
-presenting her with a handsome set of rubies and pearls. After that, she
-was engaged to sing at the Russian capital, and accordingly went to St.
-Petersburg, where, in October, 1881, she made her _début_ as La Filina
-in “Mignon.”
-
-There, also her success was great. She was the favorite of the society
-of the court, and received pleasant attentions from every quarter.
-Presents were made her, and inducements for her continued presence until
-two winters had passed. Then she decided to revisit France and Paris.
-
-
- THIS WAS HER CROWNING TRIUMPH
-
-“I wanted to sing in grand opera at Paris,” she said to me. “I wanted to
-know that I could appear successfully in that grand place. I counted my
-achievements nothing until I could do that.”
-
-“And did you?”
-
-“Yes. In July, 1882, I appeared there.”
-
-This was her greatest triumph. In the part of Marguerite, she took the
-house by storm, and won from the composer the highest encomiums.
-Subsequently, she appeared with equal success as Ophélie, having been
-specially prepared for both these rôles by the respective composers,
-Charles Gounod and Ambroise Thomas.
-
-“You should have been satisfied, after that,” I said.
-
-“I was,” she answered. “So thoroughly was I satisfied that soon
-afterwards I gave up my career, and was married. For two years, I
-remained away from the public; but after that time, my husband having
-died, I decided to return.
-
-“I made my first appearance at the Burton Theatre in London, and was
-doing well enough when Colonel Mapleson came to me. He was going to
-produce grand opera,—in fact he was going to open Covent Garden, which
-had been closed for a long time, with a big company. He was another
-interesting character. I found him to be generous and kind-hearted and
-happy-spirited as anyone could be. When he came to me, it was in the
-most friendly manner. ‘I am going to open Covent Garden.’ he said. ‘Now,
-here is your chance to sing there. All the great singers have appeared
-there. Patti, Gerster, Nilsson, Tietjens; now it’s your turn,—come and
-sing.’
-
-“‘How about terms?’ I asked.
-
-“‘Terms!’ he exclaimed; ‘terms! Don’t let such little details stand in
-your way. What is money compared to this? Ignore money. Think of the
-honor, of the memories of the place, of what people think of it.’ And
-then he waved his arms dramatically.
-
-“Yet, we came to terms, not wholly sacrificial on my part, and the
-season began. Covent Garden had not been open for a long time. It was in
-the spring of the year, cold and damp. There was a crowded house,
-though, because fashion accompanied the Prince of Wales there. He came,
-night after night, and heard the opera through with an overcoat on.
-
-“It was no pleasant task for me, or healthy, either, but the Lord has
-blessed me with a sound constitution. I sang my parts, as they should be
-sung—some in bare arms and shoulders, with too little clothing for such
-a temperature. I nearly froze, but it was Covent Garden and a great
-London audience, and so I bore up under it.
-
-“Things went on this way very successfully until Sir Augustus Harris
-took Drury Lane and decided to produce grand opera. He started in
-opposition to Colonel Mapleson, and so Covent Garden had to be given up.
-Mr. Harris had more money, more prestige with society, and Colonel
-Mapleson could not live under the division of patronage. When I saw the
-situation, I called on the new manager and talked with him concerning
-the next season. He was very proud and very condescending, and made sure
-to show his indifference to me. He told me all about the brilliant
-season he was planning, gave me a list of the great names he intended to
-charm with, and wound up by saying he would call on me, in case of need,
-but thought he had all the celebrities he could use, but would let me
-know.
-
-“Of course, I did not like that; but I knew I could rest awhile, and so
-was not much disturbed. The time for the opening of the season arrived.
-The papers were full of accounts of the occasion, and there were plenty
-of remarks concerning my non-appearance. Then ‘Aida’ was produced, and I
-read the criticisms of it with interest.
-
-
- SHE WAS INDISPENSABLE IN “AIDA”
-
-“The same afternoon a message came for me: ‘Would I come?’ and ‘Would I
-do so and so?’ I would, and did. I sang ‘Aida’ and then other parts, and
-gradually all the parts but one, which I had longed to try, but had not
-yet had the opportunity given to me. I was very successful, and Sir
-Augustus was very friendly.
-
-“The summer after that season, I visited Ems, where the De Reszkes were.
-One day they said: ‘We are going to Beirut, to hear the music,—don’t you
-want to go along?’ I thought it over, and decided that I did. My mother
-and I packed up and departed. When I got there and saw those splendid
-performances, I was entranced. It was perfectly beautiful. Everything
-was arranged after an ideal fashion. I had a great desire to sing there,
-and boasted to my mother that I would. When I came away, I was fully
-determined to carry it out.”
-
-“Could you speak German?”
-
-“Not at all. I began, though, at once, to study it; and, when I could
-talk it sufficiently, I went to Beirut and saw Madame Wagner.”
-
-
- THE KINDNESS OF FRAU WAGNER
-
-“Did you find her the imperious old lady she is said to be?”
-
-“Not at all. She welcomed me most heartily; and, when I told her that I
-had come to see if I could not sing there, she seemed much pleased. She
-treated me like a daughter, explained all that she was trying to do, and
-gave me a world of encouragement. Finally, I arranged to sing and create
-‘Elsa’ after my own idea of it, during the season following the one then
-approaching.
-
-“Meanwhile I came to New York to fulfill my contract for the season of
-1894-1895. While doing that, I made a study of Wagner’s, and, indeed, of
-all German music; and, when the season was over, went back and sang it.”
-
-Madame Nordica has found her work very exacting. For it she has needed a
-good physique; her manner of study sometimes calling for an
-extraordinary mental strain:—
-
-“I remember once, during my season under Augustus Harris, that he gave a
-garden party, one Sunday, to which several of his company were
-invited,—myself included. When the afternoon was well along, he came to
-me and said: ‘Did you ever sing “Valencia” in “The Huguenots?”’ I told
-him I had not.
-
-“‘Do you think you could learn the music and sing it by next Saturday
-night?’
-
-“I felt a little appalled at the question, but ventured to say that I
-could. I knew that hard work would do it.
-
-“‘Then do,’ he replied; ‘for I must have you sing it.’
-
-“The De Reszkes, Jean and Edouard, were near at the time, and offered to
-assist me. ‘Try it,’ they said, and so I agreed. We began rehearsals,
-almost without study, the very next day, both the De Reszkes prompting
-me, and by Friday they had me letter-perfect and ready to go on. Since
-the time seemed so peculiarly short, they feared for me, and, during the
-performance, stationed themselves, one in either wing, to reassure me.
-Whenever I approached near to either side of the stage, it was always to
-hear their repeated ‘Be calm!’ whispered so loud that the audience could
-almost hear it. Yet I sang easily, never thinking of failure.”
-
-
- MUSICAL TALENT OF AMERICAN GIRLS
-
-“Let me ask you one thing,” I said. “Has America good musical material?”
-
-“As much as any other country, and more, I should think. The higher
-average of intelligence here should yield a greater percentage of
-musical intelligence.”
-
-“Then there ought to be a number of American women who can do good work
-of a high order?”
-
-“There ought to be, but it is a question whether there will be. They are
-not cut out for the work which it requires to develop a good voice. I
-have noticed that young women seem to _underestimate the cost of
-distinction_. It means more than most of them are prepared to give; and,
-when they face the exactions of art, they falter and drop out. Hence we
-have many middle-class singers, but few really powerful ones.”
-
-“What are these exactions you speak of?”
-
-“_Time, money, and loss of friends, of pleasure. To be a great singer
-means, first, to be a great student. To be a great student means that
-you have no time for balls and parties, very little for friends, and
-less for carriage rides and_ _pleasant strolls. All that is really left
-is a shortened allowance of sleep, of time for meals, and time for
-exercise._”
-
-
- THE PRICE OF FAME
-
-“Permanent recognition, which cannot be taken away from you, is acquired
-only by _a lifetime of most earnest labor_. People are never
-internationally recognized until they have reached middle life. Many
-persons gain notoriety young, but that goes as quickly as it comes. _All
-true success is founded on real accomplishment acquired with
-difficulty._
-
-“Many young people have genius; but they need training for valuable
-service. The world gives very little recognition for a great deal of
-labor paid in; and, when I earn a thousand dollars for a half hour’s
-singing sometimes, it does not nearly average up for all the years and
-for the labor much more difficult which I contributed without
-recompense.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XI
-
-How William Dean Howells Worked to Secure a Foothold
-
-
-IN answer to my question, what constitutes success in life, Mr. Howells
-replied that everything is open to the beginner who has sufficient
-energy, perseverance and brains.
-
-“A young man stands at the parting of two ways,” he added, “and can take
-his path this way or that. It is comparatively easy then, with good
-judgment. Youth is certainly the greatest advantage which life
-supplies.”
-
-Upon my inquiring about his early life, he replied: “I was born in a
-little southeastern Ohio village—Martin’s Ferry,—which had little of
-what people deem advantages in schools, railroads, or population. I am
-not sure, however, that compensation was not had in other things.”
-
-As to any special talent for literary composition, Mr. Howells remarked
-that he came of a reading race, which had always loved literature in a
-way, and that it was his inclination to read.
-
-Upon this, I ventured to ask: “Would you say that, with a leaning toward
-a special study, and good health, a fair start, and perseverance, anyone
-can attain to distinction?”
-
-“That is a probability, only. You may be sure that distinction will not
-come without those qualities. The only way to succeed, is to have them;
-although having them will not necessarily guarantee distinction. I can
-only say that I began with
-
-
- A LOFTY IDEAL.
-
-“My own youth was not specially marked by advantages. There were none,
-unless you can call a small bookcase full of books, which my home
-contained, an advantage. The printing-office was my school from a very
-early date. My father thoroughly believed in it, and he had his belief
-as to work, which he illustrated as soon as we were old enough to learn
-the trade he followed. We could go to school and study, or we could go
-into the printing-office and work, with perhaps an equal chance of
-learning; but we could not be idle.”
-
-“And you chose the printing-office?”
-
-“Not wholly. As I recall it, I went to and fro between the schoolhouse
-and the printing-office. When I tired of one, I was promptly given the
-other.
-
-“As the world goes now, we were poor. My father’s income was never above
-twelve hundred a year, and his family was large; but nobody was rich
-then. We lived in the simple fashion of that time and place.
-
-“My reading, somehow, went on pretty constantly. No doubt my love for it
-won me a chance to devote time to it. The length varied with varying
-times.
-
-“Sometimes I read but little. There were so many years of work—of
-over-work, indeed, which falls to the lot of many,—that I should be
-ashamed to speak of it except in accounting for the fact of my little
-reading. My father had sold his paper in Hamilton, and bought an
-interest in another at Dayton, and at that time we were all straining
-our utmost to help pay for it. In that period very few hours were given
-to literature. My daily tasks began so early, and ended so late, that I
-had little time, even if I had the spirit for reading. Sometimes I had
-to sit up until midnight, waiting for telegraphic news, and be up again
-at dawn to deliver the papers, working afterwards at the case; but that
-was only for a few years.”
-
-
- ACQUIRING A LITERARY STYLE
-
-“When did you find time to seriously apply yourself to literature?”
-
-“I think I did so before I really had the time. Literary aspirations
-were stirred in me by the great authors whom I successively discovered,
-and I was perpetually imitating the writings of these,—modeling some
-composition of my own after theirs, but never willing to own it.”
-
-“Do you attribute your style to the composite influence of these various
-models?”
-
-“No doubt they had their effect, as a whole, but individually I was
-freed from the last by each succeeding author, until at length I came to
-understand that I must be like myself, and no other.”
-
-“Had you any conveniences for literary research, beyond the bookcase in
-your home?”
-
-“If you mean a place to work, I had a narrow, little space, under the
-stairs. There was a desk pushed back against the wall, which the
-irregular ceiling sloped down to meet, behind it; and at my left was a
-window, which gave a good light on the writing leaf of my desk. This was
-
-
- MY WORKSHOP
-
-for six or seven years,—and it was not at all a bad one. It seemed, for
-a while, so very simple and easy to come home in the middle of the
-afternoon, when my task at the printing-office was done, and sit down to
-my books in my little study, which I did not finally leave until the
-family were all in bed. My father had a decided bent for literature;
-and, when I began to show a liking for it, he was eager to direct my
-choice. This finally changed to merely recommending books, and
-eventually I was left to my own judgment,—a perplexed and sorrowfully
-mistaken judgment, at times.”
-
-“In what manner did you manage to read the works of all your favorite
-authors?”
-
-“My hours in the printing-office began at seven and ended at six, with
-an hour at noon for dinner, which I used for putting down such verses as
-had come to me in the morning. As soon as supper was over I got out my
-manuscripts, and sawed, and filed, and hammered away at my blessed
-poems, which were little less than imitations, until nine, when I went
-regularly to bed, to rise again at five. Sometimes the foreman gave me
-an afternoon off on Saturday, which I devoted to literature.”
-
-As I questioned further, it was said: “As I recall it, my father had
-secured one of those legislative clerkships in 1858, which used to fall
-sometimes to deserving country editors; and together we managed and
-carried out a scheme for corresponding with some city papers. Going to
-Columbus, the State Capital, we furnished a daily letter giving an
-account of the legislative proceedings, which I mainly wrote from the
-material he helped me to gather. The letters found favor, and my father
-withdrew from the work wholly. These letters I furnished during two
-years.
-
-“At the end of the first winter, a Cincinnati paper offered me the city
-editorship, but one night’s round with the reporters at the police
-station satisfied me that I was not meant for that kind of work. I then
-returned home for the summer, and spent my time in reading, _and in
-sending off poems, which regularly came back_. I worked in my father’s
-printing-office; but, as soon as my task was done, went home to my
-books, and worked away at them until supper. Then a German bookbinder,
-with whom I was endeavoring to read Heine in the original, met me in my
-father’s editorial room, and with a couple of candles on the table
-between us, and our Heine and the dictionary before us, we read until we
-were both tired out.”
-
-As to the influence of this constant writing and constant study, Mr.
-Howells remarked: “It was not without its immediate use. I learned
-
-
- HOW TO CHOOSE BETWEEN WORDS,
-
-after a study of their fitness; and, though I often employed them
-decoratively, and with no vital sense of their qualities, still, in mere
-decoration, they had to be chosen intelligently, and after some thought
-about their structure and meaning. I could not imitate great writers
-without imitating their method, which was to the last degree
-intelligent. They knew what they were doing, and, although I did not
-always know what I was doing, they made me wish to know, and ashamed of
-not knowing. The result was beneficial.”
-
-Mr. Howells then spoke of his astonishment, when one day he was at work
-as usual in the printing-office at home, upon being invited to take a
-place upon a Republican newspaper at Columbus, the Capital; where he was
-given charge of the news department. This included the literary notices
-and book reviews, to which, at once, he gave his prime attention.
-
-“When did you begin to contribute to the literature of the day?”
-
-“If you mean, when did I begin to attempt to contribute, I should need
-to fix an early date, for I early had experience with rejected
-manuscripts. One of my pieces, upon the familiar theme of Spring, was
-the first thing I ever had in print. My father offered it to the editor
-of the paper I worked on in Columbus, where we were then living, and I
-first knew what he had done, when with mingled shame and pride, I saw it
-in the journal. In the tumult of my emotions, I promised myself that if
-I ever got through that experience safely, I would never suffer anything
-else of mine to be published; but it was not long before I offered the
-editor a poem, myself.”
-
-“When did you publish your first story?”
-
-“My next venture was a story in the Ik Marvel manner, which it was my
-misfortune to carry into print. I did not really write it, but composed
-it, rather, in type, at the case. It was not altogether imitated from Ik
-Marvel, for I drew upon the easier art of Dickens, at times, and helped
-myself out in places with bold parodies of ‘Bleak House.’ It was all
-very well at the beginning, but I had not reckoned with the future
-sufficiently to start with any clear ending in my mind; and, as I went
-on, I began to find myself more and more in doubt about it. My material
-gave out; my incidents failed me; the characters wavered, and threatened
-to perish in my hands. To crown my misery, there grew up an impatience
-with the story among its readers; and this found its way to me one day,
-when I overheard an old farmer, who came in for his paper, say that he
-‘did not think that story amounted to much.’ I did not think so either,
-but it was deadly to have it put into words, and how I escaped the moral
-effect of the stroke I do not know. Somehow, I managed to bring the
-wretched thing to a close, and to live it slowly down.”
-
-
- THE FATE FOLLOWING COLLABORATION
-
-“My next contribution to literature was jointly with John J. Piatt, the
-poet, who had worked with me as a boy in the printing-office at
-Columbus. We met in Columbus, where I was then an editor, and we made
-our first literary venture together in a volume entitled, ‘Poems of Two
-Friends.’ _The volume became instantly and lastingly unknown to fame_;
-the West waited, as it always does, to hear what the East should say.
-The East said nothing, and two-thirds of the small edition of five
-hundred copies came back upon the publisher’s hands. This did not deter
-me, however, from contributing to the periodicals, which from time to
-time, accepted my efforts.
-
-“I remained as an editor, in Columbus, until 1861, when I was appointed
-
-
- CONSUL AT VENICE.
-
-I really wanted to go to Germany, that I might carry forward my studies
-in German literature; and I first applied for the Consulate at Munich.
-The powers at Washington thought it quite the same thing to offer me
-Rome, but I found that the income of the Roman Consulate would not give
-me a living, and I was forced to decline it. Then the President’s
-private secretaries, Mr. John Nicolay and Mr. John Hay, who did not know
-me, except as a young Westerner who had written poems in the ‘Atlantic
-Monthly,’ asked me how I would like Venice, promising that the salary
-would be put up to $1,000 a year. It was really put up to $1,500, and I
-accepted. I had four years of nearly uninterrupted leisure at Venice.”
-
-“Was it easier, when you returned from Venice?”
-
-“Not at all. On my return to America, my literary life took such form
-that most of my reading was done for review. I wrote at first a good
-many of the lighter criticisms in ‘The Nation;’ and then I went to
-Boston, to become assistant editor of ‘The Atlantic Monthly,’ where I
-wrote the literary notices for that periodical for four or five years;
-then I became editor until 1881. And I have had some sort of close
-relation with magazines ever since.”
-
-“Would you say that all literary success is very difficult to achieve?”
-I ventured.
-
-“All that is enduring.”
-
-“It seems to me ours is an age when fame comes quickly.”
-
-“Speaking of quickly made reputations,” said Mr. Howells, meditatively,
-“did you ever hear of Alexander Smith? He was a poet who, in the
-fifties, was proclaimed immortal by the critics, and ranked with
-Shakespeare. I myself read him with an ecstasy which, when I look over
-his work to-day, seems ridiculous. His poem, ‘Life-Drama,’ was heralded
-as an epic, and set alongside of ‘Paradise Lost.’ I cannot tell how we
-all came out of this craze, but the reading world is very susceptible to
-such lunacies. He is not the only third-rate poet who has been thus
-apotheosized, before and since. You might have envied his great success,
-as I certainly did; but it was not success, after all; and I am sure
-that real success is always difficult to achieve.”
-
-
- MY LITERARY EXPERIENCE
-
-“Do you believe that success comes to those who have a special bent or
-taste, which they cultivate by hard work?”
-
-“I can only answer that out of _my literary experience_. For my own
-part, I believe I have _never got any good from a book, that I did not
-read merely because I wanted to read it_. I think this may be applied to
-anything a person does. The book, I know, which you read from a sense of
-duty, or because for any reason you must, is apt to yield you little.
-This, I think, is also true of everything, and the endeavor that does
-one good—and lasting good,—is _the endeavor one makes with pleasure_.
-Labor done in another spirit will serve in a way, but pleasurable labor
-brings, on the whole, I think, the greatest reward.”
-
-Referring again to his early years, it was remarked: “A definite
-literary ambition grew up in me; and in the long reveries of the
-afternoon, when I was distributing my case in the printing-office, I
-fashioned a future of over-powering magnificence and undying celebrity.
-I should be ashamed to say what literary triumphs I achieved in those
-preposterous deliriums. But I realize now that such dreams are nerving,
-and sustain one in an otherwise barren struggle.”
-
-“Were you ever tempted and willing to abandon your object of a literary
-life for something else?”
-
-“I was, once. My first and only essay aside from literature was in _the
-realm of law_. It was arranged with a United States Senator that I
-should study law in his office. I tried it a month, but almost from the
-first day, I yearned to return to my books. _I had not only_ _to go back
-to literature, but to the printing-office, and I gladly chose to do
-it,—a step I never regretted._”
-
-
- AS TO A HAPPY LIFE,
-
-it was said by Mr. Howells, at the close of our interview:—
-
-“I have come to see life, not as the chase of a forever-impossible
-personal happiness, but as _a field for endeavor toward the happiness of
-the whole human family_. There is no other success. I know, indeed, of
-nothing more subtly satisfying and cheering than a knowledge of the real
-good will and appreciation of others. Such happiness does not come with
-money, nor does it flow from a fine physical state. It cannot be bought.
-But it is the keenest joy, after all; and the toiler’s truest and best
-reward.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
-JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER
-
-
-THE richest man in the United States, John Davidson Rockefeller, has
-consented to break his rule never to talk for publication; and he has
-told me the story of his early struggles and triumphs, and given
-utterance to some strikingly interesting observations anent the same. In
-doing so, he was influenced by the argument that there is something of
-helpfulness, of inspiration, in the career of every self-made man.
-
-While many such careers have been prolific of vivid contrasts, this one
-is simply marvelous. Whatever may be said by political economists of the
-dangers of vast aggregations of wealth in the hands of the few, there
-can be no question of the extraordinary interest attaching to the life
-story of a man who was a farm laborer at the age of fifteen, who left
-school at eighteen, because he felt it to be his duty to care for his
-mother and brother, and who, at the zenith of his business career, has
-endowed Chicago University with $7,500,000 out of a fortune estimated at
-over $300,000,000,—probably the largest single fortune on earth.
-
-The story opens in a fertile valley in Tioga County, New York, near the
-village of Richford, where John D. Rockefeller was born on his father’s
-farm in July, 1838. The parents of the boy were church-going,
-conscientious, debt-abhorring folk, who preferred the independence of a
-few acres to a mortgaged domain. They were Americans to the backbone,
-intelligent, industrious people, not very poor and certainly not very
-rich, for at fourteen John hired out to neighboring farmers during the
-summer months, in order to earn his way and not be dependent upon those
-he loved. His father was able to attend to the little farm himself, and
-thus it happened that the youth spent several summers away from home,
-toiling from sunrise to sunset, and sharing the humble life of the
-people he served.
-
-
- HIS EARLY DREAM AND PURPOSE
-
-Did the tired boy, peering from his attic window, ever dream of his
-future?
-
-He said to a youthful companion of Richford, a farmer’s boy like
-himself: “I would like to own all the land in this valley, as far as I
-can see. I sometimes dream of wealth and power. Do you think we shall
-ever be worth one hundred thousand dollars, you and I? I hope to,—some
-day.”
-
-Who can estimate the influence such a life as this must have had upon
-the future multi-millionaire? I asked Mr. Rockefeller about this, and
-found him enthusiastic over the advantages which he had received from
-his rural surroundings, and full of faith in the ability of the country
-boy to surpass his city cousin.
-
-“To my mind,” he said, “there is something unfortunate in being born in
-a city. Most young men raised in New York and other large centers have
-not had the struggles which come to us who were reared in the country.
-It is a noticeable fact that the country men are crowding out the city
-fellows who have wealthy fathers. They are willing to do more work and
-go through more for the sake of winning success in the end. Sons of
-wealthy parents haven’t a ghost of a show in competition with the
-fellows who come from the country with a determination to do something
-in the world.”
-
-The next step in the young man’s life was his going to Cleveland, Ohio,
-in his sixteenth year.
-
-“That was a great change in my life,” said he. “Going to Cleveland was
-my first experience in a great city, and I shall never forget those
-years. I began work there as an office-boy, and learned a great deal
-about business methods while filling that position. But what benefited
-me most in going to Cleveland was the new insight I gained as to what a
-great place the world really is. I had plenty of ambition then, and saw
-that, if I was to accomplish much, I would have to work very, very hard,
-indeed.”
-
-
- SCHOOL DAYS
-
-He found time, during the year 1854, to attend the sessions of the
-school which is now known as the Central High School. It was a brick
-edifice, surrounded by grounds which contained a number of hickory
-trees. It has long since been superseded by a larger and handsomer
-building, but Andrew J. Freese, the teacher, is still living. It is one
-of the proudest recollections of this delightful old gentleman’s life
-that John D. Rockefeller went to school with him. I visited him at his
-residence in Cleveland the other day, and he said:—
-
-“John was one of the best boys I had. He was always polite, but when the
-other boys threw hickory clubs at him, or attempted any undue
-familiarities with him, he would stop smiling and sail into them. Young
-Hanna—Marcus A. Hanna,—who was also a pupil, learned this, to his cost,
-more than once, and so did young Jones, the present Nevada senator. I
-have had several very distinguished pupils, you see, and one of my girls
-is now Mrs. John D. Rockefeller. I had Edward Wolcott, the Colorado
-senator, later on. Yes, John was about as intelligent and well-behaved a
-chap as I ever had. Here is one of his essays which you may copy, if you
-wish.”
-
-Mr. Rockefeller, I am quite sure, will pardon me for copying his
-composition at this late day, for its tone and subject matter reflect
-credit upon him:—
-
-“Freedom is one of the most desirable of all blessings. Even the
-smallest bird or insect loves to be free. Take, for instance, a robin
-that has always been free to fly from tree to tree, and sing its
-cheerful song from day to day,—catch it, and put it into a cage which is
-to it nothing less than a prison, and, although it may be there tended
-with the choicest care, yet it is not content. How eloquently does it
-plead, though in silence, for liberty. From day to day it sits
-mournfully upon its perch, meditating, as it were, some way for its
-escape, and when at last this is effected, how cheerfully does it wing
-its way out from its gloomy prison-house to sing undisturbed in the
-branches of the first trees.
-
-“If even the birds of the air love freedom, is it not natural that man,
-the lord of creation, should? I reply that it is, and that it is a
-violation of the laws of our country, and the laws of our God, that man
-should hold his fellowman in bondage. Yet how many thousands there are
-at the present time, even in our own country, who are bound down by
-cruel masters to toil beneath the scorching sun of the South. How can
-America, under such circumstances, call herself free? Is it extending
-freedom by granting to the South one of the largest divisions of land
-that she possesses for the purpose of holding slaves? It is a freedom
-that, if not speedily checked, will end in the ruin of our country.”
-
-It was greatly to the regret of the teacher that John came to him one
-day to announce his purpose to leave school. Mr. Freese urged him to
-remain two years longer, in order that he might complete the course, but
-the young man told him he felt obliged to earn more money than he was
-getting, because of his desire to provide for his mother and brother. He
-had received an offer, he said, of a place on the freight docks as a
-bill clerk, and this job would take him away from his studies.
-
-
- A RAFT OF HOOP POLES
-
-A short time afterwards, when Mr. Freese visited his former pupil at the
-freight dock, he found the young man seated on a bale of goods, bill
-book and pencil in hand. Pointing to a raft of hoop poles in the water,
-John told his caller that he had purchased them from a Canadian who had
-brought them across Lake Erie, expecting to sell them. Failing in this,
-the owner gladly accepted a cash offer from young Rockefeller, who named
-a price below the usual market rates. The young man explained that he
-_had saved a little money out of his wages_, and that this was his first
-speculation. He afterwards told Mr. Freese that he rafted the purchase
-himself to a flour mill, and disposed of his bargain at a profit of
-fifty dollars.[3]
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- This hoop pole story is matched by another, related by a friend, of
- Rockefeller’s later warehouse days in Cleveland. He one day bought a
- lot of beans. He bought them cheap, because they were damaged. Instead
- of selling them at a slight advance, as most dealers would have done,
- he spent all his spare time, for weeks, in the attic of his warehouse,
- sorting over those beans. He took out all the blackened and injured
- ones, and in the end he got a fancy price for the remainder, because
- they were of extra quality.
-
-
- THE ODOR OF OIL
-
-It was Mr. Freese, too, who first got the young man interested in oil.
-They were using sperm oil in those days, at a dollar and a half a
-gallon. Somebody had found natural petroleum, thick, slimy, and
-foul-smelling, in the Pennsylvania creeks, and a quantity of it had been
-received in Cleveland by a next-door neighbor of the schoolmaster. The
-neighbor thought it could be utilized in some way, but his experiments
-were as crude as the ill-favored stuff itself. These consisted of
-boiling, burning, and otherwise testing the oil, and the only result was
-the incurring of the disfavor of the near-by residents. The young man
-became interested at once. He, too, experimented with the black slime,
-draining off the clearer portions and touching matches to it. The flames
-were sickly, yellow, and malodorous.
-
-“_There must be some way of deodorizing this oil_,” said John, “_and I
-will find it_. There ought to be a good sale for it for illuminating
-purposes, if the good oil can be separated from the sediment, and that
-awful smell gotten rid of.”
-
-How well the young man profited by the accidental meeting is a matter of
-history. But I am digressing.
-
-
- HIS FIRST LEDGER, AND THE ITEMS IN IT
-
-While in Cleveland, slaving away at his tasks, Mr. Rockefeller was
-training himself for the more busy days to come. He kept a small ledger
-in which he entered all his receipts and expenditures, and I had the
-privilege of examining this interesting little book, and having its
-contents explained to me. It was nothing more than a small, paper-backed
-memorandum book.
-
-“When I looked this book up the other day, I thought I had but the
-cover,” said Mr. Rockefeller, “but, on examination, I perceived that I
-had utilized the cover to write on. In those days I was very economical,
-just as I am economical now. Economy is a virtue. I hadn’t seen my
-little ledger for a long time, when I found it among some old things. It
-is more than forty-two years ago since I wrote what it contains. I
-called it ‘Ledger A,’ and I wouldn’t exchange it now for all the ledgers
-in New York city and their contents. A glance through it shows me how
-carefully I kept account of my receipts and disbursements. I only wish
-more young men could be induced to keep accounts like this nowadays. It
-would go far toward teaching them the value of money.
-
-“_Every young man should take care of his money. I think it is a man’s
-duty to make all the money he can, keep all he can, and give away all he
-can._ I have followed this principle religiously all my life, as is
-evidenced in this book. It tells me just what I did with my money during
-my first few years in business. Between September, 1855, and January,
-1856, I received just fifty dollars. Out of this sum I paid for my
-washing and my board, and managed to save a little besides. I find, in
-looking through the book, that I gave a cent to Sunday school every
-Sunday. It wasn’t much, but it was all that I could afford to give to
-that particular object. _What I could afford to give to the_ _various
-religious and charitable works, I gave regularly. It is a good habit for
-a young man to get into._
-
-“During my second year in Cleveland, I earned twenty-five dollars a
-month. I was beginning to be a capitalist,” said Mr. Rockefeller, “and I
-suppose I ought to have considered myself a criminal for having so much
-money. I paid all my own bills at this time, and had some money to give
-away. I also had the happiness of saving some. I am not sure, but I was
-more independent then than now. I couldn’t buy the most fashionable cut
-of clothing, but I dressed well enough. I certainly did not buy any
-clothes I couldn’t pay for, as some young men do that I know of. I
-didn’t make any obligations I could not meet, and _my earnest advice is
-for every young man to live within his means. One of the swiftest
-‘toboggan slides’ I know of, is for a young fellow just starting out
-into the world to go into debt._
-
-“During the time between November, 1855, and April, 1856, I paid out
-just nine dollars and nine cents for clothing. And there is one item
-that was certainly extravagant as I usually wore mittens in the winter.
-This item is for fur gloves, two dollars and a half. In this same period
-_I gave away five dollars and fifty-eight cents. In one month I gave to
-foreign missions, ten cents, to the mite society, fifty cents, and
-twelve cents to the Five Points Mission, in New York._ I wasn’t living
-here then, of course, but I suppose I thought the Mission needed money.
-These little contributions of mine were not large, but they brought me
-into direct contact with church work, and that has been a benefit to me
-all my life. It is a mistake for a man to think that he must be rich to
-help others.”
-
-
- TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS
-
-_He earned and saved ten thousand dollars before he was twenty-five
-years old._
-
-Before he attained his majority, Rockefeller formed a partnership with
-another young man named Hewett, and began a warehouse and produce
-business. This was the natural outgrowth of his freight clerkship on the
-docks. _In five years, he had amassed about ten thousand dollars_
-besides earning a reputation for business capacity and probity.
-
-
- HE REMEMBERED THE OIL
-
-He never forgot those experiments with the crude oil. Discoveries became
-more and more frequent in the Pennsylvania oil territory. There was a
-rush of speculators to the new land of fortune. Men owning impoverished
-farms suddenly found themselves rich. Thousands of excited men bid
-wildly against each other for newly-shot wells, paying fabulous sums
-occasionally for dry holes.
-
-
- KEEPING HIS HEAD
-
-John D. Rockefeller looked the entire field over carefully and calmly.
-Never for a moment did he lose his head. His Cleveland bankers and
-business friends had asked him to purchase some wells, if he saw fit,
-offering to back him up with $75,000 for his own investment [he was
-worth about $10,000 at the time], and to put in $400,000 more on his
-report.
-
-_The business judgment of this young man at twenty-five was so good,
-that his neighbors were willing to invest half a million dollars at his
-bidding._
-
-He returned to Cleveland without investing a dollar. Instead of joining
-the mad crowd of producers, he sagaciously determined to begin at the
-other end of the business,—the refining of the product.
-
-
- THERE WAS MORE MONEY IN A REFINERY
-
-The use of petroleum was dangerous at that time, on account of the
-highly inflammable gases it contained. Many persons stuck to candles and
-sperm oil through fear of an explosion if they used the new illuminant.
-The process of removing these superfluous gases by refining, or
-distilling, as it was then called, was in its infancy. There were few
-men who knew anything about it.
-
-Among Rockefeller’s acquaintances in Cleveland was one of these men. His
-name was Samuel Andrews. He had worked in a distillery, and was familiar
-with the process. He believed that there was a great business to be
-built up by removing the gases from the crude oil and making it safe for
-household use. Rockefeller listened to him, and became convinced that he
-was right. Here was a field as wide as the world, limited only by the
-production of crude oil. It was a proposition on which he could figure
-and make sure of the result. It was just the thing Rockefeller had been
-looking for. He decided to leave the production of oil to others, and to
-devote his attention to preparing it for market.
-
-Andrews was a brother commission merchant. The two started a refinery,
-each closing out his former business connection. In two weeks it was
-running night and day to fill orders. So great was the demand, and so
-great was the judgment of young Rockefeller,—seeing what no one else had
-seen.
-
-A second refinery had to be built at once, and in two years their plants
-were turning out two thousand barrels of refined petroleum per day.
-Henry M. Flagler, already wealthy, came into the firm, the name of which
-then became Rockefeller, Flagler and Andrews. More refineries were
-built, not only at Cleveland, but also at other advantageous points.
-Competing refineries were bought or rendered ineffective by the cutting
-of prices.
-
-It is related that Mr. Andrews became one day dissatisfied, and he was
-asked,—“What will you take for your interest?” Andrews wrote carelessly
-on a piece of paper,—“One million dollars.” Within twenty-four hours he
-was handed that amount; Mr. Rockefeller saying,—“Cheaper at one million
-than ten.” In building up the refinery business Rockefeller was the
-head; the others were the hands. He was always the general commanding,
-the tactician. He made the plans and his associates carried them out.
-Here was the post for which he had fitted himself, and in which his
-genius for planning had full sway. In the conduct of the refinery
-affairs, as in every enterprise in which he has taken part, he
-exemplified another rule to which he had adhered from his boyhood days.
-He was the leader in whatever he undertook. In going into any
-undertaking, John D. Rockefeller has made it his rule to have the chief
-authority in his own hands or to have nothing to do with the matter.
-
-
- STANDARD OIL
-
-In 1870, when Mr. Rockefeller was thirty-two years old, the business was
-merged into the Standard Oil Company, starting with a capital of one
-million dollars. Other pens have written the later story of that great
-corporation; how it started pipe lines to carry the oil to the seaboard;
-how it earned millions in by-products which had formerly run to waste;
-how it covered the markets of the world in its keen search for trade,
-distancing all competition, and cheapening its own processes so that its
-dividends in one year, 1899, amounted to $23,000,000 in excess of the
-fixed dividend upon the whole capital stock. This is the outcome of
-thirty years’ development. The corporation is now the greatest business
-combination of modern times, or of any age of the world. Mr.
-Rockefeller’s annual income from his holdings of Standard Oil stock is
-estimated at about sixteen millions of dollars.
-
-
- MR. ROCKEFELLER’S PERSONALITY
-
-The brains of all this, the owner of the largest percentage of the stock
-in the parent corporation, and in most of the lesser ones, is now
-sixty-two years old. His personality is simple and unaffected, his
-tastes domestic, and the trend of his thoughts decidedly religious. His
-Cleveland residential estate is superb, covering a large tract of
-park-like land,—but even there he has shown his unselfishness by
-donating a large portion of his land to the city for park purposes. His
-New York home is not a pretentious place,—solid, but by no means elegant
-in outward appearance. Between the two homes he divides his time with
-his wife and children. He is an earnest and hardworking member of the
-Fifth Avenue Baptist Church, in New York, and does much to promote the
-good work carried on by that organization. He is particularly interested
-in the Sunday-school work.
-
-
- AT THE OFFICE
-
-He arises early in the morning, at his home, and, after a light
-breakfast, attends to some of his personal affairs there. He is always
-early on hand at the great Standard Oil building on lower Broadway, New
-York, and, during the day, he transacts business connected with the
-management of that vast corporation. There is hardly one of our business
-men of whom the public at large knows so little. He avoids publicity as
-most men would the plague. The result is that he is the only one of our
-very wealthy men who maintains the reputation of being different from
-the ordinary run of mortals. To most newspaper readers, he is a man of
-mystery, a sort of financial wizard who sits in his office and heaps up
-wealth after the fashion of Aladdin and other fairy-tale heroes.
-
-All this is wide of the mark. It would be hard to find a more
-commonplace, matter-of-fact man than John D. Rockefeller. His tall form,
-with the suggestion of a stoop in it, his pale, thoughtful face and
-reserved manner, suggest the scholar or professional man rather than an
-industrial Hercules or a Napoleon of finance. He speaks in a slow,
-deliberate manner, weighing each word. There is nothing impulsive or
-bombastic about him. But his conversation impresses one as consisting of
-about one hundred per cent. of cold, compact, boiled-down common sense.
-
-Here is to be noted one characteristic of the great oil magnate which
-has helped to make him what he is. The popular idea of a
-multi-millionaire is a man who has taken big risks, and has come out
-luckily. He is a living refutation of this conception. He is careful and
-cautious by nature, and he has made these traits habitual for a
-lifetime; he conducts all his affairs on the strictest business
-principles.
-
-
- FORESIGHT
-
-The qualities which have made him so successful are largely those which
-go to the making of any successful business man,—industry, thrift,
-perseverance, and foresight. Three of these qualities would have made
-him a rich man; the last has distinguished him as the richest man. One
-of his business associates said of him, the other day:—
-
-“I believe the secret of his success, so far as there is any secret,
-lies in power of foresight, which often seems to his associates to be
-wonderful. It comes simply from his habit of looking at every side of a
-question, of weighing the favorable and unfavorable features of a
-situation, and of sifting out the inevitable result through his
-unfailing good judgment.”
-
-This is his own personal statement, put into other words, so it may be
-accepted as true. The encouraging part of it is that, while such
-foresight as Rockefeller displays may be ascribed partly to natural
-endowment, both he and his friend say that it is more largely a matter
-of habit, made effective by continual practice.
-
-
- HYGIENE
-
-At noon he takes a very simple lunch at his club, or at some downtown
-restaurant. The lunch usually consists of a bowl of bread and milk. He
-remains at the office until late in the afternoon, and before dinner he
-takes some exercise. _In winter, he skates when possible._ And at other
-seasons of the year he nearly always drives in the park or on the
-avenues. Mr. Rockefeller has great faith in fresh air as a tonic.
-
-
- AT HOME
-
-The evenings are nearly always spent at home, for neither Mr.
-Rockefeller nor any of the children are fond of “society,” as the word
-is understood in New York. The children seem to have inherited many of
-their father’s sensible ideas, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has
-apparently escaped the fate of most rich men’s sons. He has a deep sense
-of responsibility as the heir-apparent to so much wealth; and, since his
-graduation from college, he has devoted himself to a business career,
-starting at the bottom and working upward, step by step. It is now
-generally known that he has been very successful in his business
-ventures, and he bids fair to become a worthy successor to his father.
-He is now actively engaged in important philanthropic enterprises in New
-York. Miss Bessie became the wife of a poor clergyman of the Baptist
-Church in Cleveland; while Miss Alta is married to a prominent young
-business man in Chicago.
-
-
- PHILANTHROPY
-
-Mr. Rockefeller has during many years turned over to his children a
-great many letters from needy people, asking them to exercise their own
-judgment in distributing charities.
-
-While he has himself given away millions for education and charity, he
-would have given more were it not for his dread of seeming ostentatious.
-But he never gives indiscriminately, nor out of hand. When a charity
-appeals to him, he investigates it thoroughly, just as he would a
-business scheme. If he decides that its object is worthy, he gives
-liberally; otherwise, not a cent can be got out of him.
-
-It may be imagined that such a man is busy to the full limit of his
-working capacity. This is true. He is too busy for any of the pastimes
-and pleasures in which most wealthy men seek diversion. He is thoroughly
-devoted to his home and family, and spends as much as possible of his
-time with them. He is a man who views life seriously, but in his quiet
-way he can get as much enjoyment out of a good story or a meeting with
-an old friend as can any other man.
-
-
- PERSEVERANCE
-
-When I asked Mr. Rockefeller what he considers has most helped him in
-obtaining success in business, he answered: “It was early training, and
-the fact that I was willing to persevere. I do not think there is any
-other quality so essential to success of any kind as the quality of
-perseverance. It overcomes almost everything, even nature.”
-
-It is to be said of his business enterprises, looking at them in a large
-way, that he has given to the world good honest oil, of standard
-quality; that his employees are always well paid; that he has given away
-more money in benevolence than any other business man in America. And
-everything about the man indicates that he is likely to “persevere” in
-the course he has so long pursued, turning his vast wealth into
-institutes for public service.
-
-
- A GENIUS FOR MONEY MAKING
-
-“There are men born with a genius for money-making,” says Mathews. “They
-have the instinct of accumulation. The talent and the inclination to
-convert dollars into doubloons by bargains or shrewd investments are in
-them just as strongly marked and as uncontrollable as were the ability
-and the inclination of Shakespeare to produce Hamlet and Othello, of
-Raphael to paint his cartoons, of Beethoven to compose his symphonies,
-or Morse to invent an electric telegraph. As it would have been a gross
-dereliction of duty, a shameful perversion of gifts, had these latter
-disregarded the instincts of their genius and engaged in the scramble
-for wealth, so would a Rothschild, an Astor, and a Peabody have sinned
-had they done violence to their natures, and thrown their energies into
-channels where they would have proved dwarfs and not giants.”
-
-The opportunity which came to young Rockefeller does not occur many
-times in many ages: and in a generous interpretation of his opportunity
-he has already invested a great deal of his earnings in permanently
-useful philanthropies.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
-The Author of the Battle Hymn of the Republic—Her Views of Education for
- Young Women
-
-
-A POET, author, lecturer, wit and conversationalist, Mrs. Julia Ward
-Howe unites with the attributes of a tender, womanly nature—which has
-made her the idol of her husband and children—the sterner virtues of a
-reformer; the unflinching courage which dares to stand with a small
-minority in the cause of right; the indomitable perseverance and force
-of character which persist in the demand for justice in face of the
-determined opposition of narrow prejudice and old-time conservatism.
-
-Although more Bostonian than the Bostonians themselves, Mrs. Howe first
-saw the light in New York, and has spent much of her later life at
-Newport. Born in 1819, in a stately mansion near the Bowling Green, then
-the most fashionable quarter of New York, she was the fourth child of
-Samuel Ward and Julia Cutler Ward, people of unusual culture,
-refinement, and high ideals. Mr. Ward was a man of spotless honor and
-business integrity; and, although not wealthy as compared with the
-millionaires of to-day, his fortune was ample enough to surround his
-wife and children with all the luxuries and refinements that the most
-fastidious nature could crave. Mrs. Ward possessed a rare combination of
-personal charms and mental gifts, which endeared her to all who had the
-privilege of knowing her. All too soon, the death angel came and bore
-away the lovely young wife and mother, then in her twenty-eighth year.
-
-Rousing himself, with a great effort, from the grief into which the
-death of his wife had plunged him, Mr. Ward devoted himself to the
-training, and education of his children. Far in advance of his age in
-the matter of higher education for women he selected as the tutor of his
-daughters the learned Doctor Joseph Green Cogswell, with instruction to
-teach them the full curriculum of Harvard college.
-
-
- “LITTLE MISS WARD”
-
-The scholarly and refined atmosphere of her father’s home, which was the
-resort of the most distinguished men of letters of the day, was an
-admirable school for the development of the literary and philosophic
-mind of the “little Miss Ward,” as Mr. Ward’s eldest daughter had been
-called from childhood.
-
-Learned even beyond advanced college graduates of to-day, an
-accomplished linguist, a musical amateur of great promise, the young and
-beautiful Miss Julia Ward, of Bond street, soon became a leader of the
-cultured and fashionable circle in which she moved. In the series,
-“Authors at Home,” by M. C. Sherwood, we get a glimpse of her, about
-that time, in a whimsical entry from the diary of a Miss Hamilton,
-written at the time of the return of Doctor Howe, from Greece, whither
-he had gone to fight the Turks:—
-
-“I walked down Broadway with all the fashion and met the pretty blue
-stocking, Miss Julia Ward, with her admirer, Doctor Howe, just home from
-Europe. She had on a blue satin cloak and a white muslin dress. I looked
-to see if she had on blue stockings, but I think not. I suspect that her
-stockings were pink, and she wore low slippers, as grandmamma does. They
-say she dreams in Italian and quotes French verses. She sang very
-prettily at a party last evening. I noticed how white her hands were.
-Still, though attractive, the muse is not handsome.”
-
-
- SHE MARRIED A REFORMER
-
-Soon after the loss of her father, in 1839, Miss Ward paid the first of
-a series of visits to Boston, where she met, among other distinguished
-people who became life-long friends, Sarah Margaret Fuller, Horace Mann,
-Charles Sumner, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. In 1843 she was married to the
-director of the institute for the blind, in South Boston, the physician
-and reformer, Doctor Samuel G. Howe, of whom Sydney Smith
-spoke—referring to the remarkable results attained in his education of
-Laura Bridgman,—as “a modern Pygmalion who has put life into a statue.”
-Immediately after their marriage, Doctor and Mrs. Howe sailed for
-Europe, making London their first stopping place. There they met many
-famous men and women, among them Charles Dickens, Thomas Carlyle, Sydney
-Smith, Thomas Moore, the Duchess of Sutherland, John Forster, Samuel
-Rogers, Richard Monckton Milnes, and many others. After an extensive
-continental tour, including the Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany,
-France, and Italy, Doctor and Mrs. Howe returned home and took up their
-residence in South Boston.
-
-One of her friends has said: “Mrs. Howe wrote leading articles from her
-cradle;” and it is true that at seventeen, at least, she was an
-anonymous but valued contributor to the _New York Magazine_, then a
-prominent periodical. In 1854, her first volume of poems was published.
-She named it “Passion Flowers,” and the Boston world of letters hailed
-her as a new poet. Though published anonymously, the volume at once
-revealed its author; and Mrs. Howe was welcomed into the poetic
-fraternity by such shining lights as Emerson, Whittier, Longfellow,
-Bryant, and Holmes. The poem by which the author will be forever
-enshrined in her country’s memory is, _par excellence_, “The Battle Hymn
-of the Republic,” which, like Kipling’s “Recessional,” sang itself at
-once into the heart of the nation. As any sketch of Mrs. Howe would be
-incomplete without the story of the birth of this great song of America,
-it is here given in brief.
-
-
- STORY OF THE “BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC”
-
-It was in the first year of our Civil War that Mrs. Howe, in company
-with her husband and friends, visited Washington. During their stay in
-that city, the party went to see a review of troops, which, however, was
-interrupted by a movement of the enemy, and had to be put off for the
-day. The carriage in which Mrs. Howe was seated with her friends was
-surrounded by armed men; and, as they rode along, she began to sing, to
-the great delight of the soldiers, “John Brown.” “Good for you!” shouted
-the boys in blue, who, with a will, took up the refrain. Mrs. Howe then
-began conversing with her friends on the momentous events of the hour,
-and expressed the strong desire she felt to write some words which might
-be sung to this stirring tune, adding that she feared she would never be
-able to do so. “She went to sleep,” says her daughter, Maude Howe Eliot,
-“full of thoughts of battle, and awoke before dawn the next morning to
-find the desired verses immediately present to her mind. She sprang from
-her bed, and in the dim gray light found a pen, and paper, whereon she
-wrote, scarcely seeing them, the lines of the poem. Returning to her
-couch, she was soon asleep, but not until she had said to herself, ‘I
-like this better than anything I have ever written before.’”
-
-
- “EIGHTY YEARS YOUNG”
-
-Of Mrs. Howe it may very fittingly be said that she is eighty years
-young. Her blue eye retains its brightness, and her dignified carriage
-betokens none of the feebleness of age. Above all, her mind seems to
-hold, in a marvelous degree, its youthful vigor and elasticity; a fact
-that especially impressed me as the author of “The Battle Hymn of the
-Republic” expressed her views on the desirability of a college training
-for girls.
-
-“The girls who go to college,” said Mrs. Howe, “are very much in
-request, I should say for everything,—certainly for teaching. Then,
-naturally, if they wish to follow literature, they have a very great
-advantage over those who have not had the benefit of a college course,
-having a liberal education to begin with.”
-
-“Which is the greater advantage to a girl, to have talent or great
-perseverance?”
-
-“In order to accomplish anything really worth doing, I think great
-perseverance is of the first importance. On the other hand, one cannot
-do a great deal without talent, while special talent without
-perseverance never amounts to much. I once heard Mr. Emerson say,
-‘Genius without character is mere friskiness;’ and we all know of highly
-gifted people, who, because lacking the essential quality of
-perseverance, accomplish very little in the world.”
-
-“Do you think the college girl will exercise a greater influence on
-modern progress and the civilization of the future than her untrained
-sister?”
-
-“Oh, very much greater,” was the quick, emphatic reply. “In the first
-place, I think that college-bred girls are quite as likely to marry as
-others, and when a college girl marries, then the whole family is lifted
-to a higher plane, the natural result of the well-trained, cultivated
-mind. Mothers of old, you know, were very ignorant. Indeed, it is sad to
-think what few advantages they had. Of course, some of them had
-opportunities to study alone, but this solitary study could not
-accomplish for them what the colleges, with their corps of specialists
-and trained professors, are doing for the young women of to-day.”
-
-
- THE IDEAL COLLEGE
-
-Speaking of the advantages and disadvantages of coeducational
-institutions, Mrs. Howe said:—
-
-“While there are many advantages in coeducation, there are also some
-dangers. The great advantage consists in the mingling of both sorts of
-mind, the masculine and the feminine. This gives a completeness that
-cannot otherwise be obtained. I have observed that when committees are
-made up of both men and women, we get a roundness and completeness that
-are lacking when the membership is composed of either sex alone; and so
-in college recitations, where the boys present their side and the girls
-theirs, we get better results. This, of course, is natural. Fortunately,
-so far, scandals have been very rare, if found at all, in coeducation at
-colleges. Many people, however, would not care to trust their children,
-nor would we send every girl, to such colleges; and, for this reason, I
-am glad that we have women’s colleges. I think, however, that, if the
-students are at all earnest, and have high ideals set before them, the
-coeducational is the ideal college; for the course in these colleges is
-like a great intellectual race, which arouses and stimulates all the
-nobler faculties.”
-
-“What influence do you think environment has on one’s career,—on success
-in life?”
-
-“What do you mean by environment?”
-
-“Well, I mean especially the sort of people with whom one is associated;
-their order of mind?”
-
-“I think it has a very important effect. If we are kept perpetually
-under lowering influences—lowering both morally and æsthetically,—the
-tendency will inevitably be to drag us down. I say æsthetically, because
-I think in that sense good taste is a part of good morals. You can, of
-course, have good taste without good morals; but with morality there is
-a certain feeling or measure of reserve and nicety which does not
-accompany good taste without good morals. You know St. Paul says: ‘Evil
-communications corrupt good manners.’ That is as true to-day as it ever
-was. We can’t always be with our equals or our superiors, however; we
-must take people as we find them. But we should try to be with people
-who stand for high things, morally and intellectually. Then, when we
-have to be among people of a lower grade, we can help them, because I
-think human nature, on the whole, desires to be elevated rather than
-lowered.”
-
-“Do you think it is necessary to success in life to have a special aim?”
-
-“I think it is a great thing to have a special aim or talent, and it is
-better to make one thing the leading interest in life than to run after
-half-a-dozen.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
-A TALK WITH EDISON
-
- DRAMATIC INCIDENTS IN HIS EARLY LIFE
-
-
-TO discover the opinion of Thomas A. Edison concerning what makes and
-constitutes success in life is an easy matter—if one can first discover
-Mr. Edison. I camped three weeks in the vicinity of Orange, N.J.,
-awaiting the opportunity to come upon the great inventor and voice my
-questions. It seemed a rather hopeless and discouraging affair until he
-was really before me; but, truth to say, he is one of the most
-accessible of men, and only reluctantly allows himself to be hedged in
-by pressure of endless affairs.
-
-“Mr. Edison is always glad to see any visitor,” said a gentleman who is
-continually with him, “except when he is hot on the trail of something
-he has been working for, and then it is as much as a man’s head is worth
-to come in on him.”
-
-He certainly was not hot on the trail of anything on the morning when,
-for the tenth time, I rang at the gate in the fence which surrounds the
-laboratory on Valley Road, Orange. A young man appeared, who conducted
-me up the walk to the Edison laboratory office.
-
-
- THE LIBRARY
-
-is a place not to be passed through without thought, for, with a further
-store of volumes in his home, it contains one of the most costly and
-well-equipped scientific libraries in the world; the collection of
-writings on patent laws and patents, for instance, is absolutely
-exhaustive. It gives, at a glance, an idea of the breadth of thought and
-sympathy of this man who grew up with scarcely a common school
-education.
-
-On the second floor, in one of the offices of the machine shop, I was
-asked to wait, while a grimy youth disappeared with my card, which he
-said he would “slip under the door of Mr. Edison’s office.”
-
-“Curious,” I thought; “what a lord this man must be if they dare not
-even knock at his door!”
-
-Thinking of this and gazing out the window, I waited until a working
-man, who had entered softly, came up beside me. He looked with a sort of
-“Well, what is it?” in his eyes, and quickly it began to come to me that
-the man in the sooty, oil-stained clothes was Edison himself. The
-working garb seemed rather incongruous, but there was no mistaking the
-broad forehead, with its shock of blackish hair streaked with gray. The
-gray eyes, too, were revelations in the way of alert comprehensiveness.
-
-“Oh!” was all I could get out at the time.
-
-“Want to see me?” he said, smiling in the most youthful and genial way.
-
-“Why,—yes, certainly, to be sure,” I stammered.
-
-He looked at me blankly.
-
-“You’ll have to talk louder,” said an assistant who worked in another
-portion of the room; “he don’t hear well.”
-
-This fact was new to me, but I raised my voice with celerity, and piped
-thereafter in an exceedingly shrill key. After the usual humdrum opening
-remarks, in which he acknowledged his age as fifty-two years, and that
-he was born in Erie county, O., of Dutch parentage, the family having
-emigrated to America in 1730, the particulars began to grow more
-interesting.
-
-His great-grandfather, I learned, was a banker of high standing in New
-York; and, when Thomas was but a child of seven years, the family
-fortune suffered reverses so serious as to make it necessary that he
-should become a wage-earner at an unusually early age, and that the
-family should move from his birth-place to Michigan.
-
-“Did you enjoy mathematics as a boy?” I asked.
-
-“Not much,” he replied. “I tried to read Newton’s ‘Principia,’ at the
-age of eleven. That disgusted me with pure mathematics, and I don’t
-wonder now. I should not have been allowed to take up such serious
-work.”
-
-“You were anxious to learn?”
-
-“Yes, indeed, _I attempted to read through the entire Free Library at
-Detroit_, but other things interfered before I had done.”
-
-
- A CHEMICAL NEWSBOY
-
-“Were you a book-worm and dreamer?” I questioned.
-
-“Not at all,” he answered, using a short, jerky method, as though he
-were unconsciously checking himself up. “I became a newsboy, and liked
-the work. Made my first coup as a newsboy in 1869.”
-
-“What was it?” I ventured.
-
-“I bought up on ‘futures’ a thousand copies of the _Detroit Free Press_
-containing important war news,—gained a little time on my rivals, and
-sold the entire batch like hot cakes. The price reached twenty-five
-cents a paper before the end of the route,” and he laughed. “I ran the
-_Grand Trunk Herald_, too, at that time—a little paper I issued from the
-train.”
-
-“When did you begin to be interested in invention?” I questioned.
-
-“Well,” he said, “I began to dabble in chemistry at that time. I fitted
-up a small laboratory on the train.”
-
-In reference to this, Mr. Edison subsequently admitted that, during the
-progress of some occult experiments in this workshop, certain
-complications ensued in which a jolted and broken bottle of sulphuric
-acid attracted the attention of the conductor. He, who had been long
-suffering in the matter of unearthly odors, promptly ejected the young
-devotee and all his works. This incident would have been only amusing
-but for its relation to, and explanation of, his deafness. A box on the
-ear, administered by the irate conductor, caused the lasting deafness.
-
-
- TELEGRAPHY
-
-“What was your first work in a practical line?” I went on.
-
-“A telegraph line between my home and another boy’s, I made with the
-help of an old river cable, some stove-pipe wire, and glass-bottle
-insulators. I had my laboratory in the cellar and studied telegraphy
-outside.”
-
-“What was the first really important thing you did?”
-
-“I saved a boy’s life.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“The boy was playing on the track near the depot. I saw he was in danger
-and caught him, getting out of the way just in time. His father was
-station-master, and taught me telegraphy in return.”
-
-Dramatic situations appear at every turn of this man’s life. He seems to
-have been continually arriving on the scene at critical moments, and
-always with the good sense to take things in his own hands. The chance
-of learning telegraphy only gave him a chance to show how apt a pupil he
-was, and the railroad company soon gave him regular employment. At
-seventeen, he had become one of the most expert operators on the road.
-
-“Did you make much use of your inventive talent at this time?” I
-questioned.
-
-“Yes,” he answered. “I invented an automatic attachment for my telegraph
-instrument which would send in the signal to show I was awake at my
-post, when I was comfortably snoring in a corner. I didn’t do much of
-that, though,” he went on; “for some such boyish trick sent me in
-disgrace over the line into Canada.”
-
-“Were you there long?”
-
-“Only a winter. If it’s incident you want, I can tell you one of that
-time. The place where I was and Sarnier, the American town, were cut off
-from telegraphic and other means of communication by the storms, until I
-got at a locomotive whistle and tooted a telegraphic message. I had to
-do it again and again, but eventually they understood over the water and
-answered in the same way.”
-
-According to his own and various recorded accounts, Edison was
-successively in charge of important wires in Memphis, Cincinnati, New
-Orleans, and Louisville. He lived in the free-and-easy atmosphere of the
-tramp operators—a boon companion with them, yet absolutely refusing to
-join in the dissipations to which they were addicted. So highly esteemed
-was he for his honesty, that it was the custom of his colleagues, when a
-spree was on hand, to make him the custodian of those funds which they
-felt obliged to save. On a more than usually hilarious occasion, one of
-them returned rather the worse for wear, and knocked the treasurer down
-on his refusal to deliver the trust money; the other depositors, we may
-be glad to note, gave the ungentlemanly tippler a sound thrashing.
-
-
- HIS USE OF MONEY
-
-“Were you good at saving your own money?” I asked.
-
-“No,” he said, smiling. “I never was much for saving money, as money. I
-devoted every cent, regardless of future needs, to scientific books and
-materials for experiments.”
-
-“You believe that an excellent way to succeed?”
-
-“Well, it helped me greatly to future success.”
-
-
- INVENTIONS
-
-“What was your next invention?” I inquired.
-
-“An automatic telegraph recorder—a machine which enabled me to record
-dispatches at leisure, and send them off as fast as needed.”
-
-“How did you come to hit upon that?”
-
-“Well, at the time, I was in such straits that I had to walk from
-Memphis to Louisville. At the Louisville station they offered me a
-place. I had perfected a style of handwriting which would allow me to
-take legibly from the wire, long hand, forty-seven and even fifty-four
-words a minute, but I was only a moderately rapid sender. I had to do
-something to help me on that side, and so I thought out that little
-device.”
-
-Later I discovered an article by one of his biographers, in which a
-paragraph referring to this Louisville period, says:—
-
-“True to his dominant instincts, he was not long in gathering around him
-a laboratory, printing-office, and machine shop. He took press reports
-during his whole stay, including on one occasion, the Presidential
-message, by Andrew Johnson, and this at one sitting, from 3.30 P.M. to
-4.30 A.M.
-
-“He then paragraphed the matter he had received over the wires, so that
-printers had exactly three lines each, thus enabling them to set up a
-column in two or three minutes’ time. For this, he was allowed all the
-exchanges he desired, and the Louisville press gave him a dinner.”
-
-“How did you manage to attract public attention to your ability?” I
-questioned.
-
-“I didn’t manage,” said the Wizard. “Some things I did created comment.
-A device that I invented in 1868, which utilized one sub-marine cable
-for two circuits, caused considerable talk, and the Franklin telegraph
-office of Boston gave me a position.”
-
-It is related of this, Mr. Edison’s first trip East, that he came with
-no ready money and in a rather dilapidated condition. His colleagues
-were tempted by his “hayseed” appearance to “salt” him, as professional
-slang terms the process of giving a receiver matter faster than he can
-record it. For this purpose, the new man was assigned to a wire
-manipulated by a New York operator famous for his speed. But there was
-no fun at all. Notwithstanding the fact that the New Yorker was in the
-game and was doing his most speedy clip, Edison wrote out the long
-message accurately, and, when he realized the situation, was soon firing
-taunts over the wire at the sender’s slowness.
-
-“Had you patented many things up to the time of your coming East?” I
-queried.
-
-“Nothing,” said the inventor, ruminatively. “I received my first patent
-in 1869.”
-
-“For what?”
-
-“A machine for recording votes, and designed to be used in the State
-Legislature.”
-
-“I didn’t know such machines were in use,” I ventured.
-
-“They ar’n’t,” he answered, with a merry twinkle. “The better it worked,
-the more impossible it was; the sacred right of the minority, you
-know,—couldn’t filibuster if they used it,—didn’t use it.”
-
-“Oh!”
-
-“Yes, it was an ingenious thing. Votes were clearly pointed and shown on
-a roll of paper, by a small machine attached to the desk of each member.
-I was made to learn that such an innovation was out of the question, but
-it taught me something.”
-
-“And that was?”
-
-“To be sure of the practical need of, and demand for, a machine, before
-expending time and energy on it.”
-
-“Is that one of your maxims of success?”
-
-“It is. It is a good rule to give people something they want, and they
-will pay money to get it.”
-
-
- HIS ARRIVAL AT THE METROPOLIS
-
-In this same year, Edison removed from Boston to New York, friendless
-and in debt on account of the expenses of his experiment. For several
-weeks he wandered about the town with actual hunger staring him in the
-face. It was a time of great financial excitement, and with that strange
-quality of Fortunism, which seems to be his chief characteristic, he
-entered the establishment of the Law Gold Reporting Company just as
-their entire plant had shut down on account of an accident in the
-machinery that could not be located. The heads of the firm were anxious
-and excited to the last degree, and a crowd of the Wall street
-fraternity waited about for the news which came not. The shabby stranger
-put his finger on the difficulty at once, and was given lucrative
-employment. In the rush of the metropolis, a man finds his true level
-without delay especially when his talents are of so practical and
-brilliant a nature as were this young telegrapher’s. It would be an
-absurdity to imagine an Edison hidden in New York. Within a short time,
-he was presented with a check for $40,000, as his share of a single
-invention—an improved stock printer. From this time, a national
-reputation was assured him. He was, too, now engaged upon the duplex and
-quadruplex systems—systems for sending two and four messages at the same
-time over a single wire,—which were to inaugurate almost a new era in
-telegraphy.
-
-
- MENTAL CONCENTRATION
-
-Recalling the incident of the Law Gold Reporting Company, I inquired:
-“Do you believe want urges a man to greater efforts, and so to greater
-success?”
-
-“It certainly makes him keep a sharp look-out. I think it does push a
-man along.”
-
-“Do you believe that invention is a gift, or an acquired ability?”
-
-“I think it’s born in a man.”
-
-“And don’t you believe that familiarity with certain mechanical
-conditions and defects naturally suggests improvements to any one?”
-
-“No. Some people may be perfectly familiar with a machine all their
-days, knowing it inefficient, and never see a way to improve it.”
-
-“What do you think is the first requisite for success in your field, or
-any other?”
-
-“_The ability to apply your physical and mental energies to one problem
-incessantly without growing weary._”
-
-
- TWENTY HOURS A DAY
-
-“Do you have regular hours, Mr. Edison?” I asked.
-
-“Oh,” he said, “I do not work hard now. I come to the laboratory about
-eight o’clock every day and go home to tea at six, and then I study or
-work on some problem until eleven, which is my hour for bed.”
-
-“Fourteen of fifteen hours a day can scarcely be called loafing,” I
-suggested.
-
-“Well,” he replied, “for fifteen years I have worked on an average of
-twenty hours a day.”
-
-When he was forty-seven years old, he estimated his true age at
-eighty-two, since working only eight hours a day would have taken till
-that time.
-
-Mr. Edison has sometimes worked sixty consecutive hours upon one
-problem. Then after a long sleep, he was perfectly refreshed and ready
-for another.
-
-
- A RUN FOR BREAKFAST
-
-Mr. Dickson, a neighbor and familiar, gives an anecdote told by Edison
-which well illustrates his untiring energy and phenomenal endurance. In
-describing his Boston experience, Edison said he bought Faraday’s works
-on electricity, commenced to read them at three o’clock in the morning
-and continued until his room-mate arose, when they started on their long
-walk to get breakfast. That object was entirely subordinated in Edison’s
-mind to Faraday, and he suddenly remarked to his friend: “‘Adams, I have
-got so much to do, and life is so short, that I have got to hustle,’ and
-with that I started off on a dead run for my breakfast.”
-
-“I’ve known Edison since he was a boy of fourteen,” said another friend;
-“and of my own knowledge I can say he never spent an idle day in his
-life. Often, when he should have been asleep, I have known him to sit up
-half the night reading. He did not take to novels or wild Western
-adventures, but read works on mechanics, chemistry, and electricity; and
-he mastered them too. But in addition to his reading, which he could
-only indulge in at odd hours, he carefully cultivated his wonderful
-powers of observation, till at length, when he was not actually asleep,
-it may be said he was learning all the time.”
-
-
- NOT BY ACCIDENT AND NOT FOR FUN
-
-“Are your discoveries often brilliant intuitions? Do they come to you
-while you are lying awake nights?” I asked him.
-
-“I never did anything worth doing by accident,” he replied, “nor did any
-of my inventions come indirectly through accident, except the
-phonograph.[4] No, when I have fully decided that a result is worth
-getting, I go about it, and make trial after trial, until it comes.”
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- “I was singing to the mouthpiece of a telephone,” said Edison, “when
- the vibrations of my voice caused a fine steel point to pierce one of
- my fingers held just behind it. That set me to thinking. If I could
- record the motions of the point and send it over the same surface
- afterward, I saw no reason why the thing would not talk. I determined
- to make a machine that would work accurately, and gave my assistants
- the necessary instructions, telling them what I had discovered. That’s
- the whole story. The phonograph is the result of the pricking of a
- finger.”
-
-“I have always kept,” continued Mr. Edison, “strictly within the lines
-of commercially useful inventions. I have never had any time to put on
-electrical wonders, valuable only as novelties to catch the popular
-fancy.”
-
-
- “I LIKE IT—I HATE IT”
-
-“What makes you work?” I asked with real curiosity. “What impels you to
-this constant, tireless struggle? You have shown that you care
-comparatively nothing for the money it makes you, and you have no
-particular enthusiasm for the attending fame. What is it?”
-
-“I like it,” he answered, after a moment of puzzled expression. “I don’t
-know any other reason. Anything I have begun is always on my mind, and I
-am not easy while away from it, until it is finished; and then I hate
-it.”
-
-“Hate it?” I said.
-
-“Yes,” he affirmed, “when it is all done and is a success, I can’t bear
-the sight of it. I haven’t used a telephone in ten years, and I would go
-out of my way any day to miss an incandescent light.”[5]
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- “After I have completed an invention,” remarked Edison, upon another
- occasion, “I seem to lose interest in it. One might think that the
- money value of an invention constitutes its reward to the man who
- loves his work. But, speaking for myself, I can honestly say this is
- not so. Life was never more full of joy to me, than when, a poor boy,
- I began to think out improvements in telegraphy, and to experiment
- with the cheapest and crudest appliances. But now that I have all the
- appliances I need, and am my own master, I continue to find my
- greatest pleasure, and so my reward, in the work that precedes what
- the world calls success.”
-
-
- DOING ONE THING EIGHTEEN HOURS IS THE SECRET
-
-“You lay down rather severe rules for one who wishes to succeed in
-life,” I ventured, “working eighteen hours a day.”
-
-“Not at all,” he said. “You do something all day long, don’t you? Every
-one does. If you get up at seven o’clock and go to bed at eleven, you
-have put in sixteen good hours, and it is certain with most men, that
-they have been doing something all the time. They have been either
-walking, or reading, or writing, or thinking. The only trouble is that
-they do it about a great many things and I do it about one. If they took
-the time in question and applied it in one direction, to one object,
-they would succeed. Success is sure to follow such application. The
-trouble lies in the fact that people do not have an object—one thing to
-which they stick, letting all else go. Success is the product of the
-severest kind of mental and physical application.”
-
-
- POSSIBILITIES IN THE ELECTRICAL FIELD
-
-“You believe, of course,” I suggested, “that much remains to be
-discovered in the realm of electricity?”
-
-“It is the field of fields,” he answered. “We can’t talk of that, but it
-holds the secrets which will reorganize the life of the world.”
-
-“You have discovered much about it,” I said, smiling.
-
-“Yes,” he said, “and yet very little in comparison with the
-possibilities that appear.”
-
-
- ONLY SIX HUNDRED INVENTIONS
-
-“How many inventions have you patented?”
-
-“Only six hundred,” he answered, “but I have made application for some
-three hundred more.”
-
-“And do you expect to retire soon, after all this?”
-
-“I hope not,” he said, almost pathetically. “I hope I will be able to
-work right on to the close. I shouldn’t care to loaf.”
-
-
- HIS COURTSHIP AND HIS HOME
-
-The idea of the great electrician’s marrying was first suggested by an
-intimate friend, who told him that his large house and numerous servants
-ought to have a mistress. Although a very shy man, he seemed pleased
-with the proposition, and timidly inquired whom he should marry. The
-friend, annoyed at his apparent want of sentiment, somewhat testily
-replied,—“Anyone.” But Edison was not without sentiment when the time
-came. One day, as he stood behind the chair of a Miss Stillwell, a
-telegraph operator in his employ, he was not a little surprised when she
-suddenly turned round and said:
-
-“Mr. Edison, I can always tell when you are behind me or near me.”
-
-It was now Miss Stillwell’s turn to be surprised, for, with
-characteristic bluntness and ardor, Edison fronted the young lady, and,
-looking her full in the face, said:
-
-“I’ve been thinking considerably about you of late, and, if you are
-willing to marry me, I would like to marry you.”
-
-The young lady said she would consider the matter, and talk it over with
-her mother. The result was that they were married a month later, and the
-union proved a very happy one.
-
-It was in fact no more an accident than other experiments in the Edison
-laboratory—his bride having been long the subject of the Wizzard’s
-observation—her mental capacity, her temper and temperament, her
-aptitude for home-making being duly tested and noted.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _General Lew Wallace in his study._
- (_See page 241._)]
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
-A FASCINATING STORY
-
-
- BY GENERAL LEW WALLACE
-
-IN his study, a curiously-shaped building lighted from the top, and
-combining in equal portions the Byzantine, Romanesque and Doric styles
-of architecture, the gray-haired author of “Ben-Hur,” surrounded by his
-pictures, books, and military trophies, is spending, in serene and
-comfortable retirement, the evening of his life. As I sat beside him,
-the other day, and listened to the recital of his earlier struggles and
-later achievements, I could not help contrasting his dignified bearing,
-careful expression, and gentle demeanor, with another occasion in his
-life, when, as a vigorous, black-haired young military officer, in the
-spring of 1861, he appeared, with flashing eye and uplifted sword, at
-the head of his regiment, the gallant and historic Eleventh Indiana
-Volunteers.
-
-General Wallace never repels a visitor, and his greeting is cordial and
-ingenuous.
-
-“If I could say anything to stimulate or encourage the young men of
-to-day,” he said, “I would gladly do so, but I fear that the story of my
-early days would be of very little interest or value to others. So far
-as school education is concerned, it may be truthfully said that I had
-but little, if any; and if, in spite of that deficiency, I ever arrived
-at proficiency, I reached it, I presume, as Topsy attained her
-stature,—‘just growed into it.’”
-
-
- A BOYHOOD OF WASTED OPPORTUNITIES
-
-“Were you denied early school advantages?” I asked.
-
-“Not in the least. On the contrary, I had most abundant opportunity in
-that respect.
-
-“My father was a lawyer, enjoying a lucrative practice in Brookville,
-Indiana,—a small town which bears the distinction of having given to the
-world more prominent men than any other place in the Hoosier State. Not
-long after my birth, he was elected lieutenant-governor, and, finally,
-governor of the state. He, himself, was an educated man, having been
-graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, and
-having served as instructor in mathematics there. He was not only an
-educated man, but a man of advanced ideas generally, as shown by the
-fact that _he failed of a re-election to congress in 1840, because, as a
-member of the committee on commerce, he gave the casting vote in favor
-of an appropriation to develop Morse’s magnetic telegraph_.
-
-“Of course, he believed in the value, and tried to impress upon me the
-necessity of a thorough school training. But, in the face of all the
-solicitude and encouragement which an indulgent father could waste on an
-unappreciative son, I remained vexatiously indifferent. I presume I was
-like some man in history,—it was Lincoln, I believe,—who said that his
-father taught him to work, but he never quite succeeded in teaching him
-to love it.
-
-“My father sent me to school, and regularly paid tuition,—for in those
-days there were no free schools; but, much to my discredit, he failed to
-secure anything like regular attendance at recitations, or even a decent
-attempt to master my lessons at any time. In fact, much of the time that
-should have been given to school was spent in fishing, hunting, and
-roaming through the woods.”
-
-
- HIS BOYHOOD LOVE FOR HISTORY AND LITERATURE
-
-“But were you thus indifferent to all forms of education?”
-
-“No, my case was not quite so hopeless as that. I did not desert the
-schools entirely, but my attendance was so provokingly irregular and my
-indifference so supreme, I wonder now that I was tolerated at all. But I
-had one mainstay; I loved to read. I was a most inordinate reader. In
-some lines of literature, especially history and some kinds of fiction,
-my appetite was insatiate, and many a day, while my companions were
-clustered together in the old red brick schoolhouse, struggling with
-their problems in fractions or percentage, I was carefully hidden in the
-woods near by, lying upon my elbows, munching an apple, and reveling in
-the beauties of Plutarch, Byron or Goldsmith.”
-
-“Did you not attend college, or the higher grade of schools?”
-
-“Yes, for a brief period. My brother was a student in Wabash
-College,—here in Crawfordsville,—and hither I also was sent; but within
-six weeks I had tired of the routine, was satiated with discipline, and
-made my exit from the institution.
-
-“I shall never forget what my father did when I returned home. He called
-me into his office, and, reaching into one of the pigeon-holes above his
-desk, withdrew therefrom a package of papers neatly folded and tied with
-the conventional red tape. He was a very systematic man, due, perhaps,
-to his West Point training, and these papers proved to be the receipts
-for my tuition, which he had carefully preserved. He called off the
-items, and asked me to add them together. The total, I confess,
-staggered me.”
-
-
- A FATHER’S FRUITFUL WARNING
-
-“‘That sum, my son,’ he said, with a tone of regret in his voice,
-‘represents what I have expended in these many years past to provide you
-with a good education. How successful I have been, you know better than
-anyone else.’
-
-“‘After mature reflection, I have come to the conclusion that I have
-done for you in that direction all that can reasonably be expected of
-any parent; and I have, therefore, called you in to tell you that you
-have now reached an age when you must take up the lines yourself. If you
-have failed to profit by the advantages with which I have tried so hard
-to surround you, the responsibility must be yours. I shall not upbraid
-you for your neglect, but rather pity you for the indifference which you
-have shown to the golden opportunities you have, through my indulgence,
-been enabled to enjoy.’”
-
-
- A MANHOOD OF SPLENDID EFFORT
-
-“What effect did his admonition have on you? Did it awaken or arouse
-you?”
-
-“It aroused me, most assuredly. It set me to thinking as nothing before
-had done. The next day, I set out with a determination to accomplish
-something for myself. My father’s injunction rang in my ears. New
-responsibilities rested on my shoulders, as I was, for the first time in
-my life, my own master. I felt that I must get work on my own account.
-
-“After much effort, I finally obtained employment from the man with whom
-I had passed so many afternoons strolling up and down the little streams
-in the neighborhood, trying to fish. He was the county clerk, and he
-hired me to copy what was known as the complete record of one of the
-courts. I worked for months in a dingy, half-lighted room, receiving for
-my pay something like ten cents per hundred words. The tediousness and
-
-
- THE REGULARITY OF THE WORK WAS A SPLENDID DRILL FOR ME,
-
-and taught me the virtue of persistence as one of the avenues of
-success. It was at this time I began to realize _the deficiency in my
-education_, especially as I had an ambition to become a lawyer. Being
-deficient in both mathematics and grammar, _I was forced to study
-evenings_. Of course, the latter was a very exacting study, after a full
-day’s hard work; but I was made to realize that _the time I had spent
-with such lavish prodigality could not be recovered_, and that I must
-extract every possible good out of the golden moments then flying by all
-too fast.”
-
-
- SELF-EDUCATION BY READING AND LITERARY COMPOSITION
-
-“Had you a distinct literary ambition at that time?”
-
-“Well, I had always had a sort of literary bent or inclination. I read
-all the literature of the day, besides the standard authors, and finally
-began to devote my odd moments to a book of my own,—a tale based on the
-days of the crusades. When completed, it covered about three hundred and
-fifty pages, and bore the rather high-sounding title, ‘The Man-at-Arms.’
-I read a good portion of it before a literary society to which I
-belonged; the members applauded it, and I was frequently urged to have
-it published.
-
-“The Mexican War soon followed, however, and I took the manuscript with
-me when I enlisted. But before the close of my service it was lost, and
-my production, therefore, never reached the public eye.”
-
-“But did not the approval which the book received from the few persons
-who read it encourage you to continue writing?”
-
-“Fully fifty years have elapsed since then, and it is, therefore, rather
-difficult, at this late day, to recall just how such things affected me.
-I suppose I was encouraged thereby, for, in due course of time, another
-book which turned out to be
-
-
- “THE FAIR GOD”
-
-my first book to reach the public,—began to shape itself in my mind. The
-composition of this work was not, as the theatrical people would say, a
-continuous performance, for there were many and singular interruptions;
-and it would be safe to say that months, and, in one case, years,
-intervened between certain chapters. A few years after the war, I
-finished the composition, strung the chapters into a continuous
-narrative, leveled up the uneven places, and started East with the
-manuscript. A letter from Whitelaw Reid, then editor of the New York
-_Tribune_, introduced me to the head of one of the leading publishing
-houses in Boston. There I was kindly received, and delivered my
-manuscript, which was referred to a professional reader, to determine
-its literary, and also, I presume, its commercial value.
-
-“It would be neither a new nor an interesting story to acquaint the
-public with the degree of anxious suspense that pervaded my mind when I
-withdrew to await the reader’s judgment. Every other writer has, I
-assume, at one time or another, undergone much the same experience. It
-was not long until I learned from the publisher that the reader reported
-in favor of my production. Publication soon followed, and for the first
-time, in a literary sense, I found myself before the public, and my book
-before the critics.”
-
-
- THE ORIGIN OF “BEN-HUR”
-
-“How long after this did ‘Ben-Hur’ appear, and what led you to write
-it?”
-
-“I began ‘Ben-Hur’ about 1876, and it was published in 1880. The
-purpose, at first, was a short serial for one of the magazines,
-descriptive of the visit of the wise men to Jerusalem as mentioned in
-the first two verses of the second chapter of Matthew. It will be
-recognized in ‘Book First’ of the work as now published. For certain
-reasons, however, the serial idea was abandoned, and the narrative,
-instead of ending with the birth of the Saviour, expanded into a more
-pretentious novel and only ended with the death scene on Calvary. The
-last ten chapters were written in the old adobe palace at Santa Fé, New
-Mexico, where I was serving as governor.
-
-“It is difficult to answer the question, ‘what led me to write the
-book;’ or why I chose a piece of fiction which used Christ as its
-leading character. In explanation, it is proper to state that I had
-reached an age in life when men usually begin to study themselves with
-reference to their fellowmen, and reflect on the good they may have done
-in the world. _Up to that time, never having read the Bible_, I knew
-nothing about sacred history; and, in matters of a religious nature,
-although I was not in every respect an infidel, I was persistently and
-notoriously indifferent. _I did not know, and therefore, did not care._
-I resolved to begin the study of the good book in earnest.
-
-
- INFLUENCE OF THE STORY OF THE CHRIST UPON THE AUTHOR
-
-“I was in quest of knowledge, but I had no faith to sustain, no creed to
-bolster up. The result was that the whole field of religious and
-biblical history opened up before me; and, my vision not being clouded
-by previously formed opinions, I was enabled to survey it without the
-aid of lenses. I believe I was thorough and persistent. I know I was
-conscientious in my search for the truth. I weighed, I analyzed, I
-counted and compared. The evolution from conjecture into knowledge,
-through opinion and belief, was gradual but irresistible; and at length
-I stood firmly and defiantly on the solid rock.
-
-“Upward of seven hundred thousand copies of ‘Ben-Hur’ have been
-published, and it has been translated into all languages from French to
-Arabic. But, whether it has ever influenced the mind of a single reader
-or not, I am sure its conception and preparation—if it has done nothing
-more—have convinced its author of the divinity of the lowly Nazarene who
-walked and talked with God.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
-Carnegie as a Metal Worker
-
-
-“THERE is no doubt,” said Mr. Carnegie, in reply to a question from me,
-“that it is becoming harder and harder, as business gravitates more and
-more to immense concerns, for a young man without capital to get a start
-for himself, and in the large cities it is especially so, where large
-capital is essential. Still it can be honestly said that there is no
-other country in the world, where able and energetic young men and women
-can so readily rise as in this. A president of a business college
-informed me, recently, that he has never been able to supply the demand
-for capable, first-class [Mark the adjective.] bookkeepers, and his
-college has over nine hundred students. In America, young men of ability
-rise with most astonishing rapidity.”
-
-“As quickly as when you were a boy?”
-
-“Much more so. When I was a boy, there were but very few important
-positions that a boy could aspire to. Every position had to be made. Now
-a boy doesn’t need to make the place,—all he has to do is to fit himself
-to take it.”
-
-
- EARLY WORK AND WAGES
-
-“Where did you begin life?”
-
-“In Dunfermline, Scotland, during my earliest years. The service of my
-life has all been in this country.”
-
-“In Pittsburg?”
-
-“Largely so. My father settled in Allegheny City, when I was only ten
-years old, and I began to earn my way in Pittsburg.”
-
-“Do you mind telling me what your first service was?”
-
-“Not at all. I was a bobbin boy in a cotton factory, then an engine-man
-or boy in the same place, and later still I was a messenger boy for a
-telegraph company.”
-
-“At small wages, I suppose?”
-
-“One dollar and twenty cents a week was what I received as a bobbin boy,
-and I considered it pretty good, at that. When I was thirteen, I had
-learned to run a steam engine, and for that I received a dollar and
-eighty cents a week.”
-
-“You had no early schooling, then?”
-
-“None except such as I gave myself.”
-
-
- COLONEL ANDERSON’S BOOKS
-
-“There were no fine libraries then, but in Allegheny City, where I
-lived, there was a certain Colonel Anderson, who was well to do and of a
-philanthropic turn. He announced, about the time I first began to work,
-that he would be in his library at home, every Saturday, ready to lend
-books to working boys and men. He had only about four hundred volumes,
-but I doubt if ever so few books were put to better use. Only he who has
-longed, as I did for Saturday to come, that the spring of knowledge
-might be opened anew to him, can understand what Colonel Anderson did
-for me and others of the boys of Allegheny. Quite a number of them have
-risen to eminence, and I think their rise can be easily traced to this
-splendid opportunity.”[6]
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- It was Colonel Anderson’s kindness that led Carnegie to bestow his
- wealth so generously for founding libraries, as he is now doing every
- year.
-
-
- HIS FIRST GLIMPSE OF PARADISE
-
-“How long did you remain an engine-boy?”
-
-“Not very long,” Mr. Carnegie replied; “perhaps a year.”
-
-“And then?”
-
-“I entered a telegraph office as a messenger boy.”
-
-Although Mr. Carnegie did not dwell much on this period, he once
-described it at a dinner given in honor of the American Consul at
-Dunfermline, Scotland, when he said:—
-
-“I awake from a dream that has carried me away back to the days of my
-boyhood, the day when the little white-haired Scottish laddie, dressed
-in a blue jacket, walked with his father into the telegraph office in
-Pittsburg to undergo examination as an applicant for a position as
-messenger boy.
-
-“Well I remember when my uncle spoke to my parents about it, and my
-father objected, because I was then getting one dollar and eighty cents
-per week for running the small engine in a cellar in Allegheny City, but
-my uncle said a messenger’s wages would be two dollars and fifty
-cents.... If you want an idea as to heaven on earth, imagine what it is
-to be taken from a dark cellar, where I fired the boiler from morning
-until night, and dropped into an office, where light shone from all
-sides, with books, papers, and pencils in profusion around me, and oh,
-the tick of those mysterious brass instruments on the desk, annihilating
-space and conveying intelligence to the world. This was my first glimpse
-of paradise, and I walked on air.”
-
-“How did you manage to rise from this position?”
-
-“I learned how to operate a telegraph instrument, and then waited an
-opportunity to show that I was fit to be an operator. Eventually my
-chance came.”
-
-The truth is that James D. Reid, the superintendent of the office, and
-himself a Scotchman, favored the ambitious lad. In his “History of the
-Telegraph,” he says of him:—
-
-“I liked the boy’s looks, and it was easy to see that, though he was
-little, he was full of spirit. He had not been with me a month when he
-asked me to teach him to telegraph. He spent all his spare time in
-practice, sending and receiving by sound and not by tape, as was the
-custom in those days. Pretty soon he could do as well as I could at the
-key.”
-
-
- INTRODUCED TO A BROOM
-
-“As you look back upon it,” I said to Mr. Carnegie, “do you consider
-that so lowly a beginning is better than one a little less trying?”
-
-“For young men starting upon their life work, it is much the best to
-begin as I did, at the beginning, and occupy the most subordinate
-positions. Many of the present-day leading men of Pittsburg, had serious
-responsibility thrust upon them at the very threshold of their careers.
-They were introduced to the broom, and spent the first hours of their
-business life sweeping out the office. I notice we have janitors and
-janitresses now in offices, and our young men, unfortunately, miss that
-salutary branch of early education. It does not hurt the newest comer to
-sweep out the office.”
-
-“Did you?”
-
-“Many’s the time. And who do you suppose were my fellow sweepers? David
-McBargo, afterwards superintendent of the Allegheny Valley Railroad;
-Robert Pitcairn, afterwards superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad;
-and Mr. Mooreland, subsequently City Attorney of Pittsburg. We all took
-turns, two each morning doing the sweeping; and now I remember Davie was
-so proud of his clean shirt bosom that he used to spread over it an old
-silk handkerchief which he kept for the purpose, and we other boys
-thought he was putting on airs. So he was. None of us had a silk
-handkerchief.”
-
-“After you had learned to telegraph, did you consider that you had
-reached high enough?”
-
-“Just at that time my father died, and the burden of the support of the
-family fell upon me. I earned as an operator twenty-five dollars a
-month, and a little additional money by copying telegraphic messages for
-the newspapers, and managed to keep the family independent.”
-
-
- AN EXPERT TELEGRAPHER
-
-More light on this period of Mr. Carnegie’s career is given by the
-“_Electric Age_,” which says:—“As a telegraph operator he was abreast of
-older and experienced men; and, although receiving messages by sound
-was, at that time, forbidden by authority as being unsafe, young
-Carnegie quickly acquired the art, and he can still stand behind the
-ticker and understand its language. As an operator, he delighted in full
-employment and the prompt discharge of business, and a big day’s work
-was his chief pleasure.”
-
-“How long did you remain with the telegraph company?”
-
-“Until I was given a place by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company.”
-
-“As an operator?”
-
-“At first,—until I showed how the telegraph could minister to railroad
-safety and success; then I was made secretary to Thomas A. Scott, the
-superintendent; and not long afterwards, when Colonel Scott became
-vice-president, I was made superintendent of the western division.”
-
-Colonel Scott’s attention was drawn to Carnegie by the operator’s
-devising a plan for running trains by telegraph, so making the most of a
-single track. Up to this time no one had ever dreamed of running trains
-in opposite directions, towards each other, directing them by telegraph,
-one train being sidetracked while the other passed. The boy studied out
-a train-despatching system which was afterwards used on every
-single-track railroad in the country. Nobody had ever thought of this
-before, and the officials were so pleased with the ingenious lad, that
-they placed him in charge of a division office, and before he was twenty
-made him superintendent of the western division of the road.
-
-
- WHAT EMPLOYERS THINK OF YOUNG MEN
-
-Concerning this period of his life, I asked Mr. Carnegie if his
-promotion was not a matter of chance, and whether he did not, at the
-time, feel it to be so. His answer was emphatic.
-
-“Never. Young men give all kinds of reasons why, in their cases, failure
-is attributable to exceptional circumstances, which rendered success
-impossible. Some never had a chance, according to their own story. This
-is simply nonsense. No young man ever lived who had not a chance, and a
-splendid chance, too, if he was ever employed at all. He is assayed in
-the mind of his immediate superior, from the day he begins work, and,
-after a time, if he has merit, he is assayed in the council chambers of
-the firm. His ability, honesty, habits, associations, temper,
-disposition,—all these are weighed and analyzed. The young man who never
-had a chance is the same young man who has been canvassed over and over
-again by his superiors, and found destitute of necessary qualifications,
-or is deemed unworthy of closer relations with the firm, owing to some
-objectionable act, habit or association, of which he thought his
-employers ignorant.”
-
-“It sounds true.”
-
-“It is.”
-
-
- THE RIGHT MEN IN DEMAND
-
-“Another class of young men attributes failure to rise to employers
-having near relatives or favorites whom they advance unfairly. They also
-insist that their employers dislike brighter intelligences than their
-own, and are disposed to discourage aspiring genius, and delighted in
-keeping young men down. There is nothing in this. On the contrary, there
-is no one suffering more for lack of the right man in the right place as
-the average employer, nor anyone more anxious to find him.”
-
-“Was this your theory on the subject when you began working for the
-railroad company?”
-
-“I had no theory then, although I have formulated one since. It lies
-mainly in this: Instead of the question, ‘What must I do for my
-employer?’ substitute, ‘What can I do?’ Faithful and conscientious
-discharge of duties assigned you is all very well, but the verdict in
-such cases generally is that you perform your present duties so well,
-that you would better continue performing them. Now, this will not do.
-It will not do for the coming partners. There must be something beyond
-this. We make clerks, bookkeepers, treasurers, bank tellers of this
-class, and there they remain to the end of the chapter. _The rising man
-must do something exceptional, and beyond the range of his special
-department. He must attract attention._”
-
-
- HOW TO ATTRACT ATTENTION
-
-“How can he do that?”
-
-“Well, if he is a shipping clerk, he may do so by discovering in an
-invoice an error with which he has nothing to do and which has escaped
-the attention of the proper party. If a weighing clerk, he may save for
-the firm in questioning the adjustment of the scales, and having them
-corrected, even if this be the province of the master mechanic. If a
-messenger boy, he can lay the seed of promotion by going beyond the
-letter of his instructions in order to secure the desired reply. There
-is no service so low and simple, neither any so high, in which the young
-man of ability and willing disposition cannot readily and almost daily
-prove himself capable of greater trust and usefulness, and, what is
-equally important, show his invincible determination to rise.”
-
-“In what manner did you reach out to establish your present great
-fortune?” I asked.
-
-“By saving my money. I put a little money aside, and it served me later
-as a matter of credit. Also, I invested in a sleeping-car industry,
-which paid me well.”
-
-
- SLEEPING-CAR INVENTION
-
-Although I tried earnestly to get the great iron-king to talk of this,
-he said little, because the matter has been fully dealt with by him in
-his “Triumphant Democracy.” From his own story there, it appears that
-one day at this time, when Mr. Carnegie still had his fortune to make,
-he was on a train examining the line from a rear window of a car, when a
-tall, spare man, accosted him and asked him to look at an invention he
-had made. He drew from a green bag a small model of a sleeping-berth for
-railway cars, and proceeded to point out its advantages. It was Mr. T.
-T. Woodruff, the inventor of the sleeping-car. As Mr. Carnegie tells the
-story:—
-
-“He had not spoken a moment before, like a flash, the whole range of the
-discovery burst upon me. ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘that is something which this
-continent must have,’
-
-“Upon my return, I laid it before Mr. Scott, declaring that it was one
-of the inventions of the age. He remarked: ‘You are enthusiastic, young
-man, but you may ask the inventor to come and let me see it.’ I did so,
-and arrangements were made to build two trial cars, and run them on the
-Pennsylvania Railroad. I was offered an interest in the venture, which I
-gladly accepted.
-
-“The notice came that my share of the first payment was $217.50. How
-well I remember the exact sum. But two hundred and seventeen dollars and
-a half were as far beyond my means as if it had been millions. I was
-earning fifty dollars per month, however, and had prospects, or at least
-I always felt that I had. I decided to call on the local banker and
-boldly ask him to advance the sum upon my interest in the affair. He put
-his hand on my shoulder and said: ‘Why, of course, Andie; you are all
-right. Go ahead. Here is the money.’
-
-“It is a proud day for a man when he pays his last note, but not to be
-named in comparison with the day in which he makes his first one, and
-gets a banker to take it. I have tried both, and I know. The cars
-furnished the subsequent payments by their earnings. I paid my first
-note from my savings, so much per month, and thus I got my foot upon
-fortune’s ladder. It was easy to climb after that.”
-
-
- THE MARK OF A MILLIONAIRE
-
-“I would like some expression from you,” I said to Mr. Carnegie, “in
-reference to the importance of laying aside money from one’s earnings,
-as a young man.”
-
-“You can have it. There is one sure mark of the coming partner, the
-future millionaire; his revenues always exceed his expenditures. He
-begins to save early, almost as soon as he begins to earn. I should say
-to young men, no matter how little it may be possible to save, save that
-little. Invest it securely, not necessarily in bonds, but in anything
-which you have good reason to believe will be profitable. Some rare
-chance will soon present itself for investment. The little you have
-saved will prove the basis for an amount of credit utterly surprising to
-you. Capitalists trust the saving man. For every hundred dollars you can
-produce as the result of hard-won savings, Midas, in search of a
-partner, will lend or credit a thousand; for every thousand, fifty
-thousand. _It is not capital that your seniors require, it is the man
-who has proved that he has the business habits which create capital. So
-it is the first hundred dollars that tell._”
-
-
- AN OIL FARM
-
-“What,” I asked Mr. Carnegie, “was the next enterprise with which you
-identified yourself?”
-
-“In company with several others, I purchased the now famous Storey farm,
-on Oil Creek, Pennsylvania, where a well had been bored and natural oil
-struck the year before. This proved a very profitable investment.”
-
-In “Triumphant Democracy,” Mr. Carnegie has expatiated most fully on
-this venture, which is so important. “When I first visited this famous
-well,” he says, “the oil was running into the creek, where a few
-flat-bottomed scows lay filled with it, ready to be floated down the
-Alleghany River, on an agreed-upon day each week, when the creek was
-flooded by means of a temporary dam. This was the beginning of the
-natural-oil business. We purchased the farm for $40,000, and so small
-was our faith in the ability of the earth to yield for any considerable
-time the hundred barrels per day, which the property was then producing,
-that we decided to make a pond capable of holding one hundred thousand
-barrels of oil, which, we estimated, would be worth, when the supply
-ceased, $1,000,000.
-
-“Unfortunately for us, the pond leaked fearfully; evaporation also
-caused much loss, but we continued to run oil in to make the losses good
-day after day, until several hundred thousand barrels had gone in this
-fashion. Our experience with the farm is worth reciting: its value rose
-to $5,000,000; that is—the shares of the company sold in the market upon
-this basis; and one year it paid cash dividends of $1,000,000—upon an
-investment of $40,000.”
-
-
- IRON BRIDGES
-
-“Were you satisfied to rest with these enterprises in your hands?” I
-asked.
-
-“No. Railway bridges were then built almost exclusively of wood, but the
-Pennsylvania Railroad had begun to experiment with cast-iron. It struck
-me that the bridge of the future must be of iron; and I organized, in
-Pittsburg, a company for the construction of iron bridges. That was the
-Keystone Bridge Works. We built the first iron bridge across the Ohio.”
-
-His entrance of the realm of steel was much too long for Mr. Carnegie to
-discuss, although he was not unwilling to give information relating to
-the subject. It appears that he realized the immensity of the steel
-manufacturing business at once. The Union Iron Mills soon followed as
-one of the enterprises, and, later, the famous Edgar Thompson Steel Rail
-Mill. The last was the outcome of a visit to England, in 1868, when
-Carnegie noticed that English railways were discarding iron for steel
-rails. The Bessemer process had been then perfected, and was making its
-way in all the iron-producing countries. Carnegie, recognizing that it
-was destined to revolutionize the iron business, introduced it into his
-mills and made steel rails with which he was enabled to compete with
-English manufacturers.
-
-
- HOMESTEAD STEEL WORKS
-
-His next enterprise was the purchase of the Homestead Steel Works,—his
-great rival in Pittsburg. In 1888, he had built or acquired seven
-distinct iron and steel works, all of which are now included in the
-Carnegie Steel Company, Limited. All the plants of this great firm are
-within a radius of five miles of Pittsburg. Probably in no other part of
-the world can be found such an aggregation of splendidly equipped steel
-works as those controlled by this association. It now comprises the
-Homestead Steel Works, the Edgar Thompson Steel Works and Furnaces, the
-Duquesne Steel Works and Furnaces, all within two miles of one another;
-the Lucy Furnaces, the Keystone Bridge Works, the Upper Union Rolling
-Mills, and the Lower Union Rolling Mills.
-
-In all branches, including the great coke works, mines, etc., there are
-employed twenty-five thousand men. The monthly pay roll exceeds one
-million, one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars, or nearly fifty
-thousand dollars for each working day. Including the Frick Coke Company,
-the united capital of the Carnegie Steel Company exceeds sixty million
-dollars.
-
-
- A STRENGTHENING POLICY
-
-“You believe in taking active measures,” I said, “to make men
-successful.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _Partial view of the Homestead Steel Works._]
-
-“I believe in anything which will help men to help themselves. To induce
-them to save, every workman in our company is allowed to deposit part of
-his earnings, not exceeding two thousand dollars, with the firm, on
-which the high interest rate of six per cent. is allowed. The firm also
-lends to any of its workmen to buy a lot, or to build a house, taking
-its pay by installments.”
-
-“Has this contributed to the success of your company?”
-
-“I think so. The policy of giving a personal interest to the men who
-render exceptional service is strengthening. With us there are many
-such, and every year several more are added as partners. It is the
-policy of the concern to interest every superintendent in the works,
-every head of a department, every exceptional young man. Promotion
-follows exceptional service, and there is no favoritism.”
-
-
- PHILANTHROPY
-
-“All you have said so far, merely gives the idea of getting money,
-without any suggestion as to the proper use of great wealth. Will you
-say something on that score?”
-
-“My views are rather well known, I think. What a man owns is already
-subordinate, in America, to what he knows; but in the final aristocracy,
-the question will not be either of these, but what has he done for his
-fellows? Where has he shown generosity and self-abnegation? Where has he
-been a father to the fatherless? And the cause of the poor, where has he
-searched that out?”
-
-That Mr. Carnegie has lived up in the past, and is still living up to
-this radical declaration of independence from the practice of men who
-have amassed fortunes around him, will be best shown by a brief
-enumeration of some of his almost unexampled philanthropies. His largest
-gift has been to the city of Pittsburg, the scene of his early trials
-and later triumphs. There he has built, at a cost of more than a million
-dollars, a magnificent library, museum, concert hall and picture
-gallery, all under one roof, and endowed it with a fund of another
-million, the interest of which (fifty thousand dollars per annum) is
-being devoted to the purchase of the best works of American art. Other
-libraries, to be connected with this largest as a center, are now being
-constructed, which will make the city of Pittsburg and its environs a
-beneficiary of his generosity to the extent of five million dollars.
-
-While thus endowing the city where his fortune was made, he has not
-forgotten other places endeared to him by association or by interest. To
-the Allegheny Free Library he has given $375,000; to the Braddock Free
-Library, $250,000; to the Johnstown Free Library, $50,000; and to the
-Fairfield (Iowa) Library, $40,000. To the Cooper Institute, New York, he
-has given $300,000. To his native land he has been scarcely less
-generous. To the Edinburgh Free Library he has given $250,000, and to
-his native town of Dunfermline, $90,000. Other Scottish towns to the
-number of ten have received helpful donations of amounts not quite so
-large. He has given $50,000 to aid poor young men and women to gain a
-musical education at the Royal College of Music in London.
-
-
- “THE MISFORTUNE OF BEING RICH MEN’S SONS”
-
-“I should like to cause you to say some other important things for young
-men to learn and benefit by.”
-
-“Our young partners in the Carnegie company have all won their spurs by
-_showing that we did not know half as well what was wanted as they did_.
-Some of them have acted upon occasions with me as if they owned the firm
-and I was but some airy New Yorker, presuming to _advise upon what I
-knew very little about_. Well, they are not now interfered with. _They
-were the true bosses,—the very men we were looking for._”
-
-“Is this all for the poor boy?”
-
-“Every word. Those who have the misfortune to be rich men’s sons are
-heavily weighted in the race. A basketful of bonds is the heaviest
-basket a young man ever had to carry. He generally gets to staggering
-under it. 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 much, but look out that
-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 grand stand. Look out for the boy who has to plunge into
-work direct from the common school, and begins by sweeping out the
-office. He is the probable dark horse that will take all the money and
-win all the applause.”[7]
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Mr. Carnegie’s recent retirement from business, and the sale of his
- vast properties to the Morgan Syndicate, marks a new era in his
- remarkable career; and it gives him the more leisure to consider
- carefully every dollar he bestows in the series of magnificent
- charities that he has inaugurated.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
-Herreshoff, the Yacht Builder
-
-
- I
-
- THE VOYAGE OF LIFE
-
- Total eclipse; no sun, no moon;
- Darkness amid the blaze of noon!—MILTON
-
-AMID the ranks of the blind, we often find men and women of culture and
-general ability, but we do not look for world-renowned specialists. No
-one is surprised at a display of enterprise in a “booming” western town,
-where everybody is “hustling;” but in a place which has once ranked as
-the third seaport in America, but has seen its maritime glory decline, a
-man who can establish a marine industry on a higher plane than was ever
-before known, and attract to his work such world-wide attention as to
-restore the vanished fame of his town, is no ordinary person. Moreover,
-if such a man has laid his plans and done his work in the disheartening
-eclipse of total blindness, he must possess qualities of the highest
-order.
-
-The office of the Herreshoff Manufacturing Company, at Bristol, Rhode
-Island, is in a building that formerly belonged to the Burnside Rifle
-Company. It is substantial, but unpretentious, and is entered by a short
-stairway on one side. The furniture throughout is also plain, but has
-been selected with excellent taste, and is suggestive of the most
-effective adaptation of means to ends in every detail. On the mantel and
-on the walls are numerous pictures, most of them of vessels, but very
-few relating directly to any of the great races for the “America’s” cup.
-The first picture to arrest one’s attention, indeed, is an excellent
-portrait of the late General Ambrose E. Burnside, who lived in Bristol,
-and was an intimate friend of John B. Herreshoff.
-
-Previous inquiry had elicited the information that the members of the
-firm are very busy with various large orders, in addition to the rush of
-work on Cup Defenders; so it was a very agreeable surprise when I was
-invited into the tasteful private office, where the blind president sat,
-having just concluded a short conversation with an attorney.
-
-
- “LET THE WORK SHOW”
-
-“Well, sir,” said he, rising and grasping my hand cordially, “what do
-you wish?”
-
-“I realize how very busy you must be, Mr. Herreshoff,” I replied, “and
-will try to be as brief as possible; but I venture to ask a few minutes
-of your time, to obtain suggestions and advice from you to young
-people.”
-
-“But why select me, in particular, as an adviser?”
-
-This was “a poser,” at first, especially when he added, noting my
-hesitation:—
-
-“We are frequently requested to give interviews in regard to our
-manufacturing business; but, since as it is the settled policy of our
-house to do our work just as well as we possibly can and then leave it
-to speak for itself, we have felt obliged to decline all these requests.
-It would be repugnant to our sense of propriety to talk in public about
-our special industry. ‘Let the work show!’ seems to us a good motto.”
-
-
- THE VOYAGE OF LIFE
-
-“True,” said I. “But the readers of my books may not care to read of
-cutters or ‘skimming dishes,’ center-boards or fin keels, or copper
-coils _versus_ steel tubes for boilers. They leave the choice in such
-matters to you, realizing that you have always proved equal to the
-situation. What I want now is advice in regard to the race of life,—the
-voyage in which each youth must be his own captain, but in which the
-words of others who have successfully sailed the sea before will help to
-avoid rocks and shoals, and to profit by favoring currents and trade
-winds. You have been handicapped in an unusual degree, sailing in total
-darkness and beset by many other difficulties, but have, nevertheless,
-made a very prosperous voyage. In overcoming such serious obstacles, you
-must have learned much of the true philosophy of both success and
-failure, and I think you will be willing to help the young with
-suggestions drawn from your experience.”
-
-“I always want to help young people, or old people, either, for that
-matter, if anything I can say will do so. But what can I say?”
-
-
- A MOTHER’S MIGHTY INFLUENCE
-
-“What do you call the prime requisite of success?”
-
-“I shall have to answer that by a somewhat humorous but very shrewd
-suggestion of another,—select a good mother. Especially for boys, I
-consider an intelligent, affectionate but considerate mother an almost
-indispensable requisite to the highest success. If you would improve the
-rising generation to the utmost, appeal first to the mothers.”
-
-“In what way?”
-
-“_Above all things else, show them that reasonable self-denial is a
-thousandfold better for a boy than to have his every wish gratified.
-Teach them to encourage industry, economy, concentration of attention
-and purpose, and indomitable persistence._”
-
-“But most mothers try to do this, don’t they?”
-
-“Yes, in a measure; but many of them, perhaps most of them, do not
-emphasize the matter half enough. A mother may wish to teach all these
-lessons to her son, but she thinks too much of him, or believes she
-does, to have him suffer any deprivation, and so indulges him in things
-which are luxuries for him, under the circumstances, rather than
-necessaries. Many a boy, born with ordinary intellect, would follow the
-example of an industrious father, were it not that his mother wishes him
-to appear as well as any boy in the neighborhood. So, without exactly
-meaning it, she gets to making a show of her boy, and brings him up with
-a habit of idling away valuable time, to keep up appearances. The
-prudent mother, however, sees the folly of this course, and teaches her
-son to excel in study and work, rather than in vain display. The
-difference in mothers makes all the difference in the world to children,
-who like brooks, can be turned very easily in their course of life.”
-
-
- SELF HELP
-
-“What ranks next in importance?”
-
-“Boys and girls themselves, especially as they grow older, and have a
-chance to understand what life means, should not only help their parents
-as a matter of duty, but should learn to help themselves, for their own
-good. I would not have them forego recreation, a reasonable amount every
-day, but let them learn the reality and earnestness of existence, and
-resolve to do the whole work and the very best work of thorough,
-reliable young men and women.”
-
-
- WHAT CAREER
-
-“What would you advise as to choosing a career?”
-
-“In that I should be governed largely by the bent of each youth. What he
-likes to do best of all, that he should do; and he should try to do it
-better than anyone else. That is legitimate emulation. Let him devote
-his full energy to his work; with the provision, however, that he needs
-change or recreation more in proportion as he uses his brain more. The
-more muscular the work, if not too heavy, the more hours, is a good
-rule: the more brain work, the fewer hours. Children at school should
-not be expected to work so long or so hard as if engaged in manual
-labor. Temperament, too, should be considered. A highly organized,
-nervous person, like a racehorse, may display intense activity for a
-short time, but it should be followed by a long period of rest; while
-the phlegmatic person, like the ox or the draft horse, can go all day
-without injury.”
-
-
- EDUCATION
-
-“I believe in education most thoroughly, and think no one can have too
-much knowledge, if properly digested. But in many of our colleges, I
-have often thought, not more than one in five is radically improved by
-the course. Most collegiates waste too much time in frivolity, and
-somehow there seems to be little restraining power in the college to
-prevent this. I agree that students should have self-restraint and
-application themselves, but, in the absence of these, the college should
-supply more compulsion than is now the rule.”
-
-
- APPRENTICES
-
-“Do you favor reviving the old apprentice system for would-be
-mechanics?”
-
-“Only in rare cases. As a rule, we have special machines now that do as
-perfect work as the market requires; some of them, indeed, better work
-than can be done by hand. A boy or man can soon learn to tend one of
-these, when he becomes, for ordinary purposes, a specialist. Very few
-shops now have apprentices. No rule, however, will apply to all, and it
-may still be best for one to serve an apprenticeship in a trade in which
-he wishes to advance beyond any predecessor or competitor.”
-
-
- PREPARE TO THE UTMOST: THEN DO YOUR BEST
-
-“Is success dependent more upon ability or opportunity?”
-
-“Of course, opportunity is necessary. You couldn’t run a mammoth
-department store on the desert of Sahara. But, given the possibility,
-the right man can make his opportunity, and should do so, if it is not
-at hand, or does not come, after reasonable waiting. Even Napoleon had
-to wait for his. On the other hand, if there is no ability, none can
-display itself, and the best opportunity must pass by unimproved. The
-true way is to first develop your ability to the last ounce, and then
-you will be ready for your opportunity, when it comes, or to make one,
-if none offers.”
-
-
- PRESENT OPPORTUNITIES
-
-“Is the chance for a youth as good as it was twenty-five or fifty years
-ago?”
-
-“Yes, and no. In any country, as it becomes more thickly populated, the
-chance for purely individual enterprises is almost sure to diminish. One
-notices this more as he travels through other and older countries,
-where, far more than with us, boys follow in the footsteps of their
-fathers, generation after generation. But for those who are willing to
-adapt themselves to circumstances, the chance, to-day, at least from a
-pecuniary standpoint, is better than ever before, for those starting in
-life. There was doubtless more chance for the individual boat-builder,
-in the days of King Philip, when each Indian made his own canoe; but
-there is certainly more profit now for an employee of our firm of
-boat-builders.”
-
-
- NATURAL EXECUTIVE ABILITY
-
-“Granted, however, that he can find employment, how do his chances of
-rising compare with those of your youth?”
-
-“They still depend largely upon the individual. _Some seem to have
-natural executive ability, and others develop it, while most men never
-possess it. Those who lack it cannot hope to rise far, and never could._
-Jefferson’s idea that all men are created equal is true enough, perhaps,
-so far as their political rights are concerned, but from the point of
-view of efficiency in business, it is ridiculous. In any shop of one
-hundred men, you will find one who is acknowledged, at least tacitly, as
-the leader, and he sooner or later becomes so in fact. A rich boy may
-get and hold a place in an office, on account of his wealth or
-influence; but in the works, merit alone will enable a man to hold a
-place long.”
-
-
- THE DEVELOPMENT OF POWER
-
-“But what is his chance of becoming a proprietor?”
-
-“That is smaller, of course, as establishments grow larger and more
-valuable. It is all bosh for every man to expect to become a Vanderbilt
-or a Rockefeller, or to be President. But, in the long run, a man will
-still rise and prosper in almost exact proportion to his real value to
-the business world. He will rise or fall according to his ability.”
-
-“Can he develop ability?”
-
-“Yes, to a certain extent. As I have said, we are not all alike, and no
-amount of cultivation will make some minds equal to those of others who
-have had but little training. But, whether great or small, everyone has
-some weak point; let him first study to overcome that.”
-
-“How can he do it?”
-
-“The only way I know of is to—do it. But this brings me back to what I
-told you at first. A good mother will show one how to guard against his
-weak points. She should study each child and develop his individual
-character, for character is the true foundation, after all. She should
-check extravagance and encourage industry and self-respect. My mother is
-one of the best, and I feel I owe her a debt I can never repay.”
-
-
- “MY MOTHER”
-
-“Your mother? Why, I thought you had been a boat-builder for half a
-century! How old is she?”
-
-“She is eighty-eight, and still enjoys good health. If I have one thing
-more than another to be thankful for, it is her care in childhood and
-her advice and sympathy through life. How often have I thought of her
-wisdom when I have seen mothers from Europe (where they were satisfied
-to be peasants), seek to outshine all their neighbors after they have
-been in America a few years, and so bring financial ruin to their
-husbands or even goad them into crime, and curse their children with
-contempt for honest labor in positions for which they are fitted, and a
-foolish desire to keep up appearances, even by living beyond their means
-and by seeking positions they cannot fill properly.”
-
-
- A BOAT-BUILDER IN YOUTH
-
-“You must have been quite young, when you began to build boats?”
-
-“About thirteen or fourteen years old. You see, my father was an amateur
-boat-builder, in a small way, and did very good work, but usually not
-for sale. But I began the work as a business thirty-six years ago, when
-I was about twenty-two.”
-
-
- HE WOULD NOT BE DISCOURAGED
-
-“You must have been terribly handicapped by your blindness.”
-
-“It was an obstacle, but I simply would not allow it to discourage me,
-and did my best, just the same as if I could see. My mother had taught
-me to think, and so I made thought and memory take the place of eyes. I
-acquired a kind of habit of mental projection which has enabled me to
-see models in my mind, as it were, and to consider their good and bad
-points intelligently. Besides, I cultivated my powers of observation to
-the utmost, in other respects. Even now, I take an occasional trip of
-observation, for I like to see what others are doing, and so keep
-abreast of the progress of the age. But I must stop or I shall get to
-‘talking shop,’ the thing I declined to do at first.
-
-
- THE SUM OF IT ALL
-
-“The main thing for a boy is to have a good mother, to heed her advice,
-to do his best, and not get a ‘swelled head’ as he rises,—in other
-words, not to expect to put a gallon into a pint cup, or a bushel into a
-peck measure. Concentration, decision, industry and economy should be
-his watchwords, and invincible determination and persistence his rule of
-action.”
-
-With another cordial handshake, he bade me good-by.
-
-
- II
-
- WHAT THE HERRESHOFF BROTHERS HAVE BEEN DOING
-
-Their recent Cup Defenders have made their names familiar to all, but
-shipping circles have long known them. The business of the firm was long
-confined almost wholly to the creation of boats with single masts, each
-craft from twenty to thirty-six feet long. In their first ten years of
-associated work, they built nearly two thousand of these. But they were
-wonderful little boats, and of unrivaled swiftness. Then they made as
-wonderful a success in building steam fishing yachts. Then came torpedo
-boats.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _The race between the “Vigilant” and the “Valkyrie.”_
- (_The “Vigilant,” Herreshoff boat, the winner._)]
-
-And in 1881 their proposal to the British government to build two
-vedette boats was accepted on condition they should outmatch the work of
-White, the naval launch builder at Cowes. No firm had ever been able to
-compete with White. But in the following July the two Herreshoff boats
-were in the Portsmouth dockyard, England, ready for trial. They were
-each forty-eight feet long, nine feet in beam, and five feet deep,
-exactly the same size as White’s. They made fifteen and one-half knots
-an hour, while White’s only recorded twelve and two-fifths knots. “With
-all their machinery coal and water in place, the Herreshoff boats were
-filled with water, and then twenty men were put aboard each, that human
-load being just so much in excess the admiralty test, and even then each
-had a floating capacity of three tons. The examiners pronounced
-enthusiastically in favor of the Herreshoff safety coil boilers as
-unexplodable, less liable to injury from shock, capable of raising steam
-more quickly, far lighter, and in all respects superior to those that
-had been formerly used for the purpose.” The boats were accepted, and
-orders given at once for two pinnaces, each thirty-three feet long.
-Again John Samuel White competed, but his new boats could only make
-seven and one-eighth knots, while the Herreshoff’s easily scored nine
-and one-quarter.
-
-
- RACING JAY GOULD
-
-In July, 1883, Jay Gould was highly elated over the speed of his
-beautiful steam yacht “Atalanta,” which had several times met and
-distanced Edward S. Jaffray’s wonderful “Stranger;” but, on the
-twentieth of that month, his happiness, as the story is told, was very
-suddenly dashed.
-
-After a hard day’s work, the jaded Jay boarded the “Atalanta” and began
-to shake out his pin-feathers a little, figuratively speaking. But
-before his boat had gone far on her run to Irvington, the bold
-manipulator of Wall Street made out a craft on his weather-quarter that
-seemed to be gliding after the “Atalanta” with intent to overhaul her.
-He had a good start, however, and sang out to the captain to keep a
-sharp eye on the persistent little stranger, so unlike the “Stranger” he
-had vanquished.
-
-“I wonder what it is!” he exclaimed to a friend beside him.
-
-The friend looked long and carefully at the oncoming boat, then turned a
-quizzical eye on Jay, remarking:—
-
-“In a little while we can tell.”
-
-“Will she get that close?”
-
-“I think she will.”
-
-It was not long before the strange boat was abreast of the “Atalanta,”
-and Jay was then able to make out the mystical number “100” on her. He
-rubbed his eyes. Those were the very figures he had long hoped to see on
-the stock ticker, after the words “Western Union,” but that day they had
-lost their charm. Before long he was not only able to see the broadside
-of the “100,” but also had a good view of the stern of the vessel,
-whereon the same figures soon appeared and nearly as soon disappeared,
-as the “100” bade good-by to the “Atalanta,” which was burning every
-pound of coal that could possibly be carried without putting Mr. Gould
-or some efficient substitute on the safety valve.
-
-“He seems to be out of humor to-night,” said his coachman, after leaving
-his employer at the door of his Irvington mansion.
-
-The mystic “100” which, by the way, was just one hundred feet over all,
-was merely the hundredth steamer built by the Herreshoffs, but on her
-first trip up the Hudson she attracted as much attention as the “Half
-Moon” of Henry Hudson or the “Clermont” of Robert Fulton. She was the
-fastest yacht in the world, and was beaten on the river by only one
-vessel, the “Mary Powell”—four and one-half minutes in twenty miles.
-
-Although Mr. Gould was considerably irritated at his defeat, he knew a
-good thing when he saw it, and the next year he ordered a small steam
-launch of the Herreshoffs.
-
-The “100” made a great stir in Boston Harbor. Later on she steamed
-through the Erie canal and the Great Lakes, and made her home with the
-millionaire Mark Hopkins.
-
-
- THE “STILETTO”
-
-The versatility of the Herreshoffs has appeared in their famous boiler
-improvement, and in the great variety of vessels they have built. The
-“Stiletto” only ninety-four feet long, over all, astonished the yachting
-world in 1885. On June 10, she beat the “Mary Powell” two miles in a
-race of twenty-eight miles on the Hudson. At one time, the “Stiletto”
-circled completely around the big steamer and then moved rapidly away
-from her.
-
-Secretary Whitney bought the “Stiletto” for the United States navy, in
-which she has done valuable service. She was followed, in 1890, by the
-still faster “Cushing,” whose record in the recent Spanish-American war
-is so well known.
-
-Admiral Porter wrote to Secretary of the Navy Chandler, that the little
-Herreshoff steam launches were faster than any other owned by the
-government, their great superiority showing especially against a strong
-head wind and sea, when they would remain dry while their rivals
-required constant bailing. They were better trimmed, lighter, more
-buoyant, and in every way superior in nautical qualities, and twice as
-fast as others in a gale.
-
-Nineteen vessels have been built by this firm for the United States
-government.
-
-“There is a certain speed that attaches to every vessel, which may be
-called its natural rate,” says Lewis Herreshoff; “it is mainly governed
-by its length and the length of the carrier wave which always
-accompanies a vessel parallel to her line of motion. When she reaches a
-speed great enough to form a wave of the same length as the moving body,
-then that vessel has reached her natural rate of speed, and all that can
-be obtained above that is done by sheer brute force. The natural limit
-of speed of a boat forty feet long is about ten miles an hour; of a
-vessel sixty feet in length, twelve and one-quarter miles; of one a
-hundred feet long, fifteen and three-fourths miles; of one two hundred
-feet long, twenty-two miles.”
-
-As the speed is increased, this double or carrier wave, one-half on
-either side of the yacht, lengthens in such a way that the vessel seems
-to settle more the faster she goes, and so has to climb the very wave
-she makes. Hence the motive power must be increased much faster than the
-speed increases. Further, in order to avoid this settling and consequent
-climbing as much as possible, lightness of construction, next to correct
-proportions, is made the great desideratum in the Herreshoffs’ ideal
-boat. They use wood wherever possible, as it is not only lighter than
-metal, but is reasonably strong and generally much more durable.
-Wherever heavy strains come, a bracing form of construction is adopted,
-and metal is used also.
-
-The engine of the “Stiletto” weighs ten pounds for each indicated
-horse-power; that of the “Cushing,” fifteen. The entire motive plant of
-the “Cushing” weighs sixty-five pounds for each horse-power; that of the
-“City of Paris,” two hundred. Comparing displacement, the former has
-eight times the power of the latter.
-
-For four years our government kept a staff of officers stationed at the
-Herreshoff works to experiment with high-speed machinery, in which the
-firm then led the country. One of their steamers, ascending the St.
-Lawrence River to the Thousand Islands, ran up all the rapids except the
-Lachine, where a detour by canal was made. The Canadians were deeply
-impressed by this triumph.
-
-
- THE BLIND BROTHERS
-
-One of the Herreshoff sisters is blind and a remarkable musician; and
-one brother blind who studied music in Berlin, and who conducts a school
-of music in Providence. Lewis Herreshoff, one of the boat-builders, is
-also blind. He, too, is a fine musician and an excellent bass singer,
-having received careful vocal training in Europe. He has fine literary
-taste, a very clear style, and writes for magazines, especially on
-boat-building and engineering. He has a large foreign correspondence,
-all of which he answers personally on the typewriter. It would be
-difficult to find a greater favorite with young people, to whom he
-devotes much of his time, teaching them games or lessons, also how to
-sail or row a boat, how to swim or float, and how to save each other
-from drowning. When walking along the street with a group of chatting
-children, he will ask, “What time is it by the clock on St. Michael’s
-Church?” pointing right at the steeple. He will wind a clock and set it
-exactly, and regulate it, if it does not go right.
-
-
- THE PERSONALITY OF JOHN B. HERRESHOFF
-
-From his boyhood, John B. Herreshoff evinced a great fondness for boats
-and machinery, finding most pleasure, in his leisure hours, when boys of
-his age usually think only of play, in haunting boat-builders’ yards and
-machine shops, studying how and why things were done, and reading what
-had been done elsewhere in those branches of industry, beyond his field
-of observation.
-
-At the age of eleven, he was studying the best lines for vessels’ hulls
-and making models and three years later he began building boats.
-
-His terrible affliction has never seemed to weaken his self-reliance or
-turn him aside from following the chosen pursuit of his life, but has
-rather strengthened his devotion to it and his capacity for it by
-concentrating all his faculties upon it.
-
-His many years of blindness have given him not only the serious,
-patient, introspective look common to those who suffer like him, and
-their gentle, clearly modulated voice, but have also developed all his
-other faculties to such an extent as to largely replace the missing
-sense.
-
-He can tell as much about an ordinary-sized steam launch, her lines,
-methods of construction, etc., by feeling, as others can by seeing, and
-he goes on inventing and building just as if his eyes were not closed
-forever. He is a tall, big-brained man, who couldn’t help inventing and
-working if he tried. Such a man would have to suffer the loss of more
-than one of his senses before his mental efficiency would be impaired.
-When he wanted to build some steam launches for the government, he went
-to the navy yard at Washington and felt of the government launches, to
-discover their shape and how they were made. Then he went to Bristol and
-made better launches suitable for the government’s use.
-
-
- HAS HE A SIXTH SENSE?
-
-He reads and understands the most delicate intonations and modulations
-of voices addressing him, as others read and understand facial
-expression. His sensitive fingers detect differences in metals, and
-follow, as if with a gift of perception, the lines of models submitted
-to him, and his mind sees even more clearly than by mere physical sight
-the intricacies of the most complicated machinery intelligently
-described to him, or over which his fingers are allowed to move. “That
-is a good stick,” he will say, examining a pile of lumber with his
-fingers. “Here’s a shaky piece, throw it out; it won’t do for this
-work,” may come next, or, “Saw off this end; it’s poor stock. The rest
-is all right.” On hearing him criticize, direct, and explain things
-within his province, a stranger finds it hard to believe he cannot see
-at least a little,—out of one eye.
-
-
- SEEING WITH THE FINGERS
-
-By the constant practice, he has, as he expresses it, learned to see
-with his hands, not quite so quickly, but he believes as perfectly, as
-he could with his eyes, and this means more than it does in the case of
-an ordinary blind man; for, by a touch, he can tell whether the graceful
-double curves of a boat’s bottom are in correct proportion, one with
-another, and then, by a few rapid sweeps of his hands, over all, he can
-instantly judge of the symmetry and perfection of the whole. Even more
-than this, he will give minute directions to the carpenters and
-mechanics, running his hand along the piece of work one had produced,
-will immediately detect the slightest deviation from the instruction he
-has given. If at all impatient, he will seize the plane or other tool,
-and do the work himself. And yet the world calls this man “blind!”
-
-While skill plays a material part, one of John B. Herreshoff’s boats is
-a product of the mind, in a very great degree. Psychologists tell us
-that we do not see with our eyes, but with the brain proper. This blind
-man sees, and constructs, not that which is objective and real to
-others, but that which is evolved from a transcendental intelligence
-applied to the most practical purposes.
-
-
- BROTHER NAT
-
-One of the brothers, who has good eyes, is a prominent chemist in New
-York; and one who can see is Nat the designer for the boat-building.
-
-Nathaniel G., the great yacht designer, was born in 1848. When he was
-not more than two years old, he was often found asleep on the sand along
-shore, with the rising tide washing his bare feet. Whenever he was
-missing, he was sought for first on the shore, where he would generally
-be found watching the ships or playing with toy boats.
-
-At nine years of age, he was an excellent helmsman, and at twelve he
-sailed the “Sprite” to her first victory and won a prize. When older
-grown, he was known as a vigilant watcher of every chance as well as a
-skillful sailor. Once, when steering the “Ianthe” in a failing wind, he
-veered widely from a crowd of contestants, so as to run into a good
-breeze he noted far to starboard, and won the race.
-
-He took a four years’ course at the Massachusetts Institute of
-Technology, and then served an apprenticeship with the famous Corliss
-Engine Company. He worked on the great engine at the Centennial
-Exposition, and took a course of engineering abroad, visiting many noted
-shipyards. He joined the firm in 1877, fourteen years after the works
-were opened.
-
-Nathaniel Greene Herreshoff, named for General Greene of Revolutionary
-fame, is seven years younger, and only less famous than his blind
-brother as a boat-builder,—only second to John B. in about the same way
-that Greene was second to Washington. “General Greene is second to no
-one,” said Washington. John B. would have done splendid work without Nat
-as he did for years before the latter joined the firm, but it would have
-been in a smaller way.
-
-For years John B., his father, and his brothers, James B. or Lewis, and
-Nathaniel G., were accustomed to get together frequently in the
-dining-room of the old homestead, and talk and plan together in regard
-to boat-building. Nat would usually make the first model on lines
-previously agreed upon, and then John B. would feel it over and suggest
-changes, which would be made, and the consultation continued until all
-was satisfactory.
-
-Nathaniel is described as “a tall, thin man, with a full beard and a
-stoop,” the latter said to have been acquired in “watching his rivals in
-his races, craning his head in order to see them from under the boom.”
-
-“We have been always together from boyhood,” said John B., speaking of
-“Nat;” “we have had the same pleasures, the same purposes, the same
-aspirations; in fact, we have almost been one, and we have achieved
-nothing for which a full share of credit is not his just due. Nothing
-has ever been done by one without the other. Whenever one found an
-obstacle or difficulty, the other helped him to remove it; and he, being
-without the disadvantage I have, never makes a mistake.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
-A Successful Novelist: Fame After Fifty[8]
-
-
- Practical Hints to Young Authors,
-
- BY MRS. AMELIA E. BARR
-
-TO be successful! That is the legitimate ideal every true worker seeks
-to realize. But success is not the open secret which it appears to be;
-its elements are often uncomprehended; and its roots generally go deep
-down, into the very beginnings of life. I can compel my soul to look
-back into that twilight which shrouds my earliest years, and perceive,
-even in them, monitions and tendencies working for that future, which in
-my destiny was fashioned and shaped when as yet there was neither hint
-nor dream of it. Fortunately, I had parents who understood the
-
-
- VALUE OF BIBLICAL AND IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE
-
-in the formation of the intellect. The men and women whom I knew first
-and best were those of the Hebrew world. Sitting before the nursery
-fire, while the snow fell softly and ceaselessly, and all the mountains
-round were white, and the streets of the little English town choked with
-drifts, I could see the camels and the caravans of the Ishmaelitish
-merchants, passing through the hot, sandy desert. I could see Hagar
-weeping under the palm, and the waters of the Red Sea standing up like a
-wall. Miriam clashing the timbrels, and Deborah singing under the oak,
-and Ruth gleaning in the wheatfields of Bethlehem, were as real to me as
-were the women of my own home. Before I was six years old, I had been
-with Christian to the Celestial City, and had watched, with Crusoe, the
-mysterious footprint on the sand, and the advent of the savages. Then
-came the wonders of afrites and genii, and all the marvels and miracles
-of the Arabian tales. These were the mind-builders, and though schools
-and teachers and text-books did much afterwards, I can never nor will
-forget the glorious company of men and women from the sacred world, and
-that marvelous company of caliphs and kings and princesses from Wonder
-Land and Fairy Land, that expanded my whole nature, and fitted me for
-the future miracles of Nature and Science, and all the marvelous people
-of the Poet’s realm.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- This is a most remarkable story, communicated to me by Mrs. Barr, and
- related for the first time in this article. The distinguished
- novelist, being a perfect housekeeper and the mother of a large
- family, yet earns $20,000 a year by her books, which have been
- translated into the language of almost every civilized country.—O. S.
- M.
-
-For eighteen years I was amassing facts and fancies, developing a crude
-intelligence, waiting for the vitalization of the heart. Then Love, the
-Supreme Teacher, came; and his first lesson was,
-
-
- RENUNCIATION.
-
-I was to give up father, and mother, home and kindred, friends and
-country, and follow where he would lead me, into a land strange and far
-off. Child-bearing and child-losing; the limitations and delights of
-frontier life; the intimate society of such great and individual men as
-Sam Houston, and the men who fought with him; the intense feelings
-induced by war, its uncertainties and possibilities, and the awful
-abiding in the Valley of the Shadow of Death, with the pestilence that
-walked in darkness and the sickness that destroyed at noonday;—all these
-events with their inevitable “asides” were instrumental in the education
-and preparation of the seventeen years of my married life.
-
-The calamitous lesson of widowhood, under peculiarly tragic
-circumstances, was the last initiation of a heart already broken and
-humbled before Him who doeth all things well, no matter how hard the
-stroke may be. I thought all was over then; yet all was just beginning.
-It was the open door to a new life—a life full of comforts, and serene,
-still,
-
-
- DELIGHTFUL STUDIES.
-
-Though I had written stories to please my children, and many things to
-please myself, it had never occurred to me that money could be made by
-writing. The late William Libbey, a man of singular wisdom and kindness,
-first made me understand that my brain and my ten fingers were security
-for a good living. From my first effort I began to gather in the harvest
-of all my years of study and reading and private writing. For there is
-this peculiarity about writing—that if in any direction it has merit, it
-will certainly find a market.
-
-For fifteen years I wrote short stories, poems, editorials, and articles
-on every conceivable subject, from Herbert Spencer’s theories, to
-gentlemen’s walking sticks; but bringing to every piece of work, if it
-was only ten lines, the best of my knowledge and ability; and so
-earning, with a great deal of pleasure, a very good living. During the
-earlier years of this time I worked and read on an average
-
-
- FIFTEEN HOURS A DAY;
-
-for I knew that, to make good work, I must have constant fresh material;
-must keep up to date in style and method; and must therefore _read_ far
-more than I wrote. But I have been an omnivorous reader all my life
-long, and no changes, no cares of home and children, have ever
-interfered with this mental necessity. In the most unlikely places and
-circumstances, I looked for books, and found them. These fifteen years
-on the weekly and monthly periodicals gave me the widest opportunities
-for information. I had an alcove in the Astor Library, and I practically
-lived in it. I slept and ate at home, but I lived in that City of Books.
-I was in the prime of life, but neither society, amusements, nor
-pleasures of any kind, could draw me away from the source of all my
-happiness and profit.
-
-Suddenly, after this long novition, I received the “call” for a
-different work. I had
-
-
- AN ACCIDENT
-
-which confined me to my room, and which, I knew, would keep me from
-active work for some months. I fretted for my work, as dry wood frets an
-inch from the flame, and said, “I shall lose all I have gained; I shall
-fall behind in the race; all these things are against me.” They were all
-for me. A little story of what seemed exceptional merit, had been laid
-away, in the hope that I might some day find time to extend it into a
-novel. A prisoner in my chair, I finished the book in six weeks, and
-sent it to Dodd, Mead & Co. On Thanksgiving morning, a letter came,
-accepting the book, and any of my readers can imagine what a happy
-Thanksgiving Day that was! This book was “Jan Vedder’s Wife,” and its
-great and immediate success indicated to me the work I was at length
-ready for. I was then in my fifty-second year, and every year had been a
-preparation for the work I have since pursued. I went out from that sick
-room sure of my
-
-
- VOCATION;
-
-and, with a confidence founded on the certainty of my equipment, and a
-determination to trust humanity, and take my readers only into green
-pastures and ways of purity and heroism, I ventured on my new path as a
-novelist.
-
-I cannot close this paper without a few words to those who wish to
-profit by it. I want them to be sure of a few points which, in my
-narrative, I may not have emphasized sufficiently.
-
-
- WORDS OF COUNSEL
-
-1. Men and women succeed _because they take pains to succeed_. Industry
-and patience are almost genius; and successful people are often more
-distinguished for resolution and perseverance than for unusual gifts.
-They make determination and unity of purpose supply the place of
-ability.
-
-2. Success is the reward of those who “spurn delights and live laborious
-days.” We learn to do things by _doing them. One of the great secrets of
-success is “pegging away.”_ No disappointment must discourage, and a run
-back must often be allowed, in order to take a longer leap forward.
-
-3. _No opposition must be taken to heart._ Our enemies often help us
-more than our friends. Besides, a head-wind is better than no wind. Who
-ever got anywhere in a dead calm?
-
-4. _A fatal mistake is to imagine that success is some stroke of luck._
-This world is run with far too tight a rein for luck to interfere.
-Fortune _sells_ her wares; she never gives them. In some form or other,
-we pay for her favors; or we go empty away.
-
-5. We have been told, for centuries, to watch for opportunities, and to
-strike while the iron is hot. Very good; but I think better of Oliver
-Cromwell’s amendment.—“_make the iron hot by striking it._”
-
-6. Everything good needs time. Don’t do work in a hurry. Go into
-details; it pays in every way. _Time means power for your work._
-Mediocrity is always in a rush; but whatever is worth doing at all is
-worth doing with consideration. For genius is nothing more nor less than
-doing well what anyone can do badly.
-
-7. _Be orderly._ Slatternly work is never good work. It is either
-affectation, or there is some radical defect in the intellect. I would
-distrust even the spiritual life of one whose methods and work were
-dirty, untidy, and without clearness and order.
-
-8. Never be above your profession. I have had many letters from people
-who wanted all the emoluments and honors of literature, and who yet
-said, “Literature is the accident of my life; I am a lawyer, or a
-doctor, or a lady, or a gentleman.” _Literature is no accident. She is a
-mistress who demands the whole heart, the whole intellect, and the whole
-time of a devotee._
-
-9. Don’t fail through defects of temper and over-sensitiveness at
-moments of trial. _One of the great helps to success is to be cheerful_;
-to go to work with a full sense of life; to be determined to put
-hindrances out of the way; to prevail over them and to get the mastery.
-_Above all things else, be cheerful_; there is no beatitude for the
-despairing.
-
-Apparent success may be reached by sheer impudence, in defiance of
-offensive demerit. But men who get what they are manifestly unfit for,
-are made to feel what people think of them. Charlatanry may flourish;
-but when its bay tree is greenest, it is held far lower than genuine
-effort. The world is just; it may, it does, patronize quacks; but _it
-never puts them on a level with true men_.
-
-It is better to have the opportunity of victory, than to be spared the
-struggle; for success comes but as the result of arduous experience. The
-foundations of my success were laid before I can well remember; _it was
-after at least forty-five years of conscious labor that I reached the
-object of my hope_. Many a time my head failed me, my hands failed me,
-my feet failed me, but, thank God, my _heart_ never failed me. Because
-_I knew that no extremity would find God’s arm shortened_.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
-How Theodore Thomas Brought the People Nearer to Music
-
-
-MR. THOMAS is an early riser, and as I found him one morning, in his
-chambers in Chicago, he was preparing to leave for rehearsal. The hale
-old gentleman actively paced the floor, while I conversed with him.
-
-“Mr. Thomas,” I said, “those familiar with the events of your life
-consider them a lesson of encouragement for earnest and high-minded
-artists.”
-
-“That is kind,” he answered.
-
-“I should like, if you will, to have you speak of your work in building
-up your great orchestra in this country.”
-
-“That is too long a story. I would have to begin with my birth.”
-
-“Where were you born?” I asked.
-
-“In the kingdom of Hanover, in 1835. My father was a violinist, and from
-him I inherited my taste, I suppose. He taught me music. When I was only
-six years old, I played the violin at public concerts.”
-
-
- “I WAS NOT AN INFANT PRODIGY”
-
-“I was not an infant prodigy, however. My father had too much wisdom to
-injure my chances in that way. He made me keep to my studies in a manner
-that did me good. I came to America in 1845.”
-
-“Was the American music field crowded then?”
-
-“On the contrary, there wasn’t any field to speak of. It had to be made.
-Music was the pastime of a few. The well-educated and fashionable
-classes possessed or claimed a knowledge of it. There was scarcely any
-music for the common people.”
-
-“How did you get your start in the New York world of music?” I asked.
-
-“With four associates, William Mason, Joseph Mosenthal, George Matzka
-and Frederick Berguer, I began a series of concerts of Chamber Music,
-and for many years we conducted this modest artistic enterprise. There
-was much musical enthusiasm on our part, but very little reward, except
-the pleasure we drew from our own playing.
-
-“These Mason and Thomas _soirées_ are still remembered by old-time music
-lovers of New York, not only for their excellence, but for the peculiar
-character of the audiences. They were quiet little monthly reunions, to
-which most of the guests came with complimentary tickets. The critics
-hardly ventured to intrude upon the exercises, and the newspapers gave
-them little notice.”
-
-
- BEGINNING OF THE ORCHESTRA
-
-“How did you come to found your great orchestra?”
-
-“It was more of a growth than a full-fledged thought to begin with. It
-was in 1861 that I severed my connection with the opera and began to
-establish a genuine orchestra. I began with occasional performances,
-popular matinée concerts, and so on, and, in a few years, was able to
-give a series of Symphony _Soirées_ at the old Irving Hall in New York.”
-
-To the average person this work of Mr. Thomas may seem to be neither
-difficult nor great. Yet while anyone could have collected a band in a
-week, to make such an orchestra as Mr. Thomas meant to have, required
-time and patience. It was when the Philharmonic Society, after living
-through a great many hardships, was on the full tide of popular favor.
-Its concerts and rehearsals filled the Academy of Music with the flower
-of New York society. Powerful social influences had been won to its
-support, and Carl Bergmann had raised its noble orchestra of one hundred
-performers to a point of proficiency then quite unexampled in this
-country, and in some particulars still unsurpassed. Ladies and gentlemen
-who moved in the best circles hardly noticed the parallel entertainment
-offered in such a modest way, by Mr. Thomas, on the opposite side of the
-street. The patrons of his Chamber Concerts, of course, went in to see
-what the new orchestra was like; professional musicians hurried to the
-hall with their free passes; and there were a few curious listeners
-besides who found in the programmes a class of compositions somewhat
-different from those which Mr. Bergmann chiefly favored, and, in
-particular, a freshness and novelty in the selections, with an
-inclination, not yet very strongly marked, toward the modern German
-school. Among such of the _dilettanti_ as condescended to think of Mr.
-Thomas at all, there was a vague impression that his concerts were
-started in opposition to the Philharmonic Society, but that they were
-not so good and much less genteel.
-
-It is true that Mr. Thomas was surpassed, at that time, by Mr.
-Bergmann’s larger and older orchestra, and that he had much less than an
-equal share of public favor, but there was no intentional rivalry. The
-two men had entirely different ideas and worked them out in perfectly
-original ways. It was only the artist’s dismal period of struggle and
-neglect, which every beginner must pass through. He had to meet cold and
-meager audiences, and the false judgment of both the critics and the
-people. Yet he was a singular compound of good American energy and
-German obstinacy, and he never lost courage.
-
-“Was it a long struggle?” I asked.
-
-“Not very long. Matters soon began to mend. The orchestra improved, the
-dreadful gaps in the audience soon filled up, and at the end of the year
-the Symphony _Soirées_, if they made no excitement in musical circles,
-had at least achieved a high reputation.”
-
-“What was your aim, at that time?”
-
-“When I began, I was convinced that there is no music too high for the
-popular appreciation,—that no scientific education is required for the
-enjoyment of Beethoven. I believed that it is only necessary that a
-public whose taste has been vitiated by over-indulgence in trifles,
-should have time and opportunity to accustom itself to better things.
-The American people at large then (1864) knew little or nothing of the
-great composers for the orchestra. Three or four more or less complete
-organizations had visited the principal cities of the United States in
-former years, but they made little permanent impression. Juillien had
-brought over, for his monster concerts, only five or six solo players,
-and the band was filled up with such material as he found here. The
-celebrated Germania Band of New York, which had first brought Mr.
-Bergmann (famous then as the head of the New York Philharmonic Society)
-into notice, did some admirable work just previous to my start in New
-York, but it disbanded after six years of vicissitude, and, besides, it
-was not a complete orchestra.”
-
-“You mean,” I said, as Mr. Thomas paused meditatively, “that you came at
-a time when there was a decided opportunity?”
-
-
- MUSIC HAD NO HOLD ON THE MASSES
-
-“Yes. There had been, and were then, good organizations, such as the New
-York Philharmonic Society and the Harvard Musical Association in Boston,
-and a few similar organizations in various parts of the country. I mean
-no disparagement to their honorable labors, but, in simple truth, none
-of them had great influence on the masses. They were pioneers of
-culture. They prepared the way for the modern permanent orchestra.”
-
-“They were not important?”
-
-“No, no; that cannot be said. It would be the grossest ingratitude to
-forget what they did and have done and are still doing, or detract in
-the smallest degree from their well-earned fame. But from the very
-nature of their organization, it was inevitable that they should stand a
-little apart from the common crowd. To the general public, their
-performances were more like mysterious rites, celebrated behind closed
-doors, in the presence of a select and unchanging company of believers.
-Year after year, the same twenty-five hundred people filled the New York
-Academy of Music at the Philharmonic concerts, applauding the same class
-of master works, and growing more and more familiar with the same
-standards of the strictly classical school. This was no cause for
-complaint; on the contrary, it was most fortunate that the reverence for
-the older forms of art and canons of taste were thus kept alive; and we
-know that, little by little, the culture which the Philharmonic Society
-diffuses, through the circle of its regular subscribers, spreads beyond
-that small company, and raises the æsthetic tone of metropolitan life.
-But I believed then, as I believe now, that it would require generations
-for this little leaven to leaven the whole mass, and so I undertook to
-do my part in improving matters by forming an orchestra.”
-
-“You wanted to get nearer the people with good music?”
-
-“No, I wanted the people to get nearer to music. I was satisfied that
-the right course is to begin at the bottom instead of the top, and make
-the cultivation of symphonic music a popular movement.”
-
-“Was the idea of a popular permanent orchestra new at that time?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Why was it necessary to effect a permanent orchestra?”
-
-“Why? Because the first step in making music popular was to raise the
-standard of orchestral performances and increase their frequency. Our
-country had never possessed a genuine orchestra, for a band of players
-gathered together at rare intervals for a special purpose does not
-deserve the name. The musician who marches at the head of a target
-company all the morning and plays for a dancing party at night, is out
-of tune with the great masters. To express the deep emotions of
-Beethoven, the romanticism of Schumann, or the poetry of Liszt, he ought
-to live in an atmosphere of art, and keep not only his hand in practice,
-but his mind properly attempered. An orchestra, therefore, ought to be a
-permanent body, whose members play together every day, under the same
-conductor, and devote themselves exclusively to genuine music. Nobody
-had yet attempted to found an orchestra of this kind in America when I
-began; but I believed it could be done.”
-
-
- WORKING OUT HIS IDEA
-
-“Did you have an idea of a permanent building for your orchestra?”
-
-“Yes. I wanted something more than an ordinary concert-room. The idea
-needed it. It was to be a place suitable for use at all seasons of the
-year. There was to be communication in summer with an open garden, and
-in winter it was to be a perfect auditorium.”
-
-Mr. Thomas’s idea went even further. It must be bright, comfortable,
-roomy, well ventilated—for a close and drowsy atmosphere is fatal to
-symphonic music,—it must offer to the multitude every attraction not
-inconsistent with musical enjoyment. The stage must be adapted for a
-variety of performances, for popular summer entertainment as well as the
-most serious of classical concerts. There, with an uninterrupted course
-of entertainments, night after night, the whole year round, the noblest
-work of all the great masters might be worthily presented.
-
-The scheme was never wholly worked out in New York, great as Mr.
-Thomas’s fame became, but it was partially realized in the old
-Exposition building in Chicago, where he afterwards gave his summer
-concerts, and it is still nearer reality in the present permanent
-Chicago orchestra, which has the great Auditorium for its home and a
-$50,000 annual guarantee.
-
-“What were your first steps in this direction?” I asked.
-
-“I began with a series of _al fresco_ entertainments in the old Terrace
-Garden, in June, 1866. They were well patronized; and repeated in 1867.
-Then, in 1868, we removed to better quarters in Central Park Garden, and
-things prospered, so that, in 1869, I began those annual tours, which
-are now so common.”
-
-The first itinerary of this kind was not very profitable, but the young
-conductor fought through it. Each new season improved somewhat, but
-there were troubles and losses. More than once, the travelers trod close
-upon the heels of calamity. The cost of moving from place to place was
-so great that the most careful management was necessary to cover
-expenses. They could not afford to be idle, even for a night, and the
-towns capable of furnishing good audiences generally wanted fun. Hence
-they must travel all day, and Thomas took care that the road should be
-smoothed with all obtainable comforts. Special cars on the railways,
-special attendants to look after the luggage, and lodgings at the best
-hotels contributed to make the tour tolerably pleasant and easy, so that
-the men came to their evening work fresh and smiling. They were tied up
-by freshets and delayed by wrecks; but their fame grew, and the
-audiences became greater. Thomas’s fame as a conductor who could
-guarantee constant employment permitted him to take his choice of the
-best players in the country, and he brought over a number of European
-celebrities as the public taste improved.
-
-Theodore Thomas did another wise thing. He treated New York like a
-provincial city, giving it a week of music once in a while as he passed
-through it on his travels. This excited the popular interest, and when
-he came to stay, the next season, a brilliantly successful series of
-concerts was the result. At the close, a number of his admirers united
-in presenting him a rich silver casket, holding a purse of thirty-five
-hundred dollars, as a testimonial of gratitude for his services. The
-Brooklyn Philharmonic Society placed itself under his direction. Chicago
-gave him a fine invitation to attend benefit entertainments to himself;
-and, when he came, decked the hall with abundant natural flowers, as if
-for the reception of a hero. He was successful financially and every
-other way, and from that time on he merely added to his laurels.
-
-
- THE CHIEF ELEMENT OF HIS SUCCESS
-
-“What,” I asked of him, “do you consider the chief element of your
-success?”
-
-“That is difficult to say. Perseverance, hard work, stern
-discipline,—each had its part.”
-
-“You have never attempted to become rich?”
-
-“Poh!”
-
-“Do you still believe in the best music for the mass of the people?”
-
-“I do. My success has been with them. It was so in New York; it is so
-here in Chicago.”
-
-“Do you still work as hard as ever?” I inquired.
-
-“Nearly so. The training of a large orchestra never ends. The work must
-be gone over and over. There is always something new.”
-
-“And your life’s pleasure lies in this?”
-
-“Wholly so. To render perfect music perfectly—that is enough.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
-John Burroughs at Home: The Hut on the Hill Top
-
-
-WHEN I visited the hill-top retreat of John Burroughs, the distinguished
-writer upon nature, at West Park, New York, it was with the feeling that
-all success is not material; that mere dollars are nothing, and that the
-influential man is the successful man, whether he be rich or poor. John
-Burroughs is unquestionably both influential and poor. Relatively poor:
-being an owner of some real estate, and having a modest income from
-copyrights. He is content: knowing when he has enough. On the wooden
-porch of his little bark-covered cabin I waited, one June afternoon,
-until he should come back from the woods and fields, where he had gone
-for a ramble. It was so still that the sound of my rocker moving to and
-fro on the rough boards of the little porch seemed to shock the perfect
-quiet. From afar off came the plaintive cry of a wood-dove, and then all
-was still again. Presently the interpreter of out-door life appeared in
-the distance, and, seeing a stranger at his door, hurried homeward. He
-was without coat or vest and looked cool in his white outing shirt and
-large straw hat. After some formalities of introduction we reached the
-subject which I had called to discuss, and he said:—
-
-“It is not customary to interview men of my vocation concerning
-success.”
-
-“Any one who has made a lasting impression on the minds of his
-contemporaries,” I began, “and influenced men and women—”
-
-“Do you refer to me?” he interrupted, naïvely.
-
-I nodded and he laughed. “I have not endowed a university nor made a
-fortune, nor conquered an enemy in battle,” he said.
-
-“And those who have done such things have not written ‘Locusts and Wild
-Honey’ and ‘Wake-Robin.’”
-
-“I recognize,” he said quietly, “that success is not always where people
-think it is. There are many ways of being successful; and I do not
-approve of the mistake which causes many to consider that a great
-fortune acquired means a great success achieved. On the contrary, our
-greatest men need very little money to accomplish the greatest work.”
-
-“I thought that anyone leading a life so wholly at variance with the
-ordinary ideas and customs would see success in life from a different
-point of view,” I observed. “Money is really no object with you?”
-
-“The subject of wealth never disturbs me.”
-
-“You lead a very simple life here.”
-
-“Such as you see.”
-
-The sight would impress anyone. So far is this disciple of nature away
-from the ordinary mode of the world, that his little cabin, set in the
-cup-shaped top of a hill, is practically bare of luxuries and the
-so-called comforts of life. His surroundings are of the rudest, the very
-rocks and bushes encroaching upon his back door. All about, the crest of
-the hill encircles him, and shuts out the world. Only the birds of the
-air venture to invade his retreat from the various sides of the
-mountain; and there is only one approach by a straggling, narrow path.
-In his house are no decorations but such as can be hung upon the exposed
-wood. The fireplace is of brick, and quite wide; the floor, rough boards
-scrubbed white; the ceiling, a rough array of exposed rafters; and his
-bed rudely constructed. Very few and very simple chairs, a plain table
-and some shelves for books make the wealth of the retreat and serve for
-his ordinary use.[9]
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- This hut on the hill-top is situated in an old lake bed, some three
- hundred yards wide, half filled with peat and decomposed matter,
- swampy and overgrown. This area was devoted by Mr. Burroughs to the
- raising of celery for the market, when he set out to earn a living
- upon the land.
-
-“Many people,” I said, “think that your method of living is an ideal
-example of the way people ought to live.”
-
-“There is nothing remarkable in that. A great many people are very weary
-of the way they think themselves compelled to live. They are mistaken in
-believing that the disagreeable things they find themselves doing, are
-the things they ought to do. A great many take their ideas of a proper
-aim in life from what other people say and do. Consequently, they are
-unhappy, and an independent existence such as mine strikes them as
-ideal. As a matter of fact, it is very natural.”
-
-“Would you say that to work so as to be able to live like this should be
-the aim of a young man?”
-
-“By no means. On the contrary, his aim should be to live in such a way
-as will give his mind the greatest freedom and peace. This can be very
-often obtained by wanting less of material things and more of
-intellectual ones. A man who achieved such an aim would be as well off
-as the most distinguished man in any field. Money-getting is half a
-mania, and some other ‘getting’ propensities are manias also. The man
-who gets content comes nearest to being reasonable.”
-
-“I should like,” I said, “to illustrate your point of view from the
-details of your own life.”
-
-“Students of nature do not, as a rule, have eventful lives. I was born
-at Roxbury, New York, in 1837. That was a time when conditions were
-rather primitive. My father was a farmer, and I was raised among the
-woods and fields. I came from an uncultivated, unreading class of
-society, and grew up among surroundings the least calculated to awaken
-the literary faculty. I have no doubt that daily contact with the woods
-and fields awakened my interest in the wonders of nature, and gave me a
-bent toward investigation in that direction.”[10]
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- “Blessed is he whose youth was passed upon a farm,” writes Mr.
- Burroughs; “and if it was a dairy farm his memories will be all the
- more fragrant. The driving of the cows to and from the pasture every
- day and every season for years,—how much of summer and of nature he
- got into him on these journeys! What rambles and excursions did this
- errand furnish the excuse for! The birds and birds’ nests, the
- berries, the squirrels, the woodchucks, the beech woods into which the
- cows loved so to wander and browse, the fragrant wintergreens, and a
- hundred nameless adventures, all strung upon that brief journey of
- half a mile to and from the remote pasture.”
-
-“Did you begin early to make notes and write upon nature?” I questioned.
-
-“Not before I was sixteen or seventeen. Earlier than that, the art of
-composition had anything but charms for me. I remember that while at
-school, at the age of fourteen, I was required, like other students, to
-write ‘compositions’ at stated times, but I usually evaded the duty one
-way or another. On one occasion, I copied something from a comic
-almanac, and unblushingly handed it in as my own. But the teacher
-detected the fraud, and ordered me to produce a twelve-line composition
-before I left school. I remember I racked my brain in vain, and the
-short winter day was almost closing when Jay Gould, who sat in the seat
-behind me, wrote twelve lines of doggerel on his slate and passed it
-slyly over to me. I had so little taste for writing that I coolly copied
-that, and handed it in as my own.”
-
-“You were friendly with Gould then?”
-
-“Oh, yes, ‘chummy,’ they call it now. His father’s farm was only a
-little way from ours, and we were fast friends, going home together
-every night.”
-
-“His view of life must have been considerably different from yours.”
-
-“It was. I always looked upon success as being a matter of mind, not
-money; but Jay wanted the material appearances. I remember that once we
-had a wrestling match, and as we were about even in strength, we agreed
-to abide by certain rules,—taking what we called ‘holts’ in the
-beginning and not breaking them until one or the other was thrown. I
-kept to this in the struggle, but when Jay realized that he was in
-danger of losing the contest, he broke the ‘holt’ and threw me. When I
-remarked that he had broken his agreement, he only laughed and said, ‘I
-threw you, didn’t I?’ And to every objection I made, he made the same
-answer. The fact of having won was pleasing to him. It satisfied him,
-although it wouldn’t have contented me.”
-
-“Did you ever talk over success in life with him?”
-
-“Yes, quite often. He was bent on making money, and did considerable
-trading among us schoolboys,—sold me some of his books. I felt then that
-my view of life was more satisfactory to me than his would have been. I
-wanted to obtain a competence, and then devote myself to high thinking
-instead of to money-making.”[11]
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- An old schoolmate in the little red schoolhouse has said, that “John
- and Jay were not like the other boys. They learned their lessons
- easier; and at recess they looked on the games, but did not join in
- them. John always knew where to find the largest trout; he could show
- you birds’ nests, and name all the flowers. He was fond of reading,
- and would walk five miles to borrow a book. Roxbury is proud of John
- Burroughs. We celebrated ‘Burroughs Day’ instead of Arbor Day here
- last spring, in the high school, in honor of him.”
-
-“How did you plan to attain this end?”
-
-“By study. I began in my sixteenth or seventeenth year to try to express
-myself on paper, and when, after I had left the country school, I
-attended the seminary at Ashland and at Cooperstown, I often received
-the highest marks in composition, though only standing about the average
-in general scholarship. My taste ran to essays, and I picked up the
-great works in that field at a bookstore, from time to time, and filled
-my mind with the essay idea. I bought the whole of Dr. Johnson’s works
-at a second-hand bookstore in New York, because, on looking into them I
-found his essays appeared to be solid literature, which I thought was
-just the thing. Almost my first literary attempts were moral
-reflections, somewhat in the Johnsonian style.”
-
-“You were supporting yourself during these years?”
-
-“I taught six months and ‘boarded round’ before I went to the seminary.
-That put fifty dollars into my pocket, and the fifty paid my way at the
-seminary.[12] Working on the farm, studying and teaching filled up the
-years until 1863, when I went to Washington and found employment in the
-Treasury Department.”
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- It was when he was attending the academy, that young Burroughs first
- saw that wonderful being—a living author:—
-
- “I distinctly remember with what emotion I gazed upon him,” he said,
- “and followed him about in the twilight, keeping on the other side of
- the street. He was of little account,—a man who had failed as a
- lawyer, and then had written a history of Poland, which I have never
- heard of since that time; but to me he was the embodiment of the
- august spirit of authorship, and I looked upon him with more reverence
- and enthusiasm than I had ever before looked upon any man with. I
- cannot divine why I should have stood in such worshipful fear and awe
- of this obscure individual, but I suppose it was the instinctive
- tribute of a timid and imaginative youth to a power he was just
- beginning to see,—or to feel,—the power of letters.”
-
-“You were connected with the Treasury then?”[13]
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- “My first book, ‘Wake-Robin,’ was written while I was a government
- clerk in Washington,” says Mr. Burroughs. “It enabled me to live over
- again the days I had passed with the birds, and in the scenes of my
- youth. I wrote the book while sitting at a desk in front of an iron
- wall. I was the keeper of a vault in which many million of bank-notes
- were stored. During my long periods of leisure, I took refuge in my
- pen. How my mind reacted from the iron wall in front of me, and sought
- solace in memories of the birds and of summer fields and woods.”
-
-“Oh, yes; for nearly nine years. I left the department in 1872, to
-become receiver of a bank, and subsequently for several years I
-performed the work of a bank examiner. I considered it only as an
-opportunity to earn and save up a little money on which I could retire.
-I managed to do that, and came back to this region, where I bought a
-fruit farm. I worked that into paying condition, and then gave all my
-time to the pursuit of the studies I like.”
-
-“Had you abandoned your interest in nature during your Washington life?”
-
-“No. I gave as much time to the study of nature and literature as I had
-to spare. When I was twenty-three I wrote an essay on ‘Expression,’ and
-sent it to the ‘_Atlantic_.’ It was so Emersonian in style, owing to my
-enthusiasm for Emerson at that time, that the editor thought some one
-was trying to palm off on him an early essay of Emerson’s which he had
-not seen. He found that Emerson had not published any such paper,
-however, and printed it, though it had not much merit. I wrote off and
-on for the magazines.”
-
-The editor in question was James Russell Lowell, who, instead of
-considering it without merit, often expressed afterwards the delight
-with which he read this contribution from an unknown hand, and the swift
-impression of the author’s future distinction which came to him with
-that reading.
-
-“Your successful work, then, has been in what direction?” I said.
-
-“In studying nature. It has all come by living close to the plants and
-animals of the woods and fields, and coming to understand them. There I
-have been successful. Men who, like myself, are deficient in
-self-assertion, or whose personalities are flexible and yielding, make a
-poor show in business, but in certain other fields these defects become
-advantages. Certainly it is so in my case. I can succeed with bird or
-beast, for I have cultivated my ability in that direction. I can look in
-the eye of an ugly dog or cow and win, but with an ugly man I have less
-success.
-
-“I consider the desire which most individuals have for the luxuries
-which money can buy, an error of mind” he added. “Those things do not
-mean anything except a lack of higher tastes. Such wants are not
-necessary wants, nor honorable wants. If you cannot get wealth with a
-noble purpose, it is better to abandon it and get something else. Peace
-of mind is one of the best things to seek, and finer tastes and
-feelings. The man who gets these, and maintains himself comfortably, is
-much more admirable and successful than the man who gets money and
-neglects these. The realm of power has no fascination for me. I would
-rather have my seclusion and peace of mind. This log hut, with its bare
-floors, is sufficient. I am set down among the beauties of nature, and
-in no danger of losing the riches that are scattered all about. No one
-will take my walks or my brook away from me. The flowers, birds and
-animals are plentifully provided. I have enough to eat and wear, and
-time to see how beautiful the world is, and to enjoy it. The entire
-world is after your money, or the things you have bought with your
-money. It is trying to keep them that makes them seem so precious. I
-live to broaden and enjoy my own life, believing that in so doing I do
-what is best for everyone. If I ran after birds only to write about
-them, I should never have written anything that anyone else would have
-cared to read. I must write from sympathy and love,—that is, from
-enjoyment,—or not at all. I come gradually to have a feeling that I want
-to write upon a given theme. Whenever the subject recurs to me, it
-awakens a warm, personal response. My confidence that I ought to write
-comes from the feeling or attraction which some subjects exercise over
-me. The work is pleasure, and the result gives pleasure.”
-
-“And your work as a naturalist is what?”
-
-“Climbing trees to study birds, lying by the waterside to watch the
-fishes, sitting still in the grass for hours to study the insects, and
-tramping here and there, always to observe and study whatever is common
-to the woods and fields.”
-
-“Men think you have done a great work,” I said.
-
-“I have done a pleasant work,” he said, modestly.
-
-“And the achievements of your schoolmate Gould do not appeal to you as
-having anything in them worth aiming for?” I questioned.
-
-“Not for me. I think my life is better for having escaped such vast and
-difficult interests.”
-
-The gentle, light-hearted naturalist and recluse came down the long
-hillside with me, “to put me right” on the main road. I watched him as
-he retraced his steps up the steep, dark path, lantern in hand. His
-sixty years sat lightly upon him, and as he ascended I heard him
-singing. Long after the light melody had died away, I saw the serene
-little light bobbing up and down in his hand, disappearing and
-reappearing, as the lone philosopher repaired to his hut and his couch
-of content.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
-Vreeland’s Romantic Story: How He Came to Transport a Million Passengers
- a Day
-
-
-A SHORT time ago, New York learned with interest and some astonishment,
-that the head of its greatest transportation system, Herbert H.
-Vreeland, had received from several of his associates as individuals, a
-“valentine” present of $100,000, in recognition of his superb management
-of their properties. Many New Yorkers then learned, for the first time,
-what railroad experts throughout the country had long known, that the
-transportation of a million people a day in New York’s busy streets,
-without serious friction or public annoyance, is not a matter of chance,
-but is the result of perhaps the most perfect traffic organization ever
-created, at the head of which is a man, quiet, forceful, able, with the
-ability of a great general—a master and at the same time, a friend of
-men,—himself one for whom in the judgment of his associates almost any
-higher railroad career is possible.
-
-Thirty years ago Mr. Vreeland, then a lad thirteen years old, was, to
-use his own humorous, reminiscent phrase, “h’isting ice” on the Hudson
-River, one of a gang of eighteen or twenty men and boys filling the ice
-carts for retail city delivery. A picture just brought to light, shows
-him among the force lined up to be photographed, as a tall, loosely
-built, hatchet-faced lad in working garb, with a fragment of a smile on
-his face, as if he could appreciate the contrast of the boy of that day
-with the man of the future.
-
-How do these things happen? What was the divine spark in this boy’s
-brain and heart that should lift him out of the crowd of the commonplace
-to the position of responsibility and influence in the world which he
-now occupies? If my readers could have been present at the interview
-kindly granted by Mr. Vreeland to the writer, and could have heard him
-recalling his early life and its many struggles and disappointments with
-a smile that was often near a tear, they would have gone away feeling
-that nothing is impossible to him who dares, and, above all else, who
-_works_, and they would have derived inspiration far greater than can
-possibly be given in these written words.
-
-“I first entered the railroad business in 1875,” said Mr. Vreeland,
-“shoveling gravel on one of the Long Island Railroad Company’s night
-construction trains. Though this position was humble enough, it was a
-great thing to me then to feel myself a railroad man, with all that that
-term implied; and when, after a few months’ trial, I was given the job
-of inspecting ties and roadbed at a dollar a day, I felt that I was well
-on the road to the presidency.
-
-“One day the superintendent asked my boss if he could give him a
-reliable man to replace a switchman who had just made a blunder leading
-to a collision, and had been discharged. The reply was, ‘Well, I’ve got
-a man named Vreeland here, who will do exactly what you tell him to.’
-They called me up, and, after a few short, sharp questions from the
-train-master, I went down to the dreary and desolate marsh near
-Bushwick, Long Island, and took charge of a switch. For a few days I had
-to camp out near that switch, in any way that might happen, but finally
-the officers made up their minds that they could afford me the luxury of
-a two-by-four flag-house with a stove in it, and I settled down for more
-railroading.
-
-“The Bushwick station was not far away, and one of the company’s
-division headquarters was there. I soon made the acquaintance of all the
-officials around that station, and got into their good graces by
-offering to help them out in their clerical work at any and all times
-when I was off duty. It was a godsend to them, and exactly what I
-wanted, for I had determined to get into the inside of the railroad
-business from bottom to top. Many’s the time I have worked till eleven
-or twelve o’clock at night in that little station, figuring out train
-receipts and expenses, engine cost and duty, and freight and passenger
-statistics of all kinds; and, as a result of this work, I quickly
-acquired a grasp of railroad details in all stages, which few managers
-possess, for, in one way and another, I got into and through every
-branch of the business.
-
-“My Bushwick switch was a temporary one, put in for construction
-purposes only, and, after some months’ use, was discontinued, and I was
-discharged. This did not suit me at all, and I went to one of the
-officials of the road and told him that I wanted to remain with the Long
-Island Railroad Company in any capacity whatsoever, and would be obliged
-to him if he would give me a job. He said, at first, that he hadn’t a
-thing for me to do, but finally added, as if he was ashamed to suggest
-it, that, if I had a mind to go down on another division and sweep out
-and dust cars, I might do it. I instantly accepted, and thereby learned
-the details of another important railroad department.
-
-“Pretty soon they made me brakeman on an early morning train to
-Hempstead, and then I found that I was worth to the world, after two
-years of railroad training, just forty dollars a month, _plus_ a
-perquisite or two obtained from running a card-table department in the
-smoking-cars. I remembered that I paid eighteen dollars of my munificent
-salary for board and lodging, sent twenty dollars home for the support
-of my mother and sister, and had two dollars a month and the aforesaid
-perquisites left for ‘luxuries.’
-
-“It was about this time, thus early in my career, that I first came to
-be known as ‘President Vreeland.’ An old codger upon the railroad, in
-talking to me one day, said, in a bantering way: ‘Well, I suppose you
-think your fortune is made, now you have become a brakeman, but let me
-tell you what will happen. You will be a brakeman about four or five
-years, and then they will make you a conductor, at about one hundred
-dollars a month, and there you’ll stick all your life, if you don’t get
-discharged.’ I responded, rather angrily, ‘Do you suppose I am going to
-be satisfied with remaining a conductor? I mean to be president of a
-railroad.’ ‘Ho, ho, ho!’ laughed the man. He told the story around, and
-many a time thereafter the boys slyly placed the word ‘President’ before
-my name on official instructions and packages sent to me.
-
-“A conductor on one of the regular trains quarreled one morning with the
-superintendent and was discharged. I was sent for and told to take out
-that train. This was jumping me over the heads of many of the older
-brakemen, and, as a consequence, all the brakemen on that train quit.
-Others were secured, however, and I ran the train regularly for a good
-many months.
-
-“Then came an accident one day, for which the engineer and I were
-jointly responsible. We admitted our responsibility, and were
-discharged. I went again to the superintendent, however, and, upon a
-strong plea to be retained in the service, he sent me back to the ranks
-among the brakemen. I had no complaint to make, but accepted the
-consequence of my mistake.
-
-“Soon after this, the control of the road passed into other hands. Many
-were discharged, and I was daily expecting my own ‘blue envelope.’ One
-day, I was detailed to act as brakeman on a special which was to convey
-the president and directors of the road, with invited guests, on a trip
-over the lines. By that time I had learned the Long Island Railroad in
-all its branches pretty well; and, in the course of the trip, was called
-upon to answer a great many questions. The next day I received word that
-the superintendent wanted to see me. My heart sank within me, for
-summonses of this kind were ominous in those days, but I duly presented
-myself at the office and was asked, ‘Are you the good-looking brakeman
-who was on the special yesterday who shows his teeth when he smiles?’ I
-modestly replied that I was certainly on the special yesterday, and I
-may possibly have partly confirmed the rest of the identification by a
-smile, for the superintendent, without further questioning, said: ‘The
-president wants to see you, up stairs.’
-
-“I went up, and in due time was shown into the presence of the great
-man, who eyed me closely for a minute or two, and then asked me abruptly
-what I was doing. I told him I was braking Number Seventeen. He said:
-‘Take this letter to your superintendent. It contains a request that he
-relieve you from duty, and put somebody else in your place. After he has
-done so, come back here.’
-
-“All this I did, and, on my return to the president, he said, ‘Take this
-letter at once to Admiral Peyron, of the French fleet (then lying in the
-harbor on a visit of courtesy to this country), and this to General
-Hancock, on Governor’s Island. They contain invitations to each to dine
-with me to-morrow night at my home in Garden City with their staffs. Get
-their answers, and, if they say yes, return at once to New York, charter
-a steamer, call for them to-morrow afternoon, land them at Long Island
-City, arrange for a special train from Long Island City to Garden City,
-take them there, and return them after the banquet. I leave everything
-in your hands. Good day.’
-
-“I suppose this might be considered a rather large job for a common
-brakeman, but I managed to get through with it without disgracing
-myself, and apparently to the satisfaction of all concerned. For some
-time thereafter, I was the president’s special emissary on similar
-matters connected with the general conduct of the business, and while I
-did not, perhaps, learn so very much about railroading proper, I was put
-in positions where I learned to take responsibility and came to have
-confidence in myself.
-
-“The control of the Long Island Railroad again changed hands, and I was
-again ‘let out,’ this time for good, so far as that particular road was
-concerned,—except that, within the last two or three years, I have
-renewed my acquaintance with it through being commissioned by a banking
-syndicate in New York City to make an expert examination of its plant
-and equipment as a preliminary to reorganization.
-
-“This was in 1881, or about that time, and I soon secured a position as
-conductor on the New York and Northern Railroad, a little line running
-from One Hundred and Fifty-fifth Street, New York City, to Yonkers. Not
-to go into tedious detail regarding my experience there, I may say in
-brief that in course of time I practically ‘ran the road.’ After some
-years, it changed hands (a thing which railways, particularly small
-ones, often do, and always to the great discomposure of the employees),
-and the new owners, including William C. Whitney, Daniel S. Lamont,
-Captain R. Somers Hayes and others, went over the road one day on a
-special train to visit the property. As I have said, I was then
-practically running the road, owing to the fact that the man who held
-the position of general manager was not a railroad man and relied upon
-me to handle all details, but my actual position was only that of
-train-master. I accompanied the party, and knowing the road thoroughly,
-not only physically but also statistically, was able to answer all the
-questions which they raised. This was the first time I had met Mr.
-Whitney, and I judge that I made a somewhat favorable impression upon
-him, for not long after I was created general manager of the road.
-
-“A few months later, I received this telegram:—
-
- ‘H. H. VREELAND.
-
- ‘Meet me at Broadway and Seventh Avenue office at two o’clock
- to-day.
-
- WILLIAM C. WHITNEY.’
-
-“I had to take a special engine to do this, but arrived at two o’clock
-at the office of the Houston Street, West Street and Pavonia Ferry
-Railroad Company, which I then knew, in an indistinct sort of way, owned
-a small horse railway in the heart of New York. After finding that Mr.
-Whitney was out at lunch, I kicked my heels for a few minutes outside
-the gate, and then inquired of a man who was seated inside in an
-exceedingly comfortable chair, when Mr. Whitney and his party were
-expected, saying, also, that my name was Vreeland, and I had an
-appointment at two. He replied: ‘Oh, are you Mr. Vreeland? Well, here is
-a letter for you. Mr. Whitney expected to be here at two o’clock, but is
-a little late.’ I took my letter and sat down again outside, thinking
-that it might possibly contain an appointment for another hour. It was,
-however, an appointment of quite a different character. It read as
-follows:—
-
- ‘MR. H. H. VREELAND.
-
- ‘DEAR SIR:—At a meeting of the stockholders of the Houston
- Street, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad Company, held
- this day, you were unanimously elected a director of the
- company.
-
- ‘At a subsequent meeting of the directors, you were unanimously
- elected president and general manager, your duties to commence
- immediately.
-
- ‘Yours truly,
-
- C. E. WARREN, Secretary.’
-
-“By the time I had recovered from my surprise at learning that I was no
-longer a steam-railroad, but a street-railroad man, Mr. Whitney and
-other directors came in, and, after spending about five minutes in
-introductions, they took up their hats and left, saying, simply, ‘Well,
-Vreeland, you are president; now run the road.’ I then set out to learn
-what kind of a toy railway it was that had come into my charge.”
-
-Here Mr. Vreeland’s narrative stops, for the rest of the history is well
-known to the people of New York, and to experts in street railroading
-throughout the country. The “Whitney syndicate,” so called, was then in
-possession of a few only out of some twenty or more street railway
-properties in New York City, the Broadway line, however, being one of
-these, and by far the most valuable. With the immense financial
-resources of Messrs. Whitney, Widener, Elkins, and their associates,
-nearly all the other properties were added to the original ones owned by
-the syndicate, and with the magnificent organizing and executive ability
-of Mr. Vreeland, there has been built up in New York a street railway
-system which, while including less than two hundred and fifty miles of
-track, is actually carrying more than one-half as many passengers each
-year as are being carried by all the steam railroads of the United
-States together.
-
-Mr. Vreeland’s first work on coming to New York was, naturally, to
-familiarize himself with the transportation conditions in New York City,
-and to learn how to handle the peculiarly complex problems involved in
-street railroading. He first had to gain, also, the confidence of his
-men, but this is never hard for anyone who is sincerely solicitous for
-their welfare, and in such sympathy with their work and hardships as a
-man like himself must have been, with his own past history in mind.
-
-With his hand firmly on the tiller, and with his scheme of organization
-perfected, he was soon able to take up the larger questions of
-administration. To Mr. Vreeland is due the credit of initiating and
-rapidly extending a general free transfer system in New York, by which
-the public is able to ride from almost any part of the largest city in
-the country to any other part, for a single five-cent fare, whereas,
-before the consolidation, two, three, and sometimes four fares would
-have to be paid for the same ride.
-
-It was upon Mr. Vreeland’s recommendation, also, backed by that of F. S.
-Pearson, the well-known consulting engineer of the Whitney syndicate,
-that the latter determined to adopt the underground conduit electric
-system in the reconstruction of the lines. At that time this decision
-involved the greatest financial and technical courage, since there was
-but one other road of this kind in existence, and that a small tramway
-in an Austrian city, while previous American experience with this system
-had been uniformly unsuccessful.
-
-Not only in street railroading proper, but also in steam railroading,
-automobile work and the electric lighting field, Mr. Vreeland possesses
-the absolute confidence of his associates, who rely implicitly upon his
-judgment, intelligence and business acumen. The recent gift, already
-referred to, is one only of several which he has received from men who
-feel that they have made millions through his ability. Although he is
-not to-day a wealthy man, as men are counted wealthy in New York City,
-he is certainly well along on the road to millionaire-dom.
-
-Best of all, however, and what has probably satisfied him most in his
-life, has been the host of genuine friendships which he has made, and
-the strong hold which he has upon the workingman. A strike of the
-employees of the Metropolitan Street Railway Company is absolutely
-impossible so long as he remains at the head of the company’s affairs,
-for the men know well that there will be in that position a man who is
-always fair, and even generous with them, bearing in mind ever his duty
-to his stockholders; and they know, too, that no injustice will be
-committed by any of the department heads. Any one of his four or five
-thousand employees can meet him personally on a question of grievance,
-and is sure of being treated as a reasonable fellow man. Time and again
-have labor leaders sought to form an organization of the Metropolitan
-employees, and as often the men have said in reply, “Not while Vreeland
-is here,—we know he will treat us fairly.”
-
-In a recent address Mr. Vreeland said:—
-
-“No artificial condition can ever, in my judgment, keep down a man who
-has health, capacity and honesty. You can temporarily interfere with him
-or make the road to the object of his ambition more difficult, but you
-cannot stop him. That tyranny is forever dead, and since its death there
-has come a great enlightenment to the possessors of power and wealth.
-Instead of preventing a man from rising, there is not a concern the wide
-world over that is not to-day eagerly seeking for capable people. The
-great hunger of the time is for good men, strong men, men capable of
-assuming responsibility; and there is sharp competition for those who
-are available.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- XXII
-
-How James Whitcomb Riley Came to be Master of the Hoosier Dialect
-
-
-IT is doubtful if there is in the literary world, to-day, a personage
-whose boyhood and young manhood can approach in romance and unusual
-circumstances that of the author of “The Old Swimmin’ Hole.”
-
-All tradition was against his accomplishing anything in the world. How,
-indeed, said the good folks of the little town of Greenfield, Indiana,
-could anything be expected of a boy who cared nothing for school, and
-deserted it at the first opportunity, to take up a wandering life.
-
-
- THROWN ON HIS OWN RESOURCES
-
-The boy’s father wanted the boy to follow in his footsteps, in the legal
-profession, and he held out alluring hopes of the possibility of scaling
-even greater heights than any to which he had yet attained. Better
-still,—from the standpoint of the restless James,—he took the youngster
-with him as he made his circuit from court to court.
-
-These excursions, for they were indeed such to the boy, sowed deep in
-his heart the seed of a determination to become a nomad; and it was not
-long until he started out as a strolling sign-painter, determined upon
-the realization of his ideals.
-
-Oftentimes business was worse than dull, and, on one occasion, hunger
-drove him for recourse to his wits, and lo, he blossomed forth as a
-“blind sign-painter,” led from place to place by a little boy, and
-showered with sympathy and trade in such abundance that he could hardly
-bear the thought of the relinquishment of a pretense so ingenious and
-successful, entered on at first as a joke.
-
-Then came another epoch. The young man fell in with a patent-medicine
-man, with whom he joined fortunes, and here the young Indianian, who had
-been scribbling more or less poetry, found a new use for his talent; for
-his duties in the partnership were to beguile the people with joke and
-song, while his co-worker plied the sales of his cure-all. There were
-many times when, but for his fancy, the young poet might have seen his
-audience dwindle rapidly away. It was while thus engaged, that he had
-the opportunities which enabled him to master thoroughly the Hoosier
-dialect.
-
-When the glamor of the patent-medicine career had faded somewhat, the
-nomadic Riley joined a band of strolling Thespians, and, in this brief
-portion of his life, after the wont of players of his class, played many
-parts.
-
-At length, he began to give a little more attention to his literary
-work; and, later, obtained a place on an Indianapolis paper, where he
-published his first poems, and they won their author almost instant
-success.
-
-
- WHY HE LONGED TO BE A BAKER
-
-When I drew Mr. Riley out to talk still further of those interesting
-days, and the strange experiences which came to him therein, the
-conversation finally turned on the subject of his youthful ambition.
-
-“I think my earliest remembered one,” he said, “was an insatiate longing
-to become a baker. I don’t know what prompted it, unless it were the
-visions of the mountains of alluring ‘goodies,’ which, as they are
-ranged in the windows of the pastry shops, appear doubly tempting to the
-youth whose mother not only counsels moderation, but enforces it.
-
-“Next, I imagined that I would like to become a showman of some sort.
-
-“Then, my shifting fancy conjured up visions of how grand it would be to
-work as a painter, and decorate houses and fences in glowing colors.
-
-“Finally, as I grew a little older, there returned my old longing to
-become an actor. When, however, my dreams were realized, and I became a
-member of a traveling theatrical company, I found that the life was full
-of hardships, with very little chance of rising in the world.
-
-“I never had any literary ambition whatever, so far as I can remember. I
-wrote, primarily, simply because I desired to have something to read,
-and could not find selections that exactly suited me. Gradually I found
-a demand for my little efforts springing up; and so my brother, who
-could write legibly transcribed them.”
-
-
- PERSISTENCE
-
-At this point I asked Mr. Riley his idea of the prime requisites for
-success in the field of letters.
-
-“The most essential factor,” he replied “is persistence,—the
-determination never to allow your energy or enthusiasm to be dampened by
-the discouragement that must inevitably come. I believe that he is
-richer for the battle with the world, in any vocation, who has great
-determination and little talent, rather than his seemingly more
-fortunate brother with great talent, perhaps, but little determination.
-As for the field of literature, I cannot but express my conviction that
-meteoric flights, such as have been taken, of recent years, by some
-young writers with whose names almost everybody is familiar, cannot fail
-to be detrimental, unless the man to whom success comes thus early and
-suddenly is an exceptionally evenly-balanced and sensible person.
-
-“Many persons have spoken to me about Kipling’s work, and remarked how
-wonderful a thing is the fact that such achievements could have been
-possible for a man comparatively so young. I say, not at all. What do we
-find when we investigate? Simply that Kipling began working on a
-newspaper when he was only thirteen years of age, and he has been
-toiling ever since. So you see, even that case confirms my theory that
-every man must be ‘tried in the fire,’ as it were.
-
-“He may begin early or late—and in some cases the fight is longer than
-in others—but of one thing I feel sure, that there is no short-cut to
-permanent, self-satisfying success in literature, or anything else.”
-
-
- TWENTY YEARS OF REJECTED MANUSCRIPTS
-
-“Mr. Riley,” I asked, “would you mind saying something about the
-obstacles over which you climbed to success?”
-
-“I am afraid it would not be a very pleasant story,” he replied. “A
-friend came to me once, completely heartbroken, saying that his
-manuscripts were constantly returned, and that he was the most miserable
-wretch alive. I asked him how long he had been trying? ‘Three years,’ he
-said. ‘My dear man,’ I answered, laughing, ‘go on, keep on trying till
-you have spent as many years at it as I did.’ ‘As many as you did!’ he
-exclaimed. ‘Yes, as long as I did.’ ‘What, you struggled for years!’
-‘Yes, sir; through years, through sleepless nights, through almost
-hopeless days. For twenty years I tried to get into one magazine; back
-came my manuscripts eternally. I kept on. In the twentieth year, that
-magazine accepted one of my articles.’
-
-“I was not a believer in the theory that one man does a thing much
-easier than any other man. Continuous, unflagging effort, persistence
-and determination will win. Let not the man be discouraged who has
-these.”
-
-“What would you advise one to do with his constantly rejected
-manuscript?” I asked.
-
-“Put it away awhile; then remodel it. Young writers make the mistake I
-made.”
-
-“What mistake?” I asked.
-
-“Hurrying a manuscript off before it was dry from my pen, as if the
-world were just waiting for that article and must have it. Now it can
-hardly be drawn from me with a pair of tweezers. Yes, lay it aside
-awhile. Reread. There is a rotten spot somewhere. Perhaps it is full of
-hackneyed phrases, or lacks in sparkle and originality. Search, examine,
-rewrite, simplify. Make it lucid. _I am glad, now, that my manuscripts
-did come back._ Presently I would discover this defect, then that.
-Perhaps three or four sleepless nights would show my failure to be in an
-unsymmetrical arrangement of the verses.
-
-“See these books?” he said, rapping upon the book case with the back of
-his hand. “Classics! but of what do they tell? Of the things of their
-own day. Let us write the things of our day. Literary fields exhausted!
-Nonsense. If we write well enough, ours will be the classics of
-to-morrow. Our young Americans have, right at hand, the richest material
-any country ever offered. Let them be brave and work in earnest.”
-
-
- A COLLEGE EDUCATION
-
-Answering other questions, the poet said:—“A college education for the
-aspirant for literary success is, of course, an advantage, provided he
-does not let education foster a false culture that will lead him away
-from the ideals he ought to cling to.
-
-“There is another thing that the young man in any artistic pursuit must
-have a care for; and that is, to be practical. This is a practical
-world, and it is always ready to take advantage of this sort of people:
-so that one must try to cultivate a practical business sense as well as
-an artistic sense. We have only a few men like Rudyard Kipling and F.
-Hopkinson Smith, who seem to combine these diverse elements of character
-in just the right proportions; but I believe that it is unfortunate for
-the happiness and peace of mind of our authors, and artists, and
-musicians, that we have not more of them.”
-
-
- RILEY’S POPULARITY
-
-Riley’s poetry is popular because it goes right to the feelings of the
-people. He could not have written as he does, but for the schooling of
-that wandering life, which gave him an insight into the struggle for
-existence among the great unnumbered multitude of his fellow-men. He
-learned in his travels and journeys, in his hard experience as a
-strolling sign-painter and patent-medicine peddler the freemasonry of
-poverty. His poems are natural; they are those of a man who feels as he
-writes. As Thoreau painted nature in the woods, and streams, and lakes,
-so Riley depicts the incidents of everyday life, and brightens each
-familiar lineament with that touch that makes all the world akin.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- SUCCESS BOOKS
-
- By DR. ORISON SWETT MARDEN
-
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- STEPPING STONES
-
- 12mo. Red Cloth. Decorative Cover. Illustrated. Price, $1.25
-
-Dr. Marden’s new volume of essays, “Stepping Stones,” has the attractive
-qualities made familiar to a large audience of readers by his earlier
-books. At the same time it is entirely new in contents and most helpful
-and entertaining in character. It contains talks to young people of both
-sexes full of practical value, happy sketches of great characters,
-salient suggestions on deportment and conduct, and shrewd advice of all
-kinds touching everyday living. The author’s wide knowledge of history
-and literature is used to give the essays atmosphere and quality, and no
-success book of the series is more engaging and wholesome than “Stepping
-Stones.”
-
-
- HOW THEY SUCCEEDED
-
- Life Stories of Successful Men told by Themselves
-
- 12mo. Red Cloth. Decorative Cover. Illustrated. Price, $1.50
-
-The author in this book has set down the story of successful men and
-women told by themselves, either in a series of interviews or by
-semi-autobiographical sketches. They make a most entertaining and
-inspiring series of life stories, full of incentive to ambitious youth.
-
-The Boston Transcript says: “To the young man who is determined to
-succeed in life, no matter in what direction his aim may lie, this
-volume will be a direct source of inspiration. It shows that the people
-‘who have got there’ have invariably done so through pluck,
-perseverance, and principle, and not through ‘pull’ or social position.
-It emphasizes the fact that success depends wholly and entirely upon the
-person himself.”
-
-
- WINNING OUT
-
- A Book about Success
-
- 12mo. Red Cloth. Decorative Cover. Gilt Top. Illustrated. Price, $1.00
-
-Dr. Marden has made for himself a wide reputation by his earlier
-volumes, “Architects of Fate” and “Pushing to the Front.” But “Winning
-Out,” while constructed along somewhat the same lines, is his first book
-designed especially for young readers. Its theme is “Character Building
-by Habit Forming.”
-
-The Louisville Courier-Journal says: “Pleasant teaching Dr. Marden’s
-anecdotes make. They are of men and things that have actually been and
-happened. The moral is often an epigram, always apropos. Through the
-pages of the small volume pass a procession of figures that have
-aspired, struggled, and achieved. Such work is good for the world, good
-for the youth in it, and for more experienced and serious middle age.”
-
-
- Defending The Bank
-
- By EDWARD S. VAN ZILE
-
-Author of “With Sword and Crucifix,” etc. Four illustrations by I. B.
- Hazelton. 12mo. Pictorial cover in color. Price, $1.25.
-
-“Defending the Bank,” by Edward S. Van Zile, is a most amusing and
-interesting detective story for boys and girls, in which a couple of
-bright boys and girls appoint themselves amateur detectives and are able
-to run down a couple of bank robbers who are planning to rob the bank of
-which the father of one of the boys is president. This is at once an
-exciting and wholesome tale, of which the scene is laid in Troy, N.Y.,
-the former home of the author. It will be widely welcomed.
-
-
- The Mutineers
-
- By EUSTACE L. WILLIAMS
-
-Author of “The Substitute Quarterback.” 12mo. Four illustrations by I.
- B. Hazelton. Pictorial cover in color. Price, $1.25.
-
-“The Mutineers” is a rattling boys’ story by Mr. Eustace L. Williams of
-the Louisville Courier-Journal. It gives a picture of life in a large
-boarding-school, where a certain set of boys control the athletics, and
-shows how their unjust power was broken by the hero of the tale, who
-forms a rival baseball nine and manages to defeat his opponents, thus
-bringing a better state of things in the school socially and as to
-sports. The story is full of lively action, and deals with baseball and
-general athletic interests in a large school in a manner which shows
-that the author is thoroughly acquainted with and sympathetic to his
-subject.
-
-
- --------------------------------------------------
-
- LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY, BOSTON
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-● Transcriber’s note:
-
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
-
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
-
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW THEY SUCCEEDED***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 64059-0.txt or 64059-0.zip *******
-
-
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
-http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/6/4/0/5/64059
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, How They Succeeded, by Orison Swett Marden</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: How They Succeeded</p>
-<p> Life Stories of Successful Men Told by Themselves</p>
-<p>Author: Orison Swett Marden</p>
-<p>Release Date: December 16, 2020 [eBook #64059]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HOW THEY SUCCEEDED***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Tim Lindell, Barry Abrahamsen,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/howtheysucceeded00mardrich
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><span class='c002'><i>HOW<br /> <br />THEY SUCCEEDED</i></span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/leaves-3.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='c002'><i>HOW</i></span></div>
- <div><span class='c002'><i>THEY SUCCEEDED</i></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/leaves-4.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>LIFE STORIES</span> <i>of</i> <span class='xlarge'>SUCCESSFUL</span></em></div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>MEN TOLD</span> <i>by</i> <span class='xlarge'>THEMSELVES</span></em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c005' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'><i>By</i> ORISON SWETT MARDEN</span></em></div>
- <div class='c000'>EDITOR <i>of</i> “SUCCESS.” AUTHOR <i>of</i> “WINNING OUT,” ETC., ETC. <span class='xxlarge'>❧</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'>ILLUSTRATED</span></div>
- <div class='c003'><span class='xlarge'><i>LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY</i> <i>BOSTON</i></span>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='xxlarge'>❧</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/copyright-top.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>COPYRIGHT,</span></em></div>
- <div><span class='large'>1901,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>By</span></span></div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>LOTHROP</span></em></div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>PUBLISHING</span></em></div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>COMPANY.</span></em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c006' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='large'>ALL RIGHTS</span></em></div>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='large'>RESERVED</span></em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/copyright-bottom.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 class='c007'><i>CONTENTS</i></h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i005.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER I</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c009'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>MARSHALL FIELD </b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_19'>19</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Determined not to remain poor”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_20'>20</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Saved my Earnings, and Attended strictly to Business”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_20'>20</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“I always thought I would be a Merchant”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>An Opportunity</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Cash basis</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_23'>23</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Every Purchaser must be enabled to feel secure”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_24'>24</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Turning-Point</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_25'>25</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Qualities that make for Success</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_27'>27</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A College Education and Business</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_27'>27</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER II</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>BELL TELEPHONE TALK<br />HINTS ON SUCCESS BY ALEXANDER G. BELL.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_30'>30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Night Worker</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_30'>30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Subject of Success</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_31'>31</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Perseverance applied to a Practical End</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_32'>32</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Concentration of Purpose</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_34'>34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Young American Geese</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>Unhelpful Reading</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_36'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Inventions in America</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_37'>37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Orient</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Environment and Heredity</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_38'>38</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Professor Bell’s Life Story</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_40'>40</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“I will make the World Hear it”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_41'>41</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER III</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>WHY THE AMERICAN PEOPLE LIKE HELEN GOULD</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_44'>44</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Face Full of Character</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Her Ambitions and Aims</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_45'>45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Most Charming Charity</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_46'>46</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Her Practical Sympathy for the Less Favored</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_49'>49</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Personal Attention to an Unselfish Service</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_52'>52</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Her Views upon Education</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_55'>55</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Evil of Idleness</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_56'>56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Her Patriotism</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_56'>56</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Our Helen”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_59'>59</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“America”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_60'>60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Unheralded Benefactions</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_60'>60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Her Personality</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_63'>63</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER IV</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>PHILIP D. ARMOUR’S BUSINESS CAREER</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_65'>65</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Footing it to California</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_68'>68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Ditch</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_70'>70</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>He enters the Grain Market</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_71'>71</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Mr. Armour’s Acute Perception of the Commercial Conditions for Building up a Great Business</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_72'>72</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>System and Good Measure</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_73'>73</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Methods</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_74'>74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Turning-Point</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Truth</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Great Orator and a Great Charity</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Ease in His Work</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Business King</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_78'>78</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Training Youth for Business</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_79'>79</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Prompt to Act</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_82'>82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Foresight</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_83'>83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Forearmed against Panic</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_84'>84</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Some Secrets of Success</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_85'>85</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER V</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>WHAT MISS MARY E. PROCTOR DID TO POPULARIZE ASTRONOMY</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_87'>87</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Audiences are Appreciative</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_88'>88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Lectures to Children</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_89'>89</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Lesson in Lecturing</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_90'>90</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Stereopticon</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_91'>91</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Stories from Starland”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Concentration of Attention</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_94'>94</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>THE BOYHOOD EXPERIENCE OF PRESIDENT SCHURMAN OF CORNELL UNIVERSITY</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_96'>96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Long Tramp to School</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_98'>98</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>He Always Supported Himself</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_100'>100</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Turning-Point of his Life</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_101'>101</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Splendid College Record</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_103'>103</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>THE STORY OF JOHN WANAMAKER</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_105'>105</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Capital at Fourteen</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_106'>106</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Tower Hall Clothing Store</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_107'>107</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Ambition and Power as an Organizer at Sixteen</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_108'>108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Y. M. C. A.</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_109'>109</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Oak Hall</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_109'>109</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Head Built for Business</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_110'>110</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Relation to Customers</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_111'>111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Merchant’s Organizing Faculty</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_113'>113</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Attention to Details</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_115'>115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Most Rigid Economy</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_115'>115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Advertising</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_116'>116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Seizing Opportunities</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_117'>117</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Push and Persistence</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_117'>117</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Balloons</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_119'>119</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“To what, Mr. Wanamaker, do you Attribute your Great Success?”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_120'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Views on Business</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_121'>121</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Public Service</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_124'>124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Invest in Yourself</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_124'>124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>At Home</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_126'>126</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER VIII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>GIVING UP FIVE THOUSAND A YEAR TO BECOME A SCULPTOR</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_129'>129</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER IX</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS BUSINESS POINTERS BY DARIUS OGDEN MILLS.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_139'>139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Work</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_139'>139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>Self-Dependence</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_140'>140</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Thrift</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_141'>141</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Expensive Habits—Smoking</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_141'>141</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Forming an Independent Business Judgment</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_142'>142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Multiplication of Opportunities To-day in America</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_142'>142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Where is One’s Best Chance? The Knowledge of Men</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_143'>143</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Bottom of the Ladder</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_144'>144</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Beneficent Use of Capital</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_145'>145</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Wholesome Discipline of Earning and Spending</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_146'>146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Personal: A Word about Cheap Hotels</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_146'>146</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER X</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>NORDICA: WHAT IT COSTS TO BECOME A QUEEN OF SONG</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Difficulties</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_150'>150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“The World was Mine, if I would Work”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_152'>152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“It put New Fire into me”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_154'>154</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“I was Traveling on Air”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_156'>156</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>In Europe</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_159'>159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Why don’t you Sing in Grand Opera?”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_161'>161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>This was her Crowning Triumph</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_162'>162</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>She was Indispensable in “Aida”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_166'>166</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Kindness of Frau Wagner</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_167'>167</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Musical Talent of American Girls</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_169'>169</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Price of Fame</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_170'>170</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>HOW HE WORKED TO SECURE A FOOT-HOLD WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_171'>171</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>A Lofty Ideal</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_172'>172</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Acquiring a Literary Style</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_174'>174</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>My Workshop</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_175'>175</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>How to Choose Between Words</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_177'>177</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Fate following Collaboration</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_179'>179</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Consul at Venice</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_180'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>My Literary Experience</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_182'>182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>As to a Happy Life</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_184'>184</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER </b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_185'>185</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Early Dream and Purpose</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_186'>186</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>School Days</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_188'>188</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Raft of Hoop Poles</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_191'>191</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Odor of Oil</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_192'>192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His First Ledger and the Items in it</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_193'>193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>$10,000</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_196'>196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>He Remembered the Oil</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_197'>197</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Keeping his Head</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_197'>197</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>There was Money in a Refinery</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_198'>198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Standard Oil</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_200'>200</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Mr. Rockefeller’s Personality</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_201'>201</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>At the Office</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_202'>202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Foresight</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_203'>203</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Hygiene</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_204'>204</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>At Home</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_205'>205</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Philanthropy</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_206'>206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Perseverance</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_207'>207</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Genius for Money-Making</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_207'>207</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>THE AUTHOR OF THE BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC HER VIEWS OF EDUCATION FOR YOUNG WOMEN.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_209'>209</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Little Miss Ward”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_211'>211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>She was Married to a Reformer</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_212'>212</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Story of the “Battle Hymn of the Republic”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_214'>214</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Eighty Years Young”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_215'>215</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Ideal College</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_217'>217</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIV</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>A TALK WITH EDISON DRAMATIC INCIDENTS IN HIS EARLY LIFE.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_220'>220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Library</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_221'>221</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Chemical Newsboy</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_223'>223</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Telegraphy</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_225'>225</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Use of Money</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_227'>227</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Inventions</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_228'>228</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Arrival at the Metropolis</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_231'>231</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Mental Concentration</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_232'>232</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Twenty Hours a Day</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_233'>233</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Run for Breakfast</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_234'>234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Not by accident and Not for Fun</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_235'>235</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“I like it—I hate it”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_236'>236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Doing One Thing Eighteen Hours is the Secret</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_237'>237</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Possibilities in the Electrical Field</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_238'>238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Only Six Hundred Inventions</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_238'>238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Courtship and his Home</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_239'>239</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XV</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>A FASCINATING STORY BY GENERAL LEW WALLACE.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_241'>241</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>A Boyhood of Wasted Opportunities</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_242'>242</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His Boyhood Love for History and Literature</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_244'>244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Father’s Fruitful Warning</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_245'>245</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Manhood of Splendid Effort</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_246'>246</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“The Regularity of the Work was a Splendid Drill for me”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_247'>247</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Self-Education by Reading and Literary Composition</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_247'>247</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“The Fair God”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_249'>249</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Origin of “Ben-Hur”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_250'>250</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Influence of the Story of the Christ upon the Author</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_251'>251</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>CARNEGIE AS A METAL WORKER</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_253'>253</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Early Work and Wages</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_254'>254</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Colonel Anderson’s Books</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_255'>255</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>His First Glimpse of Paradise</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_256'>256</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Introduced to a Broom</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_258'>258</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>An Expert Telegrapher</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_259'>259</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>What Employers Think of Young Men</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_261'>261</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Right Men in Demand</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_262'>262</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>How to Attract Attention</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_263'>263</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Sleeping-Car Invention</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_264'>264</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Work of a Millionaire</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_266'>266</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>An Oil Farm</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_267'>267</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Iron Bridges</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_268'>268</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Homestead Steel Works</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_269'>269</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Strengthening Policy</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_270'>270</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Philanthropy</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_271'>271</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“The Misfortune of Being Rich Men’s Sons”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_273'>273</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span></div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>JOHN B. HERRESHOFF, THE YACHT BUILDER</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_276'>276</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>PART I.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“Let the Work Show”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_278'>278</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Voyage of Life</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_279'>279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Mother’s Mighty Influence</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_280'>280</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Self Help</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_281'>281</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Education</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_282'>282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Apprentices</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_283'>283</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Prepare to Your Utmost: then Do Your Best</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_284'>284</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Present Opportunities</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_284'>284</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Natural Executive Ability</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_285'>285</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Development of Power</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_286'>286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“My Mother”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_287'>287</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A Boat-Builder in Youth</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_288'>288</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>He Would Not be Discouraged</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_288'>288</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Sum of it All</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_289'>289</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>PART II.</b> What the Herreshoff Brothers have been Doing.</td>
- <td class='c009'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Racing Jay Gould</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_291'>291</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The “Stiletto”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_293'>293</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Blind Brother</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_296'>296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Personality of John B. Herreshoff</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_297'>297</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Has he a Sixth Sense?</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_299'>299</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Seeing with His Fingers</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_300'>300</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Brother Nat</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_301'>301</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XVIII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>A SUCCESSFUL NOVELIST: FAME AFTER FIFTY PRACTICAL HINTS TO YOUNG AUTHORS, BY AMELIA E. BARR.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_304'>304</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>Value of Biblical and Imaginative Literature</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_305'>305</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Renunciation</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_306'>306</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Delightful Studies</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_307'>307</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Fifteen Hours a Day</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_308'>308</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>An Accident</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_309'>309</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Vocation</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_310'>310</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Words of Counsel</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_310'>310</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XIX</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>HOW THEODORE THOMAS BROUGHT THE PEOPLE NEARER TO MUSIC </b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_314'>314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>“I was Not an Infant Prodigy”</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_315'>315</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Beginning of the Orchestra</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_316'>316</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Music had No Hold on the Masses</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_320'>320</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Working Out His Idea</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_323'>323</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>The Chief Element of his Success</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_326'>326</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XX</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>JOHN BURROUGHS AT HOME: THE HUT ON THE HILL TOP</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_327'>327</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXI</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>VREELAND’S ROMANTIC STORY HOW HE CAME TO TRANSPORT A MILLION PASSENGERS A DAY.</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_341'>341</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span><span class='xlarge'>CHAPTER XXII</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='87%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'><b>HOW JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY CAME TO BE MASTER OF THE HOOSIER DIALECT</b></td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_357'>357</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Thrown on His Own Resources</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_357'>357</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Why he Longed to be a Baker</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_359'>359</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Persistence</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_361'>361</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Twenty Years of Rejected Manuscripts</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_362'>362</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>A College Education</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_364'>364</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>Riley’s Popularity</td>
- <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_365'>365</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span><span class='c002'>INTRODUCTORY NOTE</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/leaves-3.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>THE GREAT INTEREST manifested in the life-stories
-of successful men and women, which have been
-published from time to time in the magazine <span class='sc'>Success</span>, has
-actuated their production in book form. Many of these
-sketches have been revised and rewritten, and new ones
-have been added. They all contain the elements that
-make men and women successful; and they are intended
-to show that character, energy, and an indomitable ambition
-will succeed in the world, and that in this land,
-where all men are born equal and have an equal chance
-in life, there is no reason for despair. I believe that the
-ideal book for youth should deal with concrete examples;
-for that which is taken from real life is far more effective
-than that which is culled from fancy. Character-building,
-its uplifting, energizing force, has been made the basic
-principle of this work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To all who have aided me I express a grateful acknowledgment;
-and to none more than to those whose life-stories
-are here related as a lesson to young people. Among
-those who have given me special assistance in securing those
-life-stories are, Mr. Harry Steele Morrison, Mr. J. Herbert
-Welch, Mr. Charles H. Garrett, Mr. Henry Irving Dodge,
-and Mr. Jesse W. Weik. I am confident that the remarkable
-exhibit of successful careers made in this book—careers
-based on sound business principles and honesty—will
-meet with appreciation on the part of the reading
-public.</p>
-<div class='c012'><span class='sc'>Orison Swett Marden.</span></div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>I</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>MARSHALL FIELD</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>THIS world-renowned merchant is not
-easily accessible to interviews, and he
-seeks no fame for his business achievements.
-Yet, there is no story more significant,
-none more full of encouragement and inspiration
-for youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In relating it, as he told it, I have removed
-my own interrogations, so far as possible, from
-the interview.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was born in Conway, Massachusetts,” he
-said, “in 1835. My father’s farm was among
-the rocks and hills of that section, and not very
-fertile. All the people were poor in those days.
-My father was a man who had good judgment,
-and he made a success out of the farming business.
-My mother was of a more intellectual
-bent. Both my parents were anxious that their
-boys should amount to something in life, and
-their interest and care helped me.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>“I had but few books, scarcely any to speak
-of. There was not much time for literature.
-Such books as we had, I made use of.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had a leaning toward business, and took
-up with it as early as possible. I was naturally
-of a saving disposition: I had to be. Those
-were saving times. A dollar looked very big
-to us boys in those days; and as we had difficult
-labor in earning it, we did not quickly
-spend it. I however,</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>DETERMINED NOT TO REMAIN POOR.”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you attend both school and college?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I attended the common and high schools
-at home, but not long. I had no college training.
-Indeed, I cannot say that I had much of
-any public school education. I left home when
-seventeen years of age, and of course had not
-time to study closely.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My first venture in trade was made as
-clerk in a country store at Pittsfield, Massachusetts,
-where everything was sold, including dry-goods.
-There I remained for four years, and
-picked up my first knowledge of business. I</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SAVED MY EARNINGS AND ATTENDED STRICTLY TO BUSINESS,</h3>
-<p class='c017'>and so made those four years valuable to me.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>Before I went West, my employer offered me
-a quarter interest in his business if I would remain
-with him. Even after I had been here
-several years, he wrote and offered me a third
-interest if I would go back.</p>
-<p class='c011'>“But I was already too well placed. I was
-always interested in the commercial side of life.
-To this I bent my energies; and</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>I ALWAYS THOUGHT I WOULD BE A MERCHANT.</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“In Chicago, I entered as a clerk in the dry-goods
-house of Cooley, Woodsworth &amp; Co., in
-South Water street. There was no guarantee
-at that time that this place would ever become
-the western metropolis; the town had plenty of
-ambition and pluck, but the possibilities of
-greatness were hardly visible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is interesting to note in this connection
-how closely the story of Mr. Field’s progress
-is connected with Chicago’s marvelous growth.
-The city itself in its relations to the West, was</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AN OPPORTUNITY.</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>A parallel, almost exact, may be drawn between
-the individual career and the growth of
-the town. Chicago was organized in 1837, two
-years after Mr. Field was born on the far-off
-farm in New England, and the place then had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>a population of a little more than four thousand.
-In 1856, when Mr. Field, fully equipped
-for a successful mercantile career, became a
-resident of the future metropolis of the West,
-the population had grown to little more than
-eighty-four thousand. Mr. Field’s prosperity
-advanced with the growth of the city; with
-Chicago he was stricken but not crushed by the
-great fire of 1871; and with Chicago he advanced
-again to higher achievement and far
-greater prosperity than before the calamity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What were your equipments for success
-when you started as a clerk here in Chicago,
-in 1856?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Health and ambition, and what I believe to
-be sound principles;” answered Mr. Field.
-“And here I found that in a growing town, no
-one had to wait for promotion. Good business
-qualities were promptly discovered, and
-men were pushed forward rapidly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After four years, in 1860, I was made a
-partner, and in 1865, there was a partial reorganization,
-and the firm consisted after that of
-Mr. Leiter, Mr. Palmer and myself (Field,
-Palmer, and Leiter). Two years later Mr.
-Palmer withdrew, and until 1881, the style of
-the firm was Field, Leiter &amp; Co. Mr. Leiter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>retired in that year, and since then it has been
-as at present (Marshall Field &amp; Co.).”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What contributed most to the great growth
-of your business?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To answer that question,” said Mr. Field,
-“would be to review the condition of the West
-from the time Chicago began until the fire in
-1871. Everything was coming this way; immigration,
-railways and water traffic, and Chicago
-was enjoying ‘flush’ times.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There were things to learn about the country,
-and the man who learned the quickest fared
-the best. For instance, the comparative newness
-of rural communities and settlements made a
-knowledge of local solvency impossible. The
-old State banking system prevailed, and speculation
-of every kind was rampant.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A CASH BASIS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“The panic of 1857 swept almost everything
-away except the house I worked for, and
-<i>I learned that the reason they survived was
-because they understood the nature of the new
-country, and did a cash business</i>. That is, they
-bought for cash, and sold on thirty and sixty
-days; instead of giving the customers, whose
-financial condition you could hardly tell anything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>about, all the time they wanted. <i>When
-the panic came, they had no debts, and little
-owing to them</i>, and so they weathered it all
-right. <i>I learned what I consider my best lesson,
-and that was to do a cash business.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What were some of the <i>principles</i> you applied
-to your business?” I questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>I made it a point that all goods should be
-exactly what they were represented to be. It
-was a rule of the house that an exact scrutiny
-of the quality of all goods purchased should
-be maintained, and that nothing was to induce
-the house to place upon the market any line of
-goods at a shade of variation from their real
-value. Every article sold must be regarded as
-warranted, and</i></p>
-<h3 class='c015'>EVERY PURCHASER MUST BE ENABLED TO FEEL SECURE.”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you suffer any losses or reverses during
-your career?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No loss except by the fire of 1871. It
-swept away everything,—about three and a
-half millions. We were, of course, protected
-by insurance, which would have been sufficient
-against any ordinary calamity of the kind. But
-the disaster was so sweeping that some of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>companies which had insured our property were
-blotted out, and a long time passed before our
-claims against others were settled. We managed,
-however, to start again. There were no
-buildings of brick or stone left standing, but
-there were some great shells of horse-car barns
-at State and Twentieth streets which were not
-burned, and I hired those. We put up signs
-announcing that we would continue business
-uninterruptedly, and then rushed the work of
-fitting things up and getting in the stock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did the panic of 1873 affect your business?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all. We did not have any debts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“May I ask, Mr. Fields, what you consider
-to have been</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE TURNING POINT</h3>
-<p class='c017'>in your career,—the point after which there
-was no more danger?”</p>
-<p class='c011'>“Saving the first five thousand dollars I ever
-had, when I might just as well have spent
-the moderate salary I made. Possession of that
-sum, once I had it, gave me <i>the ability to meet
-opportunities</i>. That I consider the turning-point.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What trait of character do you look upon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>as having been the most essential in your
-career?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>Perseverance</i>,” said Mr. Field. But Mr.
-Selfridge, his most trusted lieutenant, in whose
-private office we were, insisted upon the addition
-of “<i>good judgment</i>” to this.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If I am compelled to lay claim to such
-traits,” added Mr. Fields, “it is because I have
-tried to practise them, and the trying has availed
-me much. I have tried to make all my acts
-and commercial moves the result of definite
-consideration and sound judgment. <i>There were
-never any great ventures or risks.</i> I practised
-honest, slow-growing business methods, and
-tried to back them with energy and good
-system.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this point, in answer to further questions,
-Mr. Field disclaimed having overworked in his
-business, although after the fire of ’71 he
-worked about eighteen hours a day for several
-weeks:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My fortune, however, has not been made
-in that manner. I believe in reasonable hours,
-but close attention during those hours. I never
-worked very many hours a day. People do not
-work as many hours now as they once did.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>The day’s labor has shortened in the last
-twenty years for everyone.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>QUALITIES THAT MAKE FOR SUCCESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What, Mr. Field,” I said, “do you consider
-to be the first requisite for success in life,
-so far as the young beginner is concerned?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The qualities of <i>honesty</i>, <i>energy</i>, <i>frugality</i>,
-<i>integrity</i>, are more necessary than ever to-day,
-and there is no success without them. They are
-so often urged that they have become commonplace,
-but they are really more prized than
-ever. And any good fortune that comes by
-such methods is deserved and admirable.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A COLLEGE EDUCATION AND BUSINESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you believe a college education for the
-young man to be a necessity in the future?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not for business purposes. Better training
-will become more and more a necessity. The
-truth is, with most young men, a college education
-means that just at the time when they
-should be having business principles instilled
-into them, and be getting themselves energetically
-pulled together for their life’s work, they
-are sent to college. Then intervenes what many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>a young man looks back on as the jolliest time
-of his life,—four years of college. Often
-when he comes out of college the young man is
-unfitted by this good time to buckle down to hard
-work, and the result is a failure to grasp opportunities
-that would have opened the way for
-a successful career.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><i>As to retiring from business</i>, Mr. Field remarked:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do not believe that, when a man no longer
-attends to his private business in person every
-day, he has given up interest in affairs. He
-may be, in fact should be, doing wider and
-greater work. There certainly is no pleasure
-in idleness. A man, upon giving up business,
-does not cease laboring, but really does or
-should do more in a larger sense. He should
-interest himself in public affairs. There is no
-happiness in mere dollars. After they are acquired,
-one can use but a moderate amount. It
-is given a man to eat so much, to wear so much,
-and to have so much shelter, and more he cannot
-use. When money has supplied these, its
-mission, so far as the individual is concerned,
-is fulfilled, and man must look further and
-higher. It is only in the wider public affairs,
-where money is a moving force toward the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>general welfare, that the possessor of it can
-possibly find pleasure, and that only in constantly
-doing more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What,” I said, “in your estimation, is the
-greatest good a man can do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The greatest good he can do is to cultivate
-himself, develop his powers, in order that he
-may be of greater use to humanity.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>II</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>BELL TELEPHONE TALK</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>HINTS ON SUCCESS BY ALEXANDER G. BELL.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c018'>EXTREMELY polite, always anxious to
-render courtesy, no one carries great
-success more gracefully than Alexander
-G. Bell, the inventor of the telephone.
-His graciousness has won many a friend, the
-admiration of many more, and has smoothed
-many a rugged spot in life.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A NIGHT WORKER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>When I first went to see him, it was about
-eleven o’clock in the morning, and he was in
-bed! The second time, I thought I would go
-somewhat later,—at one o’clock in the afternoon.
-He was eating his breakfast, I was told;
-and I had to wait some time. He came in
-apologizing profusely for keeping me waiting.
-When I told him I had come to interview him,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>in behalf of young people, about success—its
-underlying principles,—he threw back his large
-head and laughingly said:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Nothing succeeds like success.’ Success
-did you say? Why, that is a big subject,—too
-big a one. You must give me time to think
-about it; and you having planted the seed in my
-brain, will have to wait for me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When I asked what time I should call, he
-said: “Come any time, if it is only late. I
-begin my work at about nine or ten o’clock in
-the evening, and continue until four or five in
-the morning. Night is a more quiet time to
-work. It aids thought.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>So, when I went to see him again, I made it
-a point to be late. He cordially invited me into
-his studio, where, as we both sat on a large
-and comfortable sofa, he talked long on</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE SUBJECT OF SUCCESS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The value of this article would be greatly
-enhanced, if I could add his charming manner
-of emphasizing what he says, with hands, head,
-and eyes; and if I could add his beautiful distinctness
-of speech, due, a great deal, to his
-having given instruction to deaf-mutes, who
-must read the lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>“What do you think are the factors of success?”
-I asked. The reply was prompt and to
-the point.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PERSEVERANCE APPLIED TO A PRACTICAL END</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Perseverance is the chief; but perseverance
-must have some practical end, or it does
-not avail the man possessing it. A person
-without a practical end in view becomes a
-crank or an idiot. Such persons fill our insane
-asylums. The same perseverance that they
-show in some idiotic idea, if exercised in the
-accomplishment of something practicable, would
-no doubt bring success. Perseverance is first,
-but practicability is chief. The success of the
-Americans as a nation is due to their great
-practicability.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But often what the world calls nonsensical,
-becomes practical, does it not? You were
-called crazy, too, once, were you not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There are some things, though, that are
-always impracticable. Now, take, for instance,
-this idea of perpetual motion. Scientists have
-proved that it is impossible. Yet our patent
-office is continually beset by people applying for
-inventions on some perpetual motion machine.
-So the department has adopted a rule whereby
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>a working model is always required of such
-applicants. They cannot furnish one. The impossible
-is incapable of success.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have heard of people dreaming inventions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is not at all impossible. I am a believer
-in unconscious cerebration. The brain
-is working all the time, though we do not know
-it. At night, it follows up what we think in
-the daytime. When I have worked a long time
-on one thing, I make it a point to bring all the
-facts regarding it together before I retire; and
-I have often been surprised at the results. Have
-you not noticed that, often, what was dark and
-perplexing to you the night before, is found to
-be perfectly solved the next morning? We are
-thinking all the time; it is impossible not to
-think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can everyone become an inventor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, no; not all minds are constituted alike.
-Some minds are only adapted to certain things.
-But as one’s mind grows, and one’s knowledge
-of the world’s industries widens, it adapts itself
-to such things as naturally fall to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Upon my asking the relation of health to success,
-the professor replied:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe it to be a primary principle of success;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>‘mens sana in corpore sano,’—a sound
-mind in a sound body. The mind in a weak
-body produces weak ideas; a strong body gives
-strength to the thought of the mind. Ill health
-is due to man’s artificiality of living. He lives
-indoors. He becomes, as it were, a hothouse
-plant. Such a plant is never as successful as a
-hardy garden plant is. An outdoor life is necessary
-to health and success, especially in a
-youth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But is not hard study often necessary to
-success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; decidedly not. You cannot force ideas.
-Successful ideas are the result of slow growth.
-Ideas do not reach perfection in a day, no
-matter how much study is put upon them. It is
-<i>perseverance</i> in the pursuit of studies that is
-really wanted.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>CONCENTRATION OF PURPOSE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Next must come concentration of purpose
-and study. That is another thing I mean to
-emphasize. Concentrate all your thought upon
-the work in hand. The sun’s rays do not burn
-until brought to a focus.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am now thinking about flying machines.
-Everything in regard to them, I pick out and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>read. When I see a bird flying in the air, I
-note its manner of flight, as I would not if I
-were not constantly thinking about artificial
-flight, and concentrating all my thought and
-observation upon it. It is like a man who has
-made the acquaintance of some new word that
-has been brought forcibly to his notice, although
-he may have come across it many times before,
-and not have noticed it particularly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>Man is the result of slow growth</i>; that is
-why he occupies the position he does in animal
-life. What does a pup amount to that has
-gained its growth in a few days or weeks, beside
-a man who only attains it in as many years. A
-horse is often a grandfather before a boy has
-attained his full maturity. The most successful
-men in the end are those whose success is the
-result of steady accretion. That intellectuality
-is more vigorous that has attained its strength
-gradually. It is the man who carefully advances
-step by step, with his mind becoming
-wider and wider,—and progressively better
-able to grasp any theme or situation,—persevering
-in what he knows to be practical, and
-concentrating his thought upon it, who is bound
-to succeed in the greatest degree.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>YOUNG AMERICAN GEESE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“If a man is not bound down, he is sure to
-succeed. He may be bound down by environment,
-or by doting parental petting. In Paris,
-they fatten geese to create a diseased condition
-of the liver. A man stands with a box of very
-finely prepared and very rich food beside a revolving
-stand, and, as it revolves, one goose
-after another passes before him. Taking the
-first goose by the neck, he clamps down its
-throat a large lump of the food, whether the
-goose will or no, until its crop is well stuffed
-out, and then he proceeds with the rest in the
-same very mechanical manner. Now, I think,
-if those geese had to work hard for their own
-food, they would digest it better, and be far
-healthier geese. How many young American
-geese are stuffed in about the same manner at
-college and at home, by their rich and fond
-parents!”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>UNHELPFUL READING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did everything you ever studied help you
-to attain success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On the contrary, I did not begin real study
-until I was over sixteen. Until that time, my
-principal study was—reading novels.” He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>laughed heartily at my evident astonishment.
-“They did not help me in the least, for they
-did not give me an insight into real life. It
-is only those things that give one a grasp of
-practical affairs that are helpful. To read
-novels continuously is like reading fairy stories
-or “Arabian Nights” tales. It is a butterfly
-existence, so long as it lasts; but, some day, one
-is called to stern reality, unprepared.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>INVENTIONS IN AMERICA</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“You have had experience in life in Europe
-and in America. Do you think the chances for
-success are the same in Europe as in
-America?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is harder to attain success in Europe.
-There is hardly the same appreciation of progress
-there is here. Appreciation is an element
-of success. Encouragement is needed. My
-thoughts run mostly toward inventions. In
-England, people are conservative. They are
-well contented with the old, and do not readily
-adopt new ideas. Americans more quickly appreciate
-new inventions. Take an invention to
-an Englishman or a Scot, and he will ask you
-all about it, and then say your invention may
-be all right, but let somebody else try it first.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>Take the same invention to an American, and
-if it is intelligently explained, he is generally
-quick to see the feasibility of it. America is
-an inspiration to inventors. It is quicker to
-adopt advanced ideas than England or Europe.
-The most valuable inventions of this century
-have been made in America.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE ORIENT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you think there is a chance for Americans
-in the Orient?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is only a chance for capital in trade.
-American labor cannot compete with Japanese
-and Chinese. A Japanese coolie, for the
-hardest kind of work, receives the equivalent of
-six cents a day; and the whole family, father,
-mother and children, work and contribute to
-the common good. A foreigner is only made
-use of until they have absorbed all his useful
-ideas; then he is avoided. The Japanese are
-ahead of us in many things.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>ENVIRONMENT AND HEREDITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you think environment and heredity
-count in success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Environment, certainly; heredity, not so
-distinctly. In heredity, a man may stamp out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>the faults he has inherited. There is no chance
-for the proper working of heredity. If selection
-could be carried out, a man might owe
-much to heredity. But as it is, only opposites
-marry. Blonde and light-complexioned people
-marry brunettes, and the tall marry the short.
-In our scientific societies, men only are admitted.
-If women who were interested especially
-in any science were allowed to affiliate
-with the men in these societies, we might hope
-to see some wonderful workings of the laws of
-heredity. A man, as a general rule, owes very
-little to what he is born with. A man is what
-he makes of himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Environment counts for a great deal. A
-man’s particular idea may have no chance for
-growth or encouragement in his community.
-Real success is denied that man, until he finds
-a proper environment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>America is a good environment for young
-men. It breathes the very spirit of success. I
-noticed at once, when I first came to this
-country, how the people were all striving for
-success, and helping others to attain success. It
-is an inspiration you cannot help feeling.</i>
-<span class='sc'>America is the land of success.</span>”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>PROFESSOR BELL’S LIFE STORY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Alexander Graham Bell was born in Edinburgh,
-Scotland, March 3, 1847. His father,
-Alexander Melville Bell, now in Washington,
-D.C., was a distinguished Scottish educator,
-and the inventor of a system of “visible
-speech,” which he has successfully taught to
-deaf-mutes. His grandfather, Alexander Bell,
-became well known by the invention of a
-method of removing impediments of speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The younger Bell received his education at
-the Edinburgh High School and University;
-and, in 1867, he entered the University of London.
-Then, in his twenty-third year, his health
-failing from over-study, he came with his father
-to Canada, as he expressed it, “to die.” Later,
-he settled in the United States, becoming first a
-teacher of deaf-mutes, and subsequently professor
-of vocal physiology in Boston University.
-In 1867, he first began to study the problem of
-conveying articulate sound by electric currents;
-which he pursued during his leisure time.
-After nine long years of research and experiment,
-he completed the first telephone, early in
-1876, when it was exhibited at the Centennial
-Exposition, and pronounced the “wonder of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>wonders in electric telegraphy.” This was the
-judgment of scientific men who were in a position
-to judge, and not of the world at large.
-People regarded it only as a novelty, as a curious
-scientific toy; and most business men
-doubted that it would ever prove a useful factor
-in the daily life of the world, and the untold
-blessing to mankind it has since become. All
-this skepticism he had to overcome. “A new
-art was to be taught to the world, a new industry
-created, business and social methods
-revolutionized.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“I WILL MAKE THE WORLD HEAR IT”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“It does speak,” cried Sir William Thompson,
-with fervid enthusiasm; and Bell’s father-in-law
-added: “I will make the world hear it.”
-In less than a quarter of a century, it is conveying
-thought in every civilized tongue; Japan
-being the first country outside of the United
-States to adopt it. In the first eight years of
-its existence, the Bell Telephone Company declared
-dividends to the extent of $4,000,000;
-and the great sums of money the company earns
-for its stockholders is a subject of current comment
-and wonder. Some fierce contests have
-been waged over the priority of his invention,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>but Mr. Bell has been triumphant in every
-case.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He has become very wealthy from his invention.
-He has a beautiful winter residence in
-Washington; fitted up with a laboratory, and
-all sorts of electrical conveniences mostly of his
-own invention. His summer residence is at
-Cambridge, Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His wife, Mabel, the daughter of the late
-Gardiner G. Hubbard, is a deaf-mute, of whose
-education he had charge when she was a child.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Bell, with one of his beautiful daughters,
-recently made a visit to Japan. The Order of
-the Rising Star, the highest order in the gift
-of the Japanese Emperor, was bestowed upon
-him. He is greatly impressed by the character
-of the people; believing them capable of much
-greater advancement.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Bell is the inventor of the photophone,
-aiming to transmit speech by a vibratory beam
-of light. He has given much time and study
-to problems of multiplex telegraphy, and to
-efforts to record speech by photographing the
-vibrations of a jet of water.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Few inventors have derived as much satisfaction
-and happiness from their achievements
-as Mr. Bell. In this respect, his success has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>been ideal, and in impressive contrast with the
-experience of Charles Goodyear, the man who
-made india-rubber useful, and of some other
-well-known inventors, whose services to mankind
-brought no substantial reward to themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Bell is in nowise spoiled by his good fortune;
-but is the same unpretending person to-day,
-that he was before the telephone made him
-wealthy and famous.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>III</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Why the American People Like Helen Gould</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>MISS HELEN GOULD has won a
-place for herself in the hearts of
-Americans such as few people of
-great wealth ever gain. Her strong character,
-commonsense, and high ideals, have made her
-respected by all, while her munificence and
-kindness have won for her the love of many.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Upon my arrival at her Tarrytown home, I
-was made to feel that I was welcome, and everyone
-who enters her presence feels the same.
-The grand mansion, standing high on the hills
-overlooking the Hudson, has a home-like appearance.
-Chickens play around the little stone
-cottage at the grand entrance, and the grounds
-are not unlike those of any other country house,
-with trees in abundance, and beautiful lawns.
-There are large beds of flowers, and in the
-gardens all the summer vegetables were growing.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>Miss Gould takes a very great interest in her
-famous greenhouses, the gardens, the flowers,
-and the chickens, for she is a home-loving
-woman. It is a common thing to see her in the
-grounds, digging and raking and planting, like
-some farmer’s girl. That is one reason why her
-neighbors all like her; she seems so unconscious
-of her wealth and station.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A FACE FULL OF CHARACTER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>When I entered Lyndhurst, she came forward
-to meet me in the pleasantest way imaginable.
-Her face is not exactly beautiful, but has
-a great deal of character written upon it, and it
-is very attractive. She held out her hand for
-me to shake in the good old-fashioned way, and
-then we sat down in the wide hall to talk. Miss
-Gould was dressed very simply. Her gown
-was of dark cloth, close-fitting, and her skirt
-hung several inches above the ground, for she is
-a believer in short skirts for walking. Her entire
-costume was very becoming. She never
-over-dresses, and her garments are neat, and
-naturally of excellent quality.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HER AMBITIONS AND AIMS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>In the conversation that followed, I was permitted
-to learn much of her ambitions and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>aims. She is ambitious to leave an impression
-on the world by good deeds well done, and this
-ambition is gratified to the utmost. She is
-modest about her work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I cannot find that I am doing much at all,”
-she said, “when there is so very much to be
-done. I suppose I shouldn’t expect to be able
-to do everything, but I sometimes feel that I
-want to, nevertheless.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A MOST CHARMING CHARITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>One of her most charming charities is
-“Woody Crest,” two miles from Lyndhurst,
-a haven of delight where some twoscore waifs
-are received at a time for a two weeks’ visit.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Years before Miss Gould’s name became associated
-throughout the country with charity,
-she was doing her part in trying to make a
-world happier. Every summer she was hostess
-to scores of poor children, who were guests at
-one of the two Gould summer homes; little
-people with pinched, wan faces, and crippled
-children from the tenements, were taken to that
-home and entertained. They came in relays, a
-new company arriving once in two weeks, the
-number of children thus given a taste of heaven
-on earth being limited only by the capacity of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>the Gould residence. This was her first, and, I
-am told, her favorite charity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Little children do things naturally. It was
-when a child that Helen Gould commenced the
-work that has given her name a sacred significance.
-When a little girl, she could see the less
-fortunate little girls passing the great Gould
-home on Fifth avenue, and she pitied them and
-loved them, and from her own allowance administered
-to their comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My father always encouraged me in charitable
-work,” she writes a friend. How much
-the American people owe to that encouragement.
-A frown from that father, idolized as
-he was by his daughter, would have frosted and
-killed that budding philanthropy which has made
-a great fortune a fountain of joy, and carried
-sunshine into many lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Woody Crest” is a sylvan paradise, a nobly
-wooded hill towering above the sumptuous
-green of Westchester, a place with wild flowers
-and winding drives, and at its crest a solid
-mansion built of the native rock. One can look
-out from its luxuriant lawns to the majestic
-Hudson, or turn aside into the shadiest of nooks
-among the trees. What a place for the restful
-breezes to fan the tired brows from the tenements.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>Do the little folks enjoy it? Ask them,
-and their eyes will sparkle with gladness for
-answer. Ask those, too, who are awaiting their
-turn in hot New York, and watch the eagerness
-of their anticipation. For two long and happy
-weeks they become as joyous as mortals are ever
-permitted to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Gould has a personal oversight of the
-place, and, by her frequent visits, makes friends
-with the wee visitors, who look upon her as a
-combination of angel and fairy godmother.
-Every day, a wagonette drawn by two horses
-takes the children, in relays, for long drives into
-the country. Amusements are provided, and
-some of those who remain for an entire season
-at Woody Crest are instructed in different
-branches. Twice a month some of the older
-boys set the type for a little magazine which is
-devoted to Woody Crest matters. There are
-several portable cottages erected there, one for
-the sick, one for servants’ sleeping rooms, and
-a third for a laundry.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And the munificent hostess of these children
-of the needy gets her reward in eyes made
-bright, in cheeks made ruddy, in the “God
-bless you,” that falls from the lips of grateful
-parents.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>All winter long, instead of closing “Woody
-Crest” and waiting for the summer sunshine
-to bring about a return of her charitable opportunities,
-Miss Gould has kept the place running
-at full expense. During the winter she
-herself occupies her town residence. Ordinarily
-she would not keep “Woody Crest”
-open longer than Thanksgiving Day, but in the
-past winter fifteen small boys were entertained
-for six months. Six of these were cripples, and
-nine were sound of limb. Though it required
-many servants, I am told that the little guests
-were given as much consideration as the same
-number of grown people would have received.
-They had nurses and physicians for those who
-needed them, governesses and instructors for
-those who were well.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HER PRACTICAL SYMPATHY FOR THE LESS FAVORED</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>When, one day, I was privileged to meet Miss
-Gould at Woody Crest, I saw a hundred children
-scattered around the lawn in front of the
-stately mansion. It had been an afternoon of
-labor and anxiety on her part, for she felt the
-responsibility of entertaining and caring for so
-many little ones. As she finally cooled herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>on the piazza and looked at her little charges
-romping around on the lawn, I asked her if she
-thought any of the little ones before her would
-ever make their mark in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That’s hard to say,” she replied, after a
-moment’s hesitation, “but no one can tell what
-may be in children until they have grown up
-and developed. But the hardest thing to me
-is to see genius struggling under obstacles and
-in surroundings that would discourage almost
-anybody. I do not see, for my part, how any
-child from the poorest tenements could ever
-grow up and develop into strong, successful
-men or women. Many of them, of course, have
-no gifts or endowments to do this, but even if
-they had, the surroundings are enough to stifle
-every spark of ambition in them. It is a
-mystery to me how they can preserve such
-bright and eager faces. What would we do
-if we were brought up in such environments!
-I know I should never be able to survive it, and
-would never succeed in rising above my surroundings.
-And it is harder on the girls than
-the boys! The boys can go forth into the world
-and probably secure a position which in time
-will bring them different companionship and
-surroundings; but the poor girls have so few
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>opportunities. They must drudge and drag
-along for the bare necessities of life. My heart
-aches sometimes for them, and I wish I had the
-power to lighten the burdens of everyone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The hardest thing, I suppose, is to see real
-ability fighting against odds, with no one to
-help and encourage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, that seems the worst, and I think we
-all ought to make it possible for such ones to
-get a little encouragement and help. When a
-boy is deserving of credit it should be given
-unstintedly. It goes a long way toward making
-him more hopeful for the future. We don’t
-as a rule receive enough encouragement in this
-world. Certainly not the poor. Everybody
-seems so busy and intent upon making his own
-way in the world that he forgets to drop a word
-of cheer for those who have not been so fortunate
-by birth or surroundings.”<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c019'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f1'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='sc'>Note.</span>—For four paragraphs preceding I am indebted
-to <span class='sc'>George Ethelbert Walsh</span>, whose interview
-was published in the <i>Boston Transcript</i>, Oct. 12, 1900.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>For a number of years, Miss Gould has supported
-certain beds in the Babies’ Shelter, in
-connection with the Church of the Holy Communion,
-New York, and the Wayside Day
-Nursery, near Bellevue Hospital, has always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>found in her a good friend. Once a year she
-makes a tour through the day nurseries of New
-York, noting the special needs of each, and
-often sending money or materials for meeting
-those needs.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PERSONAL ATTENTION TO AN UNSELFISH SERVICE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Her charities, says Mr. Walsh, in the article
-above cited, are probably the most practical on
-record. She does not go “slumming,” as so
-many fashionable girls do, but she does go and
-investigate personal charities herself and apply
-the medicine as she thinks best. She puts herself
-out in more ways to relieve distress around
-than she would to accommodate her wealthiest
-friend. Not only has she always pitied the sufferers
-in the world less fortunate than herself,
-but she has always had a great desire to help
-those struggling for a living in practical ways
-to get along. It is this side of her noble work
-that stands out most conspicuously to-day. The
-public realizes for the first time that this young
-woman, who first came into actual fame at the
-time of our war with Spain, has been supporting
-and encouraging young people in different
-parts of the country for years past. These protéges
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>are all worthy of her patronage, and <i>they
-have been sought out by her. Not one has ever
-approached Miss Gould for help, and in fact
-such an introduction would undoubtedly operate
-against her inclination to help them</i>. <i>She has
-discovered them</i>; and then through considerable
-tact and discretion obtained from them their
-ambitious desires and hopes. Through equally
-good tact and sense she has then placed them in
-positions where they could work out their own
-destinies without feeling that they were accepting
-charity. This is distinctly what Miss Gould
-wishes to avoid in helping her little protéges.
-She does not offer them charity or do anything
-to make them dependent upon her if it can be
-helped. By her money and influence she obtains
-for them positions which will give them
-every chance in the world to rise and develop
-talents which she thinks she has discovered in
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Some of her protéges, continues Mr. Walsh,
-have been sent away to schools and colleges.
-One of the easiest ways to accomplish this is to
-offer a scholarship in some institution and then
-place her young protége in such a position that
-he or she can win it, and in this way have four
-years of tuition free. Fully a dozen different
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>scholars are now enjoying the benefits of Miss
-Gould’s kindness in this and other respects.
-Four others have been enabled to attend art
-schools, and two are studying music under the
-best teachers through the instrumentality of
-this young woman. Two of these scholars were
-literally rescued from the tenement dregs of
-New York, and they showed such aptitude for
-study and work that Miss Gould undertook to
-give them a fair start in the world. Unusual
-aptitude, brightness, or kindness on the part of
-children always attract Miss Gould, and she has
-become the patron saint of more than a hundred.
-When her name is mentioned they show
-their interest and concern, not by looks of awe
-and fear but of eagerness and happiness. Those
-of their number who have been lifted from their
-low estate and put in high positions to carve out
-a life of success through their common patron
-saint, bring back stories of her kindness and
-consideration that make the children look upon
-her as they would the Madonna. But she is a
-youthful Madonna, and the very idea of posing
-as such, even before the poor and ignorant of
-her little friends, would amuse her. Nevertheless,
-that is the nearest that one can interpret
-their ideas concerning her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Miss Gould’s beneficiaries have been sometimes
-aided in obtaining the most advanced
-schooling in the land; and she visits with equal
-interest the industrial classes of Berea and the
-favored students of the College Beautiful.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HER VIEWS UPON EDUCATION</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Miss Gould is well educated, and a graduate
-of a law school. I tried to ascertain her views
-regarding the education of young women of to-day,
-and what careers they should follow. This
-is one of her particular hobbies, and many are
-the young girls she has helped to attain to a
-better and more satisfactory life.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe most earnestly in education for
-women,” she said; “not necessarily the higher
-education about which we hear so much, but a
-good, common-school education. As the years
-pass, girls are obliged to make their own way in
-the world more and more; and to do so, they
-must have good schooling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And what particular career do you think
-most desirable for young women?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, as to careers, there are many that
-young women follow, nowadays. I think, if I
-had my own way to make, I should fit myself
-to be a private secretary. That is a position
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>which attracts nearly every young woman; but,
-to fill it, she must study hard and learn, and
-then work hard to keep the place. Then there
-are openings for young women in the fields of
-legitimate business. Women know as much
-about money affairs as men, only most of them
-have not had much experience. In that field,
-there are hundreds of things that a woman can
-do.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE EVIL OF IDLENESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“But I don’t think it matters much what a
-girl does so long as she is active, and doesn’t
-allow herself to stagnate. There’s nothing, to
-my mind, so pathetic as a girl who thinks she
-can’t do anything, and is of no use to the
-world.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HER PATRIOTISM</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The late Admiral Philip, he of the “Texas”
-in the Santiago fight, regarded Miss Gould as an
-angel, and the sailors of the Brooklyn navy yard
-fairly worship her. A hustling Y. M. C. A.
-chap, Frank Smith by name, started a little
-club-house for “Jack Ashore,” near the Brooklyn
-navy yard. Miss Gould heard of this club,
-and visited it. At a glance she grasped the
-meaning, and, on her return home she wrote a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>letter and a check for fifty thousand dollars, and
-there sprang from that letter and check, a handsome
-building in which there are sixty beds, a
-library, a pipe organ, a smoking-room, and a
-restaurant. Do you wonder that the “Jackies”
-adore her, and that the gale that sweeps over
-the ship out in the open sea is often freighted
-with the melody of her name?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When I visited Cuba and Porto Rico,” says
-Congressman Charles B. Landis, of Indiana,—to
-whom I am greatly indebted in preparing
-this article,—“I talked with officers and privates
-everywhere along the journey, visited
-camps and hospitals in cities and isolated towns,
-and everywhere it seemed that the sickness and
-suffering and heart yearning of the American
-soldier had been anticipated by Helen Gould.
-Voices that quivered and eyes that moistened at
-the mention of the name of this young American
-girl were one continuous tribute to her heart
-and work. She cannot fully realize how far-reaching
-have been her efforts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A business man looks for results. What impressed
-me most with Miss Gould’s work was
-the visible, tangible results. Every dollar spent
-by her seemed to go, straight as a cannon-ball,
-to some mark. Miss Gould has a business head,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>and is not hysterical in her work. She gives,
-but follows the gift and sees that it goes to the
-spot. She has studied results and knows which
-charity pays a premium in smiles, and tears,
-and joy, and better life, and very little of her
-money will be wasted in impracticable schemes.
-She has a happy faculty of getting in actual
-touch with conditions, realizing that she cannot
-hit an object near at hand by aiming at a star.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Gould’s practical business sense was
-beautifully exemplified at Montauk Point.
-Hundreds of soldiers from the hospitals in Cuba
-and Porto Rico were suddenly unloaded there.
-Elsewhere were government supplies—tents
-and cots and rations,—but there the sick
-soldiers were without shelter, were hungry, had
-no medicine, and were sleeping on the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Why? Because of red tape. This young
-lady appeared in person and amazed the strutters
-in shoulder-straps and the slaves to discipline
-by having the sick soldier boys made comfortable
-on army cots, placed in army tents, and
-fed on army rations,—and this, too, without
-any “requisition.” She grasped a situation,
-cut the ropes of theory and introduced practice.
-From her own purse she provided nurses and
-dainties, and bundled up scores of soldier boys
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>and sent them to her beautiful villa on the Hudson.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The camp rang with this refrain:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c021'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>You’re the angel of the camp,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Helen Gould,</div>
- <div class='line'>In the sun-rays, in the damp,</div>
- <div class='line'>On the weary, weary tramp,</div>
- <div class='line'>To our darkness you’re a lamp,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Helen Gould.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Thoughts of home and gentle things,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Helen Gould,</div>
- <div class='line'>To the camp your coming brings;</div>
- <div class='line'>All the place with music rings</div>
- <div class='line'>At the rustle of your wings,</div>
- <div class='line in8'>Helen Gould.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c015'>“OUR HELEN”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>On the day of the Dewey parade in New
-York, Miss Gould was in front of her house, on
-a platform she had erected for the small children
-of certain Asylums. Mayor Van Wyck
-told Admiral Dewey who she was, and the Admiral
-stood up in his carriage and bowed to her
-three times. Then the word went down the
-line that Miss Gould was there, and every company
-saluted her as it passed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But it was when a body of young recruits
-stopped for a moment before her door that the
-real excitement began.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>“She shan’t marry a foreign prince,” they
-cried, tossing their hats and stamping their feet.
-“She’s Helen, our Helen, and she shall not
-marry a foreign prince.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“AMERICA”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Miss Gould’s patriotism is very real and intense,
-and is not confined to times of war. Two
-years ago, she caused fifty thousand copies of
-the national hymn, “America,” to be printed
-and distributed among the pupils of the public
-schools of New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe every one should know that hymn
-and sing it,” she declared, “if he sings no
-other. I would like to have the children sing
-it into their very souls, till it becomes a part of
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She strongly favors patriotic services in the
-churches on the Sunday preceding the Fourth
-of July, when she would like to hear such airs
-as “America,” “Hail Columbia,” and “The
-Star Spangled Banner,” and see the sacred edifices
-draped in red, white, and blue.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>UNHERALDED BENEFACTIONS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Miss Gould has a strong prejudice against
-letting her many gifts and charities be known,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>and even her dearest friends never know “what
-Helen’s doing now.” Of course, her great
-public charities, as when she gives a hundred
-thousand dollars at a time, are heralded. Her
-recent gift of that sum to the government, for
-national defense, has made her name beloved
-throughout the land; but, had she been able, she
-would have kept that secret also.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The place Helen Gould now holds in the love
-and esteem of the republic exemplifies how
-quickly the nation’s heart responds to the touch
-of gentleness, and how easy it is for wealth to
-conquer and rise triumphant, if only it be seasoned
-with common sense and sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>I will not attempt to specify the numerous
-projects of charity that have been given life and
-vigor by Miss Gould. I know her gifts in recent
-years have passed the million-dollar mark.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It seems so easy to do things for others,”
-said Miss Gould, recently. It is easy to do
-good, if the doing is natural and without
-thought of self-glorification.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Gould’s views upon “How to Make the
-Most of Wealth,” are well set forth in her admirable
-letter to Dr. Louis Klopsch, as published
-in the <i>Christian Herald</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Christian idea that wealth is a stewardship,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>or trust, and not to be used for one’s personal
-pleasure alone, but for the welfare of
-others, certainly seems the noblest; and those
-who have more money or broader culture owe a
-debt to those who have had fewer opportunities.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And there are so many ways one can help.
-Children, the sick and the aged especially, have
-claims on our attention, and the forms of
-work for them are numerous; from kindergartens,
-day-nurseries and industrial schools, to
-‘homes’ and hospitals. Our institutions for
-higher education require gifts in order to do
-their best work, for the tuition fees do not cover
-the expense of the advantages offered; and certainly
-such societies as those in our churches,
-and the Young Woman’s Christian Association
-and the Young Men’s Christian Association,
-deserve our hearty cooperation. The earnest
-workers who so nobly and lovingly give their
-lives to promote the welfare of others, give far
-more than though they had simply made gifts of
-money, so those who cannot afford to give
-largely need not feel discouraged on that account.
-After all, sympathy and good-will may
-be a greater force than wealth, and we can all
-extend to others a kindly feeling and courteous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>consideration, that will make life sweeter and
-better.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sometimes it seems to me we do not sufficiently
-realize the good that is done by money
-that is used in the different industries in giving
-employment to great numbers of people under
-the direction of clever men and women; and
-surely it takes more ability, perseverance and
-time to successfully manage such an enterprise
-than to merely make gifts.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HER PERSONALITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Miss Gould’s life at Tarrytown is an ideal
-one. She runs down to the city at frequent intervals,
-to attend to business affairs; but she
-lives at Lyndhurst. She entertains but few
-visitors, and in turn visits but seldom. The
-management of her property, to which she gives
-close attention, makes no inconsiderable call
-upon her time. “I have no time for society,”
-she said, “and indeed I do not care for it at
-all; it is very well for those who like it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Would you have an idea of her personality?
-“If so,” replies Landis, “you will think of a
-good young woman in your own town, who
-loves her parents and her home; who is devoted
-to the church; who thinks of the poor on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>Thanksgiving Day and Christmas; whose face
-is bright and manner unaffected; whose dress
-is elegant in its simplicity; who takes an interest
-in all things, from politics to religion;
-whom children love and day-laborers greet by
-reverently lifting the hat; and who, if she were
-graduated from a home seminary or college,
-would receive a bouquet from every boy in
-town. If you can think of such a young woman,
-and nearly every community has one
-(and ninety-nine times out of a hundred she is
-poor), you have a fair idea of the impression
-made on a plain man from a country town by
-Miss Gould.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Helen Miller Gould is just at the threshold
-of her beautiful career. What a promise is
-there in her life and work for the coming century?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She has pledged a Hall of Fame for the campus
-of the New York University, overlooking
-the Harlem river. It will have tablets for the
-names of fifty distinguished Americans; and
-proud will be the descendants of those whose
-names are inscribed thereon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The human heart is the tablet upon which
-Miss Gould has inscribed her name, and her
-“Hall of Fame” is as broad and high as the
-republic itself.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>IV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Philip D. Armour’s Business Career</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>I&nbsp;MET Mr. Armour in the quiet of the Armour
-Institute, his great philanthropic
-school for young men and women. He
-was very courteous, and there was no delay.
-He took my hand with a firm grasp—reading
-with his steady gaze such of my characteristics
-as interested him,—and saying, at the same
-time, “Well, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In stating my desire to learn such lessons
-from his business career as might be helpful to
-young men, I inquired whether the average
-American boy of to-day has equally <i>as good a
-chance to succeed in the world</i> as he had, when
-he began life.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Every bit and better. The affairs of life are
-larger. There are greater things to do. There
-was never before such a demand for able men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Were the conditions surrounding your
-youth especially difficult?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>“No. They were those common to every
-small New York town in 1832. I was born at
-Stockbridge, in Madison county. Our family
-had its roots in Scotland. My father’s ancestors
-were the Robertsons, Watsons, and McGregors
-of Scotland; my mother came of the
-Puritans, who settled in Connecticut.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Dr. Gunsaulus says,” I ventured, “that <i>all
-these streams of heredity set toward business
-affairs</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps so. I like trading well. My father
-was reasonably prosperous and independent for
-those times. My mother had been a schoolteacher.
-There were six boys, and of course
-such a household had to be managed with the
-strictest economy in those days. My mother
-thought it her duty to bring to our home some
-of the rigid discipline of the school-room. We
-were all trained to work together, and everything
-was done as systematically as possible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Had you access to any books?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, the Bible, ‘Pilgrim’s Progress,’ and a
-History of the United States.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is said of the latter, by those closest to Mr.
-Armour, that it was as full of shouting Americanism
-as anything ever written, and that Mr.
-Armour’s whole nature is yet colored by its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>stout American prejudices; also that it was read
-and re-read by the Armour children, though of
-this the great merchant did not speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Were you always of <i>a robust constitution</i>?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, sir. All our boys were. We were
-stout enough to be bathed in an ice-cold spring,
-out of doors, when at home. There were no
-bath tubs and warm water arrangements in
-those days. We had to be strong. My father
-was a stern Scotchman, and when he laid his
-plans they were carried out. When he set us
-boys to work, we worked. It was our mother
-who insisted on keeping us all at school, and
-who looked after our educational needs; while
-our father saw to it that we had plenty of good,
-hard work on the farm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you enjoy that sort of life?” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well enough, but not much more than any
-boy does. Boys are always more or less afraid
-of hard work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The truth is, I have heard, but not from Mr.
-Armour, that when he attended the district
-school, he was as full of pranks and capers as
-the best; and that he traded jack-knives in
-summer and bob-sleds in winter. Young Armour
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>was often to be found, in the winter,
-coasting down the long hill near the schoolhouse.
-Later, he had a brief term of schooling
-at the Cazenovia Seminary.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>FOOTING IT TO CALIFORNIA</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“When did you leave the farm for a mercantile
-life?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was a clerk in a store in Stockbridge for
-two years, after I was seventeen, but was engaged
-with the farm more or less, and wanted
-to get out of that life. I was a little over seventeen
-years old when the California gold excitement
-of 1849 reached our town. Wonderful
-tales were told of gold already found, and the
-prospects for more on the Pacific coast. I
-brooded over the difference between tossing hay
-in the hot sun and digging up gold by handfuls,
-until one day I threw down my pitchfork and
-went over to the house and told mother that
-I had quit that kind of work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“People with plenty of money could sail
-around Cape Horn in those days, but I had no
-money to spare, and so decided to walk across
-the country. That is, we were carried part of
-the way by rail and walked the rest. I persuaded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>one of the neighbor’s boys, Calvin Gilbert,
-to go along with me, and we started.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I provided myself with an old carpet sack
-into which to put my clothes. I bought a new
-pair of boots, and when we had gone as far as
-we could on canals and wagons, I bought two
-oxen. With these we managed for awhile, but
-eventually reached California afoot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Young Armour suffered a severe illness on
-the journey, and was nursed by his companion
-Gilbert, who gathered herbs and steeped them
-for his friend’s use, and once rode thirty miles
-in the rain to get a doctor. When they reached
-California, he fell in with Edward Croarkin, a
-miner, who nursed him back to health. The
-manner in which he remembered these men
-gives keen satisfaction to the friends of the
-great merchant.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you have any money when you arrived
-at the gold-fields?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Scarcely any. I struck right out, though,
-and found a place where I could dig, and I
-struck pay dirt in a little time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you work entirely alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No. It was not long before I met Mr.
-Croarkin at a little mining camp called Virginia.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>He had the next claim to mine, and we became
-partners. After a little while, he went away,
-but came back in a year. We then bought in
-together. The way we ran things was ‘turn
-about.’ Croarkin would cook one week, and I
-the next, and then we would have a clean-up
-every Sunday morning. We baked our own
-bread, and kept a few hens, which kept us supplied
-with eggs. There was a man named Chapin
-who had a little store in the village, and we
-would take our gold dust there and trade it for
-groceries.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE DITCH</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you discover much gold?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, I worked with pretty good success,—nothing
-startling. <i>I didn’t waste much, and
-tried to live carefully.</i> I also <i>studied the business
-opportunities</i> around, and persuaded some
-of my friends to join me in buying and developing
-a ‘ditch,’—a kind of aqueduct, to convey
-water to diggers and washers. That proved
-more profitable than digging for gold, and at
-the end of the year, the others sold out to me,
-took their earnings and went home. I stayed,
-and bought up several other water-powers, until,
-in 1856, I thought I had enough, and so I sold
-out and came East.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>“How much had you made, altogether?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About four thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This was when Mr. Armour was twenty-four
-years old,—his capital for beginning to do
-business.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HE ENTERS THE GRAIN MARKET</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you return to Stockbridge?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A little while, but my ambition set in another
-direction. I had been studying the
-methods then used for moving the vast and
-growing food products of the West, such as
-grain and cattle, and I believed that I could
-improve them and make money. The idea and
-the field interested me and I decided to enter it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My standing was good, and I raised the
-money, and bought what was then the largest
-elevator in Milwaukee. This put me in contact
-with the movement of grain. At that time,
-John Plankington had been established in Milwaukee
-a number of years, and, in partnership
-with Frederick Layton, had built up a good
-pork-packing concern. I bought in with those
-gentlemen, and so came in contact with the
-work I liked. One of my brothers, Herman,
-had established himself in Chicago some time
-before, in the grain-commission business. I got
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>him to turn that over to the care of another
-brother, Joseph, so that he might go to New
-York as a member of the new firm, of which I
-was a partner. It was important that the Milwaukee
-and Chicago houses should be able to
-ship to a house of their own in New York,—that
-is, to themselves. Risks were avoided in
-this way, and we were certain of obtaining all
-that the ever-changing markets could offer us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When did you begin to build up your Chicago
-interests?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They were really begun, before the war, by
-my brother Herman. When he went to New
-York for us, we began adding a small packinghouse
-to the Chicago commission branch. It
-gradually grew with the growth of the West.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>MR. ARMOUR’S ACUTE PERCEPTION OF THE COMMERCIAL CONDITIONS FOR BUILDING UP A GREAT BUSINESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Is there any one thing that accounts for the
-immense growth of the packing industry here?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“System and the growth of the West did it.
-Things were changing at startling rates in those
-days. The West was growing fast. Its great
-areas of production offered good profits to men
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>who would handle and ship the products. Railway
-lines were reaching out in new directions,
-or increasing their capacities and lowering their
-rates of transportation. These changes and the
-growth of the country made the creation of a
-food-gathering and delivering system necessary.
-Other things helped. At that time
-(1863), a great many could see that the war
-was going to terminate favorably for the Union.
-Farming operations had been enlarged by the
-war demand and war prices. The state banking
-system had been done away with, and we
-had a uniform currency, available everywhere,
-so that exchanges between the East and the
-West had become greatly simplified. Nothing
-more was needed than a steady watchfulness
-of the markets by competent men in continuous
-telegraphic communication with each other,
-and who knew the legitimate demand and supply,
-in order to sell all products quickly and
-with profit.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SYSTEM AND GOOD MEASURE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you believe that system does so much?”
-I ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“System and good measure. <i>Give a measure
-heaped full and running over, and success is</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span><i>certain.</i> That is what it means to be the intelligent
-servants of a great public need. We believed
-in thoughtfully adopting every attainable
-improvement, mechanical or otherwise, in the
-methods and appliances for handling every
-pound of grain or flesh. Right liberality and
-right economy will do everything where a public
-need is being served. Then, too, our</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>METHODS</h3>
-<p class='c017'>improved all the time. There was a time when
-many parts of cattle were wasted, and the
-health of the city injured by the refuse. Now,
-by adopting the best known methods, nothing
-is wasted; and buttons, fertilizers, glue and
-other things are made cheaper and better for
-the world in general, out of material that was
-before a waste and a menace. I believe in finding
-out the truth about all things—the very
-latest truth or discovery,—and applying it.”</p>
-<p class='c011'>“You attribute nothing to good fortune?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing!” Certainly the word came well
-from a man whose energy, integrity, and business
-ability made more money out of a ditch
-than other men were making out of rich placers
-in the gold region.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>THE TURNING POINT</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“May I ask what you consider the turning-point
-of your career?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The time when I began to save the money
-I earned at the gold-fields.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TRUTH</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What trait do you consider most essential
-in young men?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Truth. Let them get that. Young men
-talk about getting capital to work with. Let
-them get truth on board, and capital follows.
-It’s easy enough to get that.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A GREAT ORATOR, AND A GREAT CHARITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you always desire to follow a commercial,
-rather than a professional life?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not always. I have no talent in any other
-direction; but I should have liked to be a great
-orator.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Armour would say no more on this subject,
-but his admiration for oratory has been
-demonstrated in a remarkable way.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was after a Sunday morning discourse by
-the splendid orator, Dr. Gunsaulus, at Plymouth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>Church, Chicago, in which the latter had set
-forth his views on the subject of educating children,
-that Mr. Armour came forward and
-said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You believe in those ideas of yours, do
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I certainly do,” said Dr. Gunsaulus.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And would you carry them out if you had
-the opportunity?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I would.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, sir,” said Mr. Armour, “if you will
-give me five years of your time, I will give you
-the money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But to carry out my ideas would take a
-million dollars!” exclaimed Gunsaulus.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have made a little money in my time,”
-returned Mr. Armour. And so the famous Armour
-Institute of Technology, to which its
-founder has already given sums aggregating
-$2,800,000, was associated with Mr. Armour’s
-love of oratory.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>One of his lieutenants says that Gerritt Smith,
-the old abolitionist, was Armour’s boyhood’s
-hero, and that to-day Mr. Armour will go far
-to hear a good speaker, often remarking that
-he would have preferred to be a great orator
-rather than a great capitalist.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>EASE IN HIS WORK</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“There is no need to ask you,” I continued,
-“whether you believe in constant, hard labor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should not call it hard. I believe in close
-application, of course, while laboring. Overwork
-is not necessary to success. Every man
-should have plenty of rest. I have.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You must rise early to be at your office at
-half past seven?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, but I go to bed early. I am not burning
-the candle at both ends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The enormous energy of this man, who is too
-modest to discuss it, is displayed in the most
-normal manner. Though he sits all day at a
-desk which has direct cable connection with
-London, Liverpool, Calcutta, and other great
-centers of trade, with which he is in constant
-connection,—though he has at his hand long-distance
-telephone connection with New York,
-New Orleans, and San Francisco, and direct
-wires from his room to almost all parts of the
-world, conveying messages in short sentences
-upon subjects which involve the moving of vast
-amounts of stock and cereals, and the exchange
-of millions in money, he is not, seemingly, an
-overworked man. The great subjects to which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>he gives calm, undivided attention from early
-morning until evening, are laid aside with the
-ease with which one doffs his raiment, and outside
-of his office the cares weigh upon him no
-more. His mind takes up new and simpler
-things.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you do,” I inquired, “after your
-hard day’s work,—think about it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all. I drive, take up home subjects,
-and never think of the office until I return to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your sleep is never disturbed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A BUSINESS KING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>And yet the business which this man forgets,
-when he gathers children about him and moves
-in his simple home circle, amounts in one year,
-to over $100,000,000 worth of food products,
-manufactured and distributed; the hogs killed,
-1,750,000; the cattle, 1,080,000; the sheep,
-625,000. Eleven thousand men are constantly
-employed, and the wages paid them are over
-$5,500,000; the railway cars owned and moving
-about all parts of the country, four thousand;
-the wagons of many kinds and of large number,
-drawn by seven hundred and fifty horses. The
-glue factory, employing seven hundred and fifty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>hands, makes over twelve million pounds of
-glue. In his private office, it is he who takes
-care of all the general affairs of this immense
-world of industry, and yet at half-past four he
-is done, and the whole subject is comfortably
-off his mind.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TRAINING YOUTH FOR BUSINESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you believe in inherited abilities, or that
-any boy can be taught and trained, and made a
-great and able man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I recognize inherited ability. Some people
-have it, and only in a certain direction; but I
-think men can be taught and trained so that
-they become much better and more useful than
-they would be, otherwise. Some boys require
-more training and teaching than others. There
-is prosperity for everyone, according to his
-ability.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What would you do with those who are
-naturally less competent than others?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Train them, and give them work according
-to their ability. I believe that life is all right,
-and that this difference which nature makes is
-all right. Everything is good, and is coming
-out satisfactorily, and we ought to make the
-most of conditions, and try to use and improve
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>everything. The work needed is here, and
-everyone should set about doing it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When asked if he thought the chances for
-young men as good to-day as they were when
-he was young. “Yes,” he said, “I think so.
-The world is changing every day and new fields
-are constantly opening. We have new ideas,
-new inventions, new methods of manufacture,
-and new ways to-day everywhere. There is
-plenty of room for any man who can do anything
-well. The electrical field is a wonderful
-one. There are other things equally good, and
-the right man is never at a loss for an opportunity.
-Provided he has some ability and good
-sense to start with, is thrifty, honest and economical,
-there is no reason why any young man
-should not accumulate money and attain so
-called success in life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When asked to what qualities he attributed
-his own success, Mr. Armour said: “I think
-that thrift and economy had much to do with
-it. I owe much to my mother’s training and to
-a good line of Scotch ancestors, who have always
-been thrifty and economical. As to my
-business education, I never had any. I am, in
-fact, a good deal like Topsy, ‘I just growed.’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>My success has been largely a matter of organization.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have always made it a point to surround
-myself with good men. I take them when they
-are young and keep them just as long as I can.
-Nearly all of the men I now have, have grown
-up with me. Many of them have worked with
-me for twenty years. They have started in at
-low wages, and have been advanced until they
-have reached the highest positions.” Mr. Armour
-thinks that most men who accumulate
-a large amount of money, inherited the money-making
-instinct. The power of making and
-accumulating money, he says, is as much a
-natural gift as are those of a singer or an artist.
-“The germs of the power to make money must
-be in the mind. Take, for instance, the people
-we have working with us. I can get millions
-of good bookkeepers or accountants, but not
-more than one out of five hundred in all of those
-I have employed has made a great success as an
-organizer or trader.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Armour is a great believer in young men
-and young brains. He never discharges a man
-if he can possibly avoid it. If the man is not
-doing good work where he is, he puts him in
-some other department, but never discharges
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>him if he can find him other work. He will
-not, however, tolerate intemperance, laziness or
-getting into debt. Some time ago a policeman
-entered his office. In answer to Mr. Armour’s
-question, “What do you want here?” he replied:
-“I want to garnishee one of your men’s
-wages for debt.” “Indeed,” said Mr. Armour,
-“and who is the man?” Asking the officer
-into his private room he sent for the debtor.
-“How long have you been in debt?” asked Mr.
-Armour. The clerk replied that he had been
-behind for twenty years and could not seem to
-catch up. “But you get a good salary, don’t
-you?” “Yes, but I can’t get out of debt.”
-“But you must get out, or you must leave here,”
-said Mr. Armour. “How much do you owe?”
-The clerk then gave the amount, which was
-less than a thousand-dollars. “Well,” said Mr.
-Armour, handing him a check, “there is
-enough to pay all your debts, and if I hear of
-you again getting into debt, you will have to
-leave.” The clerk paid his debts and remodeled
-his life on a cash basis.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PROMPT TO ACT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>In illustration of Mr. Armour’s aptitude for
-doing business, and his energy, it is related that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>when, in 1893, local forces planned to defeat
-him in the grain market, and everyone was crying
-that at last the great Goliath had met his
-David, he was all energy. He had ordered immense
-quantities of wheat. The opposition had
-shrewdly secured every available place of storage,
-and rejoiced that the great packer, having
-no place to store his property, would suffer immense
-loss, and must capitulate. He foresaw
-the fray and its dangers, and, going over on
-Goose Island, bought property at any price, and
-began the construction of immense elevators.
-The town was placarded with the truth that
-anyone could get work at Armour’s elevators.
-No one believed they could be done in time, but
-three shifts of men working night and day, often
-under the direct supervision of the millionaire,
-gradually forced the work ahead, and when, on
-the appointed day, the great grain-ships began
-to arrive, the opposition realized failure. The
-vessels began to pour the contents of their immense
-holds into these granaries, and the fight
-was over.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>FORESIGHT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The foresight that sent him to New York in
-1864, to sell pork, brought him back from Europe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>in 1893, months before the impending
-panic was dreamed of by other merchants. It
-is told of him that he called all his head men to
-New York, and announced to them:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gentlemen, there’s going to be financial
-trouble soon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why, Mr. Armour,” they said, “you must
-be mistaken. Things were never better. You
-have been ill, and are suddenly apprehensive.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, no,” he said, “I’m not. There is going
-to be trouble;” and he gave as his reasons certain
-conditions which existed in nearly all countries,
-which none of those present had thought
-of. “Now,” said he to the first of his many
-lieutenants, “how much will you need to run
-your department until next year?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The head man named his need. The others
-were asked, each in turn, the same question, and,
-when all were through, he counted up, and,
-turning to the company, said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gentlemen, go back and borrow all you
-need in Chicago, on my credit. Use my name
-for all it will bring in the way of loans.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>FOREARMED AGAINST PANIC</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The lieutenants returned, and the name of
-Armour was strained to its utmost limit. When
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>all had been borrowed, the financial flurry suddenly
-loomed up, but it did not worry the great
-packer. In his vaults were $8,000,000 in
-gold. All who had loaned him at interest then
-hurried to his doors, fearing that he also was
-imperiled. They found him supplied with ready
-money, and able to compel them to wait until
-the stipulated time of payment, or to force them
-to abandon their claims of interest for their
-money, and so tide him over the unhappy period.
-It was a master stroke, and made the
-name of the great packer a power in the world
-of finance.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SOME SECRETS OF SUCCESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you consider your financial decisions
-which you make quickly to be brilliant intuitions?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I never did anything worth doing by accident,
-nor did anything I have come that way.
-No, I never decide anything without knowing
-the conditions of the market, and never begin
-unless satisfied concerning the conclusion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not everyone could do that,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I cannot do everything. Every man can do
-something, and there is plenty to do,—never
-more than now. The problems to be solved are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>greater now than ever before. <i>Never was there
-more need of able men. I am looking for
-trained men all the time.</i> More money is being
-offered for them everywhere than formerly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you consider that <i>happiness</i> consists in
-labor alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>It consists in doing something for others.</i>
-If you give the world better material, better
-measure, better opportunities for living respectably,
-there is happiness in that. You cannot
-give the world anything without labor, and
-there is no satisfaction in anything but such
-labor as looks toward doing this, and does it.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>V</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>What Miss Mary E. Proctor Did to Popularize Astronomy</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>“YOU can never know what your possibilities
-are,” said Miss Proctor, “till
-you have put yourself to the test.
-There are many, many women who long to
-do something, and could succeed, if they would
-only banish their doubts, and plunge in. For
-example, I was not at all sure that I could
-interest audiences with talks on astronomy, but,
-in 1893, I began, and since then have given
-between four and five hundred lectures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Proctor is so busy spreading knowledge
-of the beauties and marvels of the heavens,
-that she was at home in New York for only a
-two days’ interval between tours, when she consented
-to talk to me about her work. This talk
-showed such enthusiasm and whole-souled devotion
-to the theme that it is easy to understand
-Miss Proctor’s success as a lecturer, although
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>she is physically diminutive, and is very domestic
-in her tastes.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AUDIENCES ARE APPRECIATIVE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I am always nervous in going before an
-audience,” she said, “but there is so much I
-want to tell them that I have no time at all to
-think of myself. I find that if the lecturer is
-really interested in the subject, those who come
-to listen usually are; and it is certainly true, as
-I have learned by going upon the platform, tired
-out from a long journey, that you cannot expect
-enthusiasm in your audience, unless you
-are enthusiastic yourself. But I think that audiences
-are very responsive and appreciative of
-intelligent efforts to interest them, and, therefore,
-I am sure, that if a woman possesses, or
-can acquire a thorough knowledge of some practical,
-popular subject, and has enthusiasm and
-a fair knowledge of human nature, she can attain
-success on the lecture platform.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The field is broad, and far from over-crowded,
-and it yields bountifully to those who
-are willing to toil and wait. There is Miss
-Roberts, for instance, who commands large
-audiences for her lectures on music; and Mrs.
-Lemcke, who has been remarkably successful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>in her practical talks on cooking; and Mary
-E. Booth, who gives wonderfully instructive
-and entertaining lectures on the revelations of
-the microscope; and Miss Very, who takes audiences
-of children on most delightful and
-profitable imaginary trips to places of importance.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>LECTURES TO CHILDREN</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Children, by the way, are my most satisfactory
-audiences. Grown-up people never become
-so absorbed. It is the greatest pleasure of my
-lecturing to talk to the little tots, and watch
-them drink it all in. Indeed, I prepared my
-very first lecture for children, but didn’t deliver
-it. That episode marked the beginning of my
-career as a lecturer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you ask me to tell you about it? My
-father, Richard A. Proctor, wrote, as you know,
-many books on popular astronomy. When I
-was a girl I did not read them very carefully;
-my education at South Kensington, London,
-following a musical and artistic direction. In
-fact, I was ambitious to become a painter. But
-when my father died, in 1888, I found comfort
-in reading his books all over again; and as he
-had drilled me to write for his periodical,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>‘<i>Knowledge</i>,’ I began to write articles on astronomy
-for anyone who would accept them.
-One day, in the spring of 1893, I received a
-letter from Mrs. Potter Palmer, asking me if I
-would talk to an audience of children in the
-Children’s Building at the World’s Fair. The
-idea of lecturing was new to me, but I decided
-that I would try, at any rate, and so I took
-great pains to prepare a talk that I thought the
-children would understand, and be interested in.
-But when I reached the building, I found an
-audience, not of children, but of men and women.
-<i>There was hardly a child in all the assembled
-five hundred people.</i> It would never do
-to give them the childish talk I had prepared,
-and as it was my first attempt to talk from a
-platform, you can imagine my state of mind.
-I was determined, however, that my first effort
-should not be a fiasco, so I stepped out upon
-the platform and talked about the things that
-had most interested me in my father’s books
-and conversations.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A LESSON IN LECTURING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I have lectured a great many times since
-then, but my first lecture was the most trying.
-I am now glad that things happened as they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>did, for that experience taught me a valuable
-lesson. I learned not to commit my talks to
-memory, but merely to have the topics and facts
-and general arrangement of the lecture well in
-mind. By this method, I can change and adapt
-myself to my audience at any time; and I often
-have to do this. I am able to feel intuitively
-whether I have gained my listeners’ sympathy
-and interest, and when I feel that I have not, I
-immediately take another tack. Another great
-advantage of not committing what you are going
-to say to memory, word for word, is the
-added color and animation and spontaneity
-which the conversational tone and manner gives
-the lecture.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE STEREOPTICON</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“My stereopticon pictures of the heavenly
-bodies are of great help to me. They naturally
-add much to the interest, and are really a revelation
-to most of my audiences, for the reason
-that they show things that can never be seen
-with the naked eye. How my father would
-have delighted in them, and how effectively he
-would have used them. But celestial photography
-had not been made practical at the time of
-his death; it is, indeed, quite a new art, although
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>its general principles are very simple.
-A special lens and photographic plate are adjusted
-in the telescope, and the plate is exposed
-as in an ordinary camera, except that the exposure
-is much longer. It usually continues for
-about four hours, the greater the length of time
-the greater being the number of stars that will
-be seen in the photograph. After the developing,
-these stars appear as mere specks on the
-plate. That they are so small is not surprising,
-for most of them are stars that are never seen
-by the eye alone. When the photograph is enlarged
-by the stereopticon, the result is like looking
-at a considerable portion of the heavens
-through a powerful telescope.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The children utter exclamations of delight
-when they see the pictures,—the children, dear,
-imaginative little souls, it is my ambition to devote
-more and more of my time to them, and
-finally talk and write for them altogether. They
-are greatly impressed with the new world in
-the skies which is opened to them, and I like to
-think that these early impressions will give them
-an understanding and appreciation of the wonders
-of astronomy that will always be a pleasure
-to them.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>“STORIES FROM STAR LAND”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“For the children, my first book, ‘Stories
-From Starland,’ was written. I tried to weave
-into it poetical and romantic ideas, that appeal
-to the imaginative mind of the child, and
-quicken the interest without any sacrifice of accuracy
-in the facts with which I deal. I wrote
-the book in a week. The publisher came to me
-one Saturday, and told me that he would like a
-children’s book on astronomy. I devoted all my
-days to it till the following Saturday night, and
-on Monday morning took the completed manuscript
-to the publishing house. They seemed
-very much surprised that it should be finished
-so soon; but as a matter of fact it was not much
-more than the manual labor of writing out the
-manuscript that I did in that week. <i>The little
-book itself is the result of ten years’ thought
-and study.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is much the same with my lectures. I
-deliver them in a hasty, conversational tone, and
-they seem, as one of my listeners told me recently,
-to be ‘just offhand chats.’ But in
-reality I devote a great deal of labor to them,
-and am constantly adding new facts and new
-ideas.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>CONCENTRATION OF ATTENTION</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I learned very soon after I began my work,
-that <i>I must give myself up to it absolutely</i> if I
-were to achieve success. There could be no side
-issues, nothing else to absorb any of my energy,
-or take any of my thought or time. One of the
-first things I did was to take a thorough course
-in singing, for the purpose of acquiring complete
-control of my voice. I put aside all social functions,
-of which I am rather fond and have since
-devoted my days and nights to astronomy,—not
-that I work at night, except when I lecture;
-I rest and retire early, so that in the morning
-I may have the spirit and enthusiasm necessary
-to do good work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>Enthusiasm</i>, it seems to me, is an important
-factor in success. It combats discouragement,
-makes work a pleasure, and sacrifices easier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A great many women fail in special fields
-of endeavor, who might succeed if they were
-willing to sacrifice something, and would not
-let the distractions creep in. There is more in
-a woman’s life to divert her attention from a
-single purpose than in a man’s; but if the woman
-has chosen some line of effort that is worthy to
-be called life work, and if—refusing to be drawn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>aside,—she keeps her eyes steadfastly upon the
-goal, I believe that she is almost certain to
-achieve success.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>VI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>The Boyhood Experience of President Schurman of Cornell University</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>AT ten years of age, he was a country lad
-on a backwoods farm on Prince Edward
-Island.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At thirteen, he had become a clerk in a country
-store, at a salary of thirty dollars a year.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At eighteen, he was a college student, supporting
-himself by working in the evenings as a
-bookkeeper.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At twenty, he had won a scholarship in the
-University of London, in competition with all
-other Canadian students.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At twenty-five, he was professor of philosophy,
-Acadia College, Nova Scotia.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At thirty-eight, he was appointed President
-of Cornell University.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At forty-four, he was chairman of President
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>McKinley’s special commission to the Philippines.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In this summary is epitomized the career of
-Jacob Gould Schurman. It is a romance of
-real life such as is not unfamiliar in America.
-Mr. Schurman’s career differs from that of
-some other self-made men, however. Instead
-of heaping up millions upon millions, he has
-applied his talents to winning the intellectual
-prizes of life, and has made his way, unaided,
-to the front rank of the leaders in thought and
-learning in this country. His career is a source
-of inspiration to all poor boys who have their
-own way to make in the world, for he has
-won his present honors by his own unaided
-efforts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>President Schurman says of his early life:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is impossible for the boy of to-day, no
-matter in what part of the country he is
-brought up, to appreciate the life of Prince Edward
-Island as it was forty years ago. At that
-time, it had neither railroads nor daily newspapers,
-nor any of the dozen other things that
-are the merest commonplaces nowadays, even
-to the boys of the country districts. I did not
-see a railroad until late in my ’teens. I was
-never inside of a theatre until after I was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>twenty. The only newspaper that came to my
-father’s house was a little provincial weekly.
-The only books the house contained were a
-few standard works,—such as the Bible, Bunyan’s
-‘Pilgrim’s Progress,’ Fox’s ‘Book of
-Martyrs,’ and a few others of that class. Remember,
-too, that this was not back at the beginning
-of the century, but little more than a
-generation ago, for I was born in the year
-1854.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My father had cleared away the land on
-which our house stood. He was a poor man,
-but no poorer than his neighbors. No amount
-of land, and no amount of work could yield
-much more than the necessaries of life in that
-time and place. There were eight children in
-our family, and there was work for all of us.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A LONG TRAMP TO SCHOOL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Our parents were anxious to have their
-children acquire at least an elementary education;
-and so, summer and winter, we tramped
-the mile and a half that lay between our house
-and the district school, and the snow often fell
-to the depth of five or six feet on the island,
-and sometimes, when it was at its worst, our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>father would drive us all to school in a big
-sleigh. But no weather was bad enough to
-keep us away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That would be looked upon as a poor kind
-of school, nowadays, I suppose. The scholars
-were of all ages, and everything, from A,-B,-C,
-to the Rule of Three, was taught by the one
-teacher. But whatever may have been its deficiencies,
-the work of the school was thorough.
-The teacher was an old-fashioned drillmaster,
-and whatever he drove into our heads he put
-there to stay. I went to this school until I
-was thirteen, and by that time I had learned to
-read and write and spell and figure with considerable
-accuracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the age of thirteen, I left home. I had
-formed no definite plans for the future. I
-merely wanted to get into a village, and to earn
-some money.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My father got me a place in the nearest
-town,—Summerside,—a village of about one
-thousand inhabitants. For my first year’s
-work I was to receive thirty dollars and my
-board. Think of that, young men of to-day!
-Thirty dollars a year for working from seven
-in the morning until ten at night! But I was
-glad to get the place. It was a start in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>world, and the little village was like a city to
-my country eyes.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HE ALWAYS SUPPORTED HIMSELF</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“From the time I began working in the store
-until to-day, I have always supported myself,
-and during all the years of my boyhood I never
-received a penny that I did not earn myself.
-At the end of my first year, I went to a larger
-store in the same town, where I was to receive
-sixty dollars a year and my board. I kept this
-place for two years, and then I gave it up,
-against the wishes of my employer, because I
-had made up my mind that I wanted to get a
-better education. I determined to go to college.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I did not know how I was going to do this,
-except that it must be by my own efforts. I
-had saved about eighty dollars from my store-keeping,
-and that was all the money I had in
-the world.” <i>Out of a hundred and fifty dollars,
-the only cash he received as his first earnings
-during three years, young Schurman had saved
-eighty dollars; this he invested in the beginnings
-of an education.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When I told my employer of my plan, he
-tried to dissuade me from it. He pointed out
-the difficulties in the way of my going to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>college, and offered to double my pay if I would
-stay in the store.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE TURNING-POINT OF HIS LIFE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“That was the turning-point in my life. On
-one side was the certainty of one hundred and
-twenty dollars a year, and the prospect of promotion
-as fast as I deserved it. Remember
-what one hundred and twenty dollars meant
-in Prince Edward Island, and to a poor boy
-who had never possessed such a sum in his life.
-On the other side was my hope of obtaining an
-education. I knew that it involved hard work
-and self-denial, and there was the possibility of
-failure in the end. But my mind was made up.
-I would not turn back. I need not say that I
-do not regret that early decision, although I
-think that I should have made a successful
-storekeeper.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With my eighty dollars capital, I began to
-attend the village high school, to get my
-preparation for college. I had only one year to
-do it in. My money would not last longer than
-that. I recited in Latin, Greek and algebra,
-all on the same day, and for the next forty
-weeks I studied harder than I ever had before
-or have since. At the end of the year I entered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>the competitive examination for a scholarship
-in Prince of Wales College, at Charlotte Town,
-on the island. I had small hope of winning it,
-my preparation had been so hasty and incomplete.
-But when the result was announced, I
-found that I had not only won the scholarship
-from my county, but stood first of all the competitors
-on the island.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The scholarship I had won amounted to
-only sixty dollars a year. It seems little
-enough, but I can say now, after nearly thirty
-years, that the winning of it was the greatest
-success I have ever had. I have had other rewards,
-which, to most persons, would seem
-immeasurably greater, but with this difference:
-that first success was essential; without it I
-could not have gone on. The others I could
-have done without, if it had been necessary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For two years young Schurman attended
-Prince of Wales College. He lived on his
-scholarship and what he could earn by keeping
-books for one of the town storekeepers, spending
-less than one hundred dollars during the
-entire college year. Afterwards, he taught a
-country school for a year, and then went to
-Acadia College in Nova Scotia to complete his
-college course.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>A SPLENDID COLLEGE RECORD</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>One of Mr. Schurman’s fellow-students in
-Acadia says that he was remarkable chiefly for
-taking every prize to which he was eligible. In
-his senior year, he learned of a scholarship in
-the University of London, to be competed for
-by the students of Canadian colleges. The
-scholarship paid five hundred dollars a year for
-three years. The young student in Acadia was
-ambitious to continue his studies in England,
-and saw in this offer his opportunity. He tried
-the examination and won the prize.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>During the three years in the University of
-London, Mr. Schurman became deeply interested
-in the study of philosophy, and decided
-that he had found in it his life work. He was
-eager to go to Germany and study under the
-great leaders of philosophic thought. A way
-was opened for him, through the offer of the
-Hibbard Society in London; the prize being a
-traveling fellowship with two thousand dollars
-a year. The honor men of the great English
-universities like Oxford and Cambridge were
-among the competitors, but the poor country
-boy from Prince Edward Island was again successful,
-greatly to the surprise of the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>At the end of his course in Germany, Mr.
-Schurman, then a Doctor of Philosophy, returned
-to Acadia College to become a teacher
-there. Soon afterwards, he was called to Dalhousie
-University, at Halifax, Nova Scotia.
-In 1886, when a chair of philosophy was established
-at Cornell, President White, who once
-met the brilliant young Canadian, called him to
-that position. Two years later, Dr. Schurman
-became Dean of the Sage School of Philosophy
-at Cornell; and, in 1892, when the President’s
-chair became vacant, he was placed at the head
-of the great university. At that time, he was
-only thirty-eight years of age.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>President Schurman is a man of great intellectual
-power, and an inspiring presence.
-Though one of the youngest college presidents
-in the country, he is one of the most successful,
-and under his leadership Cornell has been very
-prosperous. He is deeply interested in all the
-affairs of young men, and especially those who,
-as he did, must make their own way in the
-world. He said, the other day:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Though I am no longer engaged directly in
-teaching, I should think my work a failure if
-I did not feel that my influence on the young
-men with whom I come in contact is as direct
-and helpful as that of a teacher could be.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>VII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>The Story of John Wanamaker</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>IN a plain two-story dwelling, on the outskirts
-of Philadelphia, the future merchant
-prince was born, July 11, 1837.
-His parents were Americans in humble station;
-his mother being of that sturdy Pennsylvania
-Dutch stock which has no parallel except the
-Scotch for ruggedness. His father, a hardworking
-man, owned a brickyard in the close
-vicinity of the family residence. Little John
-earned his first money, seven big copper cents,
-by assisting his father. He was too small to
-do much, but turned the bricks every morning
-as they lay drying in the summer sun. As he
-grew older and stronger, the boy was given
-harder tasks around the brickyard.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He went to school a little, not much, and he
-assisted his mother in the house a great deal.
-His father died when John was fourteen, and
-this changed the whole course of his life. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>abandoned the brickyard and secured a place
-in a bookstore owned by Barclay Lippincott,
-on Market Street, Philadelphia, at a salary of
-one dollar and twenty-five cents a week.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was a four-mile walk from his home to his
-place of business. Cheerfully he trudged this
-distance morning and night; purchasing an
-apple or a roll each noon for luncheon, and
-giving his mother all the money that he saved.
-He used to deny himself every comfort, and
-the only other money that he ever spent was on
-books for his mother. This seems to have been
-the boy’s chief source of pleasure at that period.
-Even to-day, he says of his mother: “Her
-smile was a bit of heaven, and it never faded
-out of her face till her dying day.” Mrs.
-Wanamaker lived to see her son famous and
-wealthy.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS CAPITAL AT FOURTEEN</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>John Wanamaker, the boy, had no single
-thing in all his surroundings to give him an
-advantage over any one of hundreds of other
-boys in the city of Philadelphia. Indeed, there
-were hundreds and hundreds of other boys of
-his own age for whom anyone would have felt
-safe in prophesying a more notable career. His
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>capital was not in money. Very few boys in
-all that great city had less money than John
-Wanamaker, and comparatively few families
-of average position but were better off in the
-way of worldly goods. John Wanamaker’s
-capital, that stood him in such good stead in
-after life, comprised good health, good habits,
-a clean mind, thrift in money matters, and tireless
-devotion to whatever he thought to be duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>People who were well acquainted with John
-Wanamaker when he was a book publisher’s
-boy, say that he was exceptionally promising as
-a boy; that he was studious as well as attentive
-to business. He did not take kindly to rough
-play, or do much playing of any kind. He was
-earnest in his work, unusually earnest for a
-boy. And he was saving of his money.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When, a little later, he went to a Market
-street clothing house and asked for a place, he
-had no difficulty in getting it, nor had he any
-trouble in holding it, and here he could earn
-twenty-five cents a week more wages.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TOWER HALL CLOTHING STORE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Men who worked with him in the Tower
-Hall Clothing Store say that he was always
-bright, willing, accommodating, and very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>seldom out of temper. His effort was to be
-first at the store in the morning, and he was
-very likely to be one of the last, if not the last,
-at the store in the evening. If there was an
-errand, he was always prompt and glad to do
-it. And so the store people liked him, and the
-proprietor liked him, and, when he began to
-sell clothing, the customers liked him. He was
-considerate of their interests. He did not try
-to force undesirable goods upon them. He
-treated them so that when they came again they
-would be apt to ask, “Where is John?”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS AMBITION AND POWER AS AN ORGANIZER AT SIXTEEN</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Colonel Bennett, the proprietor of Tower
-Hall, said of him at this time:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“John was certainly the most ambitious boy
-I ever saw. I used to take him to lunch with
-me, and he used to tell me how he was going to
-be a great merchant.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He was very much interested in the temperance
-cause; and had not been with me long before
-he persuaded most of the employees in
-the store to join the temperance society to
-which he belonged. He was always organizing
-something. He seemed to be a natural-born
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>organizer. This faculty is largely accountable
-for his great success in after life.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE Y. M. C. A.</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Young Wanamaker’s religious principles
-were always at the forefront in whatever he
-did. His interest in Sunday School work, and
-his skill as an organizer became well known.
-And so earnestly did he engage in the work of
-the Young Men’s Christian Association, that
-he was appointed the first salaried secretary of
-the Philadelphia branch, at one thousand
-dollars a year. Never since has a secretary enrolled
-so many members in the same space of
-time. He passed seven years in this arduous
-work.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>OAK HALL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>He saved his money; and, at twenty-four,
-formed a partnership with his brother-in-law
-Nathan Brown, and opened Oak Hall Clothing
-store, in April, 1861. Their united capital was
-only $3,500; yet Wanamaker’s capital of popular
-good-will was very great. He was already
-a great power in the city. I can never forget
-the impression made upon my mind, after he
-had been in business but a few months, when I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>visited his Bethany Sunday School, established
-in one of the most unpromising sections of the
-city, which had become already a factor for
-good, with one of the largest enrollments in
-the world. And he was foremost in every form
-of philanthropic work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was because of his great capacity to do
-business that Wanamaker had been able to
-“boom” the Young Men’s Christian Association
-work. He knew how to do it. And he
-could “boom” a Sunday School, or anything
-else that he took hold of. He had</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A HEAD BUILT FOR BUSINESS,</h3>
-<p class='c017'>whatever the business might be. And as for
-Oak Hall, he knew just what to do with it.</p>
-<p class='c011'><i>The first thing he did was to multiply his
-working capital by getting the best help obtainable
-for running the store.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the very outset, John Wanamaker did
-what almost any other business man would
-have stood aghast at. He chose the best man
-he knew as a salesman in the clothing business
-in Philadelphia,—the man of the most winning
-personality who could attract trade,—and
-agreed to pay him $1,350 for a year,—one-third
-of the entire capital of the new concern.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>It has been a prime principle with this merchant
-prince not only to deal fairly with his
-employees, but to make it an object for them
-to earn money for him and to stand by him.
-Capacity has been the first demand. <i>He engaged
-the very best men to be had.</i> There are
-to-day dozens of men in his employ who receive
-larger salaries than are paid to cabinet
-ministers. All the employees of the Thirteenth
-Street store, which he occupied in 1877, participate
-in <i>a yearly division of profits. Their
-share at the end of the first year amounted to
-$109,439.68.</i></p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS RELATION TO CUSTOMERS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>A considerable portion of the trade of the
-new store came from people in the country districts.
-Mr. Wanamaker had a way of getting
-close to them and gaining their good will. He
-understood human nature. He put his customer
-at ease. He showed interest in the things that
-interested the farmer. An old employee of the
-firm says: “John used to put a lot of chestnuts
-in his pocket along in the fall and winter, and,
-when he had one of these countrymen in tow,
-he’d slip a few of the nuts into the visitor’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>hand and both would go munching about the
-store.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Wanamaker was the first to introduce the
-“one-price system” into the clothing trade. It
-was the universal rule in those days, in the
-clothing trade, not to mark the prices plainly
-on the goods that were for sale. Within rather
-liberal bounds, the salesman got what he could
-from the customer. Mr. Wanamaker, after a
-time, instituted at Oak Hall the plan of “but
-one price and that plainly marked.” In doing
-this he followed the cue of Stewart, who was
-the first merchant in the country to introduce it
-into the dry-goods business.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The great Wanamaker store of 1877 went
-much further:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He announced that <i>those who bought goods
-of him were to be satisfied with what they
-bought, or have their money back</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To the old mercantile houses of the city, this
-seemed like committing business suicide.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was, also, unheard-of that special effort
-should be made to add to the comfort of visitors;
-to make them welcome whether they cared
-to buy or not; to induce them to look upon the
-store as a meeting-place, a rendezvous, a resting-place,—a
-sort of city home, almost.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>THE MERCHANT’S ORGANIZING FACULTY</h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c017'>was so great that General Grant once remarked
-to George W. Childs that Wanamaker would
-have been a great general if his lot had been
-that of army service.</p>
-<p class='c011'>Wanamaker used to buy goods of Stewart,
-and the New York merchant remarked to a
-friend: “If young Wanamaker lives, he will
-be a greater merchant than I ever was.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Sometime in recent years, since Wanamaker
-bought the Stewart store, he said to Frank G.
-Carpenter:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A. T. Stewart was a genius. I have been
-surprised again and again as I have gone
-through the Broadway and Tenth Street building,
-to find what a knowledge he had of the
-needs of a mercantile establishment. Mr. Stewart
-put up a building which is to-day, I believe,
-better arranged than any of the modern structures.
-He seemed to know just what was
-needed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I met him often when I was a young man.
-I have reason to think that he took a liking to
-me. One day, I remember, I was in his woolen
-department buying some stuffs for my store
-here, when he came up to me and asked if I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>would be in the store for fifteen minutes longer.
-I replied that I would. At the end of fifteen
-minutes he returned and handed me a slip of
-paper, saying:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Young man, I understand that you have
-a mission school in Philadelphia; use that for
-it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Before I could reply he had left. I looked
-down at the slip of paper. It was a check for
-one thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Wanamaker early showed himself the peer
-of the greatest merchants. He created the
-combination or department store. He lifted
-the retail clothing business to a higher plane
-than it had ever before reached. In ten years
-from the time he began to do business for himself,
-he had absorbed the space of forty-five
-other tenants and become the leading merchant
-of his native city. Four years later, he had
-purchased, for $450,000, the freight depot of
-the Pennsylvania Railroad, covering the entire
-square where his present great store is located.
-The firm name became simply John Wanamaker.
-His lieutenants and business partners
-therein are his son Thomas B. Wanamaker,
-and Robert C. Ogden. Their two Philadelphia
-establishments alone do a business of between
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>$30,000,000 and $40,000,000 annually. Mr.
-Wanamaker’s private fortune is one of the most
-substantial in America.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>ATTENTION TO DETAILS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Yet in all these years he has been early and
-late at the store, as he was when a boy. He
-has always seen to it that customers have prompt
-and careful attention. He early made the rule
-that if a sale was missed, a written reason must
-be rendered by the salesman. There was no
-hap-hazard business in that store,—nothing of
-the happy-go-lucky style. Each man must be
-alert, wide-awake, attentive, or there was no
-place for him at Oak Hall.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE MOST RIGID ECONOMY</h3>
-<p class='c017'>has been always a part of the system. It is told
-of him that, in the earlier days of Oak Hall,
-he used to gather up the short pieces of string
-that came in on parcels, make them into a
-bunch, and see that they were used when
-bundles were to be tied. He also had a habit
-of smoothing out old newspapers, and seeing
-that they were used as wrappers for such things
-as did not require a better grade of paper.</p>
-<p class='c011'>The story has been often related of the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>day’s business at the original store in ’61, when
-Wanamaker delivered the sales by wheeling a
-push-cart.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>ADVERTISING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The first day’s business made a cash profit
-of thirty-eight dollars; and the whole sum was
-invested in one advertisement in the next day’s
-“<i>Inquirer</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His advertising methods were unique; he
-paid for the best talent he could get in this line.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Philadelphia woke one morning to find “W.
-&amp; B.” in the form of six-inch square posters
-stuck up all over the town. There was not another
-letter, no hint, just “W. &amp; B.” Such
-things are common enough now, but then the
-whole city was soon talking and wondering
-what this sign meant. After a few days, a
-second poster modestly stated that Wanamaker
-&amp; Brown had begun to sell clothing at Oak
-Hall. Before long there were great signs, each
-100 feet in length, painted on special fences
-built in a dozen places about the city, particularly
-near the railroad stations. These told of
-the new firm and were the first of a class that
-is now seen all over the country. Afterwards</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>BALLOONS</h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c017'>more than twenty feet high were sent up, and
-a suit of clothes was given to each person who
-brought one of them back. Whole counties
-were stirred up by the balloons. It was grand
-advertising, imitated since by all sorts of
-people. When the balloon idea struck the Oak
-Hall management it was quickly found that the
-only way to get these air-ships was to make
-them, and so, on the roof of the store, the cotton
-cloth was cut and oiled and put together.
-Being well built, and tied very tightly at the
-neck, they made long flights and some of them
-were used over and over again. In one instance,
-a balloon remained for more than six
-months in a cranberry swamp, and when the
-great bag was discovered, slowly swaying in
-the breeze, among the bushes, the frightened
-Jerseymen thought they had come upon an
-elephant, or, maybe, a survivor of the mastodons.
-This made more advertising of the very
-best kind for the clothing store,—the kind that
-excites interested, complimentary talk.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SEIZING OPPORTUNITIES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Genius consists in taking advantage of opportunities
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>quite as much as in making them.
-Here was a young man doing things in an advertising
-way regardless of the custom of the
-business world, and with a wonderful knowledge
-of human nature. He took commonsense
-advantage of opportunities that were open to
-everybody.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Soon after the balloon experience, tally-ho
-coaching began to be a Philadelphia fad of the
-very exclusives. Immediately afterwards a
-crack coach was secured, and six large and
-spirited horses were used instead of four, and
-Oak Hall employees, dressed in the style of the
-most ultra coaching set, traversed the country
-in every direction, scattering advertising matter
-to the music of the horn. Sometimes they
-would be a week on a trip. No wonder Oak
-Hall flourished. It was kept in the very front
-of the procession all the time.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A little later, in the yachting season, the
-whole town was attracted and amused by processions
-and scatterings of men, each wearing
-a wire body frame that supported a thin staff
-from which waved a wooden burgee, or
-pointed flag reminding them of Oak Hall.
-Nearly two hundred of these prototypes of the
-“Sandwich man” were often out at one time.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>But it was not only in the quick catching of
-a novel advertising thought that the new house
-was making history; in newspaper advertising,
-it was even further in advance. The statements
-of store news were crisp and unhackneyed, and
-the first artistic illustrations ever put into advertisements
-were used there. So high was
-the grade of this picture-work that art schools
-regularly clipped the illustrations as models;
-and the world-famous Shakespearian scholar,
-Dr. Horace Howard Furness, treasured the
-original sketches of “The Seven Ages” as
-among the most interesting in his unique collection.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PUSH AND PERSISTENCE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“The chief reason,” said Mr. Wanamaker
-upon one occasion, “that everybody is not successful
-is the fact that they have not enough
-persistency. I always advise young men who
-write me on the subject to do one thing well,
-throwing all their energies into it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To his employees he once said:—“We are
-very foolish people if we shut our ears and eyes
-to what other people are doing. I often pick
-up things from strangers. As you go along,
-pick up suggestions here and there, jot them
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>down and send them along. Even writing them
-down helps to concentrate your mind on that
-part of the work. You need not be afraid of
-overstepping the mark. The more we push
-each other, the better.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“TO WHAT, MR. WANAMAKER, DO YOU ATTRIBUTE YOUR GREAT SUCCESS?”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>In reply to this question when asked, he replied:—“To
-thinking, toiling, trying, and
-trusting in God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A serene confidence in a guiding power has
-always been one of the Wanamaker characteristics.
-He is always calm. Under the greatest
-stress he never loses his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In one physical particular, Mr. Wanamaker
-is very remarkable. He can work continually
-for a long time without sleep and without evidence
-of strain, and make up for it by a good
-rest afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When upon one occasion he was asked to
-name the essentials of success, he replied,
-curtly:—“I might write a volume trying to
-tell you how to succeed. <i>One way is to not be
-above taking a hint from a master.</i> I don’t
-care to tell why I succeeded; because I object
-to talking about myself,—it isn’t modest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>A feature of his make-up that has contributed
-largely to his success is his ability to concentrate
-his thoughts. No matter how trivial
-the subject brought before him, he takes it up
-with the appearance of one who has nothing
-else on his mind.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS VIEWS ON BUSINESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>When asked whether the small tradesmen
-has any “show” to-day against the great department
-stores, he said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All of the great stores were small at one time.
-Small stores will keep on developing into big
-ones. You wouldn’t expect a man to put an
-iron band about his business in order to prevent
-expansion, would you? There are, according
-to statistics, a greater number of prosperous
-small stores in the city than ever before.
-What better proof do you want?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The department store is a natural product,
-evolved from conditions that exist as a result
-of fixed trade laws. Executive capacity, combined
-with command of capital, finds opportunity
-in these conditions, which are harmonious
-with the irresistible determination of the
-producer to meet the consumer directly, and
-of merchandise to find distribution along the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>lines of least resistance. Reduced prices stimulate
-consumption, and increase employment;
-and it is sound opinion that the increased employment
-created by the department stores goes
-to women without curtailing that of men. In
-general it may be stated that large retail stores
-have shortened the hours of labor; and by
-systematic discipline have made it lighter. The
-small store is harder upon the sales-person and
-clerk. The effects upon the character and
-capacity of the employees are good. A well
-ordered, modern retail store is the means of
-education in spelling, writing, English language,
-system and method. Thus it becomes
-to the ambitious and serious employees, in a
-small way, a university, in which character is
-broadened by intelligent instruction practically
-applied.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When asked if a man with means but no
-experience would be safe in embarking in a
-mercantile business, he replied quickly:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A man can’t drive a horse who has never
-seen one. No; a man must have training, must
-know how to buy and sell; only experience
-teaches that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>I have heard people marvel at the unbroken
-upward course of Mr. Wanamaker’s career,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>and lament that they so often make mistakes.
-But hear him:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Who does not make mistakes? Why, if I
-were to think only of the mistakes I have made,
-I should be miserable indeed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>I have heard it said a hundred times that Mr.
-Wanamaker started when success was easy.
-Here is what he says himself about it:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think I could succeed as well now as in the
-past. It seems to me that the conditions of to-day
-are even more favorable to success than
-when I was a boy. There are better facilities
-for doing business, and more business to be
-done. Information in the shape of books and
-newspapers is now in the reach of all, and the
-young man has two opportunities where he
-formerly had one.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We are much more afraid of combinations
-of capital than we have any reason for being.
-Competition regulates everything of that kind.
-No organization can make immense profits for
-any length of time without its field soon swarming
-with competitors. It requires brain and
-muscle to manage any kind of business, and
-the same elements which have produced business
-success in the past will produce it now, and
-will always produce it.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>PUBLIC SERVICE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>With the exception of his term of service as
-postmaster-general of the United States in
-President Harrison’s cabinet—a service which
-was marked by great executive ability and the
-institution of many reforms,—Mr. Wanamaker
-has devoted his attention almost entirely to his
-business and his church work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Yet as a citizen he has always taken a most
-positive course in opposition to the evils that
-threaten society. He has been forever
-prompted by his religious convictions to pursue
-vice either in the “dive,” or in municipal, state
-or national life. He hates a barroom, but he
-hates a treasury looter far more fiercely. His
-idea of Christian duty was evidently derived
-from the scene wherein the Master took a
-scourge and drove the corrupt traders and
-office-holders out of the temple. It is vigorous,
-it is militant; but it makes enemies. Consequently,
-Mr. Wanamaker is not without persistent
-maligners; getting himself well hated by
-the worst men in the community.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>INVEST IN YOURSELF</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Mr. Wanamaker’s views of what life is for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>are well expressed in the following excerpt
-from one of his addresses to young men.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the course of his address, he related that
-he was once called upon to invest in
-an expedition to recover Spanish mahogany
-and doubloons from the Spanish Main,
-which, for half a century, had lain under
-the rolling waves in sunken frigates. “But,
-young men,” he continued, “I know of better
-expeditions than this right at home, deep
-down under the sea of neglect and ignorance
-and discouragement. Near your own feet lie
-treasures untold, and you can have them all
-for your own by earnest watch and faithful
-study and proper care.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Let us not be content to mine the most coal,
-make the largest locomotives and 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
-full-trained for the highest and noblest service.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This is the most enduring kind of property
-to acquire, a property of soul which no disaster
-can wreck or ruin. Whatever may be the
-changes that shall sweep over our fair land, no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>power can ever take away from you your investments
-in knowledge.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AT HOME</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Like all other magnetic and forceful men,
-Mr. Wanamaker is striking in appearance,
-strong rather than handsome. He has a full,
-round head, a broad forehead, a strong nose,
-heavy-lidded eyes that flash with energy, heavy
-jaws that denote strength of will, and tightly
-closed lips that just droop at the corners, giving
-an ever-present touch of sedateness. His face
-is as smooth as a boy’s and as mobile as an
-actor’s; and, when lighted up in discussion, it
-beams with expression. He wears a hat that
-is only six and seven-eighths in size, but is almost
-completely circular in form. He is almost
-six feet tall and finely built, and all his
-motions have in them the springiness of health.
-Nobody ever saw him dressed in any other
-color than black, with a black necktie under
-a “turn-down” collar. But he always looks
-as trim as if he were just out of the hands of
-both tailor and barber.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is his delight to pass much time at his
-country seat in Jenkintown. He is fond of the
-field and the river, the trees and flowers, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>all the growths with which God has beautified
-the earth. His house is a home-like structure,
-with wide piazzas, standing upon the crest of a
-hill in the midst of a noble lawn. A big rosery
-and orchid house stand near by. The before-breakfast
-ramble of the proprietor is finished
-in the flower garden, and every guest is laden
-with floral trophies.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Wanamaker was married, while he was
-the Secretary of the Y. M. C. A., to one whom
-he met at a church service, and who has been in
-full sympathy with his religious activities. He
-has been for forty years superintendent of the
-Bethany Sunday School in Philadelphia. He
-began with two teachers and twenty-seven
-pupils; and at the recent anniversary reported
-a school of 4,500, a church with 3,700 members,
-500 having been added during the past year,
-several branches, and scores of department organizations.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>John Wanamaker says to-day that his business
-success is due to his religious training.
-He is first of all a Christian.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The lesson of such a life should be precious
-to every young man. It teaches the value of
-untiring effort, of economy, of common sense
-applied to common business. I know of no
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>career in this country that offers more encouragement
-to young people. It shows what persistency
-can do; it shows what intelligent, well-directed,
-tireless effort can do; and it proves
-that a man may devote himself to helping
-others, to the Sunday School, to the Church, to
-broad philanthropy, and still be wonderfully
-successful in a business way.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Giving up Five Thousand Dollars a Year to Become a Sculptor</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>“MY life?” queried F. Wellington
-Ruckstuhl, one of the foremost
-sculptors of America, as we sat in
-his studio looking up at his huge figure of
-“Force.” “When did I begin to sculpture?
-As a child I was forever whittling, but I did
-not have dreams then of becoming a sculptor.
-It was not till I was thirty-two years of age.
-And love,—disappointment in my first love
-played a prominent part.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But as a boy, Mr. Ruckstuhl?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was a poet. Every sculptor or artist is
-necessarily a poet. I was always reaching out
-and seeking the beautiful. My father was a
-foreman in a St. Louis machine shop. He
-came to this country in a sailing ship from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>Alsace, by way of the Gulf to St. Louis, when
-I was but six years old. He was a very pious
-man and a deacon in a church. One time,
-Moody and Sankey came to town, and my
-father made me attend the meetings; I think
-he hoped that I would become a minister. Between
-the ages of fourteen and nineteen, I
-worked in a photographic supply store; wrote
-one hundred poems, and read incessantly. I
-enlarged a view of the statue of Nelson in
-Trafalgar Square, London, into a ‘plaster
-sketch,’ ten times as large as the picture, but
-still I did not know my path. I began the study
-of philosophy, and kept up my reading for ten
-years. My friends thought I would become a
-literary man. I wrote for the papers, and belonged
-to a prominent literary club. I tried to
-analyze myself. ‘I am a man,’ I said, ‘but
-what am I good for? What am I to make of
-this life?’ I drifted from one position to another.
-Every one was sorry to part with my
-services, for I always did my duties as well as
-they could be done. When I was twenty-five
-years of age, the girl to whom I was attached
-was forced by her mother to marry a wealthy
-man. She died a year afterwards; and I
-‘pulled up stakes,’ and started on a hap-hazard,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>reckless career. I went to Colorado, drifted
-into Arizona, prospected, mined, and worked
-on a ranch. I went to California, and at one
-time thought of shipping for China. My experiences
-would fill a book. Again I reached
-St. Louis. For a year, I could not find a thing
-to do, and became desperate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you had done nothing at art so far?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At that time, I saw a clay sketch. I said
-to myself, ‘I can do as well as that,’ and I
-copied it. My second sketch admitted me to
-the St. Louis Sketch Club. I told my friends
-that I would be a sculptor. They laughed
-and ridiculed me. I had secured a position
-in a store, and at odd times worked at
-what I had always loved, but had only
-half realized it. Notices appeared in the
-papers about me, for I was popular in the
-community. I entered the competition for a
-statue of General Frank R. Blair. I received
-the first prize, but when the committee discovered
-that I was only a bill clerk in a store, they
-argued that I was not competent to carry out
-the work; although I was given the first prize
-model and the one hundred and fifty dollars accompanying
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>“But that inspired you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, but my father and mother put every
-obstacle in the way possible. I was driven
-from room to room. I was not even allowed to
-work in the attic.” Here Mr. Ruckstuhl
-laughed. “You see what genius has to contend
-with. I was advanced in position in the
-store, till I became assistant manager, at two
-thousand dollars a year. When I told the
-proprietor that I had decided to be a sculptor,
-he gazed at me in blank astonishment. ‘A
-sculptor?’ he queried, incredulously, and made
-a few very discouraging remarks, emphasized
-with dashes. ‘Why, young man, are you
-going to throw up the chance of a lifetime? I
-will give you five thousand dollars a year, and
-promote you to be manager if you will remain
-with me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But I had found my life’s work,” said Mr.
-Ruckstuhl, turning to me. “I knew it would
-be a struggle through poverty, till I attained
-fame. But I was confident in myself, which is
-half of the battle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you went abroad?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, with but two hundred and fifty
-dollars,” he replied. “I traveled through
-Europe for five months and visited the French
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Salon. I said to myself, ‘I can do that, and
-that;’ and my confidence grew. But there was
-some work that completely ‘beat’ me. I returned
-to America penniless, but with a greater
-insight into art. I determined that I would retrace
-my steps to Paris, and study there for
-three years, and thought that would be sufficient
-to fully develop me. My family and
-friends laughed me to scorn, and I was discouraged
-by everyone. In four months, in St.
-Louis, I secured seven orders for busts, at two
-hundred dollars each, to be done after my return
-from France. That shows that some persons
-had confidence in me and in my talent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“O, the student life in Paris! How I look
-back with pleasure upon those struggling, yet
-happy days! In two months, I started on my
-female figure of ‘Evening,’ in the nude, that
-is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I
-finished it in nine months, and positively sweat
-blood in my work. I sent it to the Salon, and
-went to Italy. When I returned to Paris, I
-saw my name in the paper with honorable mention.
-I suppose you can realize my feelings; I
-experienced the first flush of victory. I brought
-it to America, and exposed it in St. Louis.
-Strange to say, I rose in the estimation of even
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>my family. My father actually congratulated
-me. A wealthy man in St. Louis gave me
-three thousand dollars to have my ‘Evening’
-put into marble. I returned with it to Paris,
-and in a month and a quarter it was exhibited
-in the Salon. At the World’s Fair, at Chicago,
-it had the place of honor, and received one of
-the eleven grand medals given to American
-sculptors. In 1892, I came to New York.
-This statue of ‘Force’ will be erected, with
-my statue of ‘Wisdom,’ on the new Court of
-Appeals in New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>We gazed at it, seated, and clothed in partial
-armor, of the old Roman type, and holding a
-sword across its knees. The great muscles
-spoke of strength and force, and yet, with it
-all, there was an almost benign look upon the
-military visage.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is force and real action there withal,
-although there is repose.” I said in admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh,” said Mr. Ruckstuhl, “that’s it, and
-that is what it is so hard to get! That is what
-every sculptor strives for; and, unless he attains
-it, his work, from my point of view, is
-worthless. There must be life in a statue; it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>must almost breathe. In repose there must be
-dormant action that speaks for itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is most of your work done under inspiration?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is nothing,—and a great deal,—in
-so-called inspiration. I firmly believe that we
-mortals are merely tools, mediums, at work
-here on earth. I peg away, and bend all my
-energies to my task. I simply accomplish
-nothing. Suddenly, after considerable preparatory
-toil, the mist clears away; I see things
-clearly; everything is outlined for me. I believe
-there is a conscious and a sub-conscious
-mind. The sub-conscious mind is the one that
-does original work; it cannot be affected by the
-mind that is conscious to all our petty environments.
-When the conscious mind is lulled and
-silenced, the sub-conscious one begins to work.
-That I call inspiration.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are you ever discouraged?” I asked out
-of curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Continually,” replied Mr. Ruckstuhl, looking
-down at his hands, soiled with the working
-clay. “Some days I will be satisfied with what
-I have done. It will strike me as simply fine.
-I will be as happy as a bird, and leave simply
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>joyous. The following morning, when the
-cloths are removed, I look at my previous toil,
-and consider it vile. I ask myself: ‘Are you
-a sculptor or not? Do you think that you ever
-will be one? Do you consider that art?’ So
-it is, till your task is accomplished. You are
-your own critic, and are continually distressed
-at your inability to create your ideals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. F. Wellington Ruckstuhl is forty-six
-years of age; neither short nor tall; a brilliant
-man, with wonderful powers of endurance, for
-his work is more exacting and tedious than is
-generally supposed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have simply worked a month and a quarter
-on that statue,” he said. “Certain work
-dissatisfied me, and I obliterated it. I have
-raised that head three times. My eyes get
-weary, and I become physically tired. On such
-occasions I sit down and smoke a little to distract
-my thoughts, and to clear my mind.
-Then my sub-conscious mind comes into play
-again,” he concluded with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Ruckstuhl’s best known works are:
-“Mercury Teasing the Eagle of Jupiter,”
-which is of bronze, nine feet high, which he
-made in Paris; a seven-foot statue of Solon,
-erected in the Congressional Library, at Washington;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>busts of Franklin, Gœthe and Macaulay,
-on the front of the same library; and
-the eleven-foot statue of bronze of “Victory,”
-for the Jamaica soldiers’ and sailors’ monument.
-In competition, he won the contract for
-an equestrian statue of General John F. Hartrauft,
-ex-Governor of Pennsylvania, which he
-also made in Paris. It is considered the finest
-piece of work of its kind in America. Besides
-this labor, he has made a number of medallions
-and busts; and with the completion of his
-statue of “Force,” he will have made a wonderful
-record.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Art was in me as a child,” he said: “I
-was discouraged whenever it beckoned me, but
-finally claimed me. I surrendered a good position
-to follow it, whether it led through a
-thorny road or not. A sculptor is an artist, a
-musician, a poet, a writer, a dramatist,—to
-throw action, breath and life, music and a soul
-into his creation. I can pick up an instrument
-and learn it instantly; I can sing, and act, so
-I am in touch with the sympathies of the beings
-that I endeavor to create. You will find most
-sculptors and artists of my composite nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There,” said Mr. Ruckstuhl, and he
-stretched out his arm, with his palm downward,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>and moved it through the air, as he
-gazed into distance, “you strive to create the
-imagination of your mind, and it comes to
-you as if sent from another world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You strive.” That is the way to success.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>Questions and Answers: Business Pointers by Darius Ogden Mills</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>“WHAT is your idea, Mr. Mills,<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c019'><sup>[2]</sup></a> of a
-successful life?” “If a bootblack
-does all the good he possibly
-can for his fellow-men, his life has been
-just as successful as that of the millionaire
-who helps thousands.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f2'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. Mills was born in Western New York in 1825.
-He has been a leading financier for fifty years, in California,
-and in New York. He is connected with the
-management of eighteen important business and philanthropic
-corporations in New York City.</p>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c015'>WORK</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What, Mr. Mills, do you consider the key-note
-of success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Work,” he replied, quickly and emphatically.
-“Work develops all the good there is in
-a man; idleness all the evil. Work sharpens all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>his faculties and makes him thrifty; idleness
-makes him lazy and a spendthrift. Work surrounds
-a man with those whose habits are industrious
-and honest; in such society a weak
-man develops strength, and a strong man is
-made stronger. Idleness, on the other hand, is
-apt to throw a man into the company of men
-whose object in life is usually the pursuit of unwholesome
-and demoralizing diversions.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SELF-DEPENDENCE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“To what formative influence do you attribute
-your material success, Mr. Mills?” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was taught very early that I would have
-to depend entirely upon myself; that my future
-lay in my own hands. I had that for a start,
-and it was a good one. I didn’t waste any
-time thinking about succession to wealth, which
-so often acts as a drag upon young men. Many
-persons waste the best years of their lives waiting
-for dead men’s shoes; and, when they get
-them, find them entirely too big to wear gracefully,
-simply because they have not developed
-themselves to wear them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As a rule, the small inheritance, which, to
-a boy, would seem large, has a tendency to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>lessen his efforts, and is a great damage to him
-in the way of acquiring the habits necessary
-to success.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HABIT OF THRIFT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“No one can acquire a fortune unless he
-makes a start; and the habit of thrift, which he
-learns in saving his first hundred dollars, is of
-inestimable value later on. It is not the money,
-but the habit which counts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is no one so helpless as a man who
-is ‘broke,’ no matter how capable he may be,
-and there is no habit so detrimental to his reputation
-among business men as that of borrowing
-small sums of money. This cannot be too
-emphatically impressed upon young men.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>EXPENSIVE HABITS—SMOKING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Another thing is that none but the
-wealthy, and very few of them, can afford the
-indulgence of expensive habits; how much less
-then can a man with only a few dollars in his
-pocket? More young men are ruined by the
-expense of smoking than in any other way.
-The money thus laid out would make them independent,
-in many cases, or at least would
-give them a good start. A young man should
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>be warned by the melancholy example of those
-who have been ruined by smoke, and avoid it.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>FORMING AN INDEPENDENT BUSINESS JUDGMENT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What marked traits, Mr. Mills, have the
-influential men with whom you have been associated,
-possessed, which most impressed you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A habit of thinking and acting for themselves.
-No end of people are ruined by taking
-the advice of others. This may answer temporarily,
-but in the long run it is sure to be disastrous.
-Any man who hasn’t ability to judge
-for himself would better get a comfortable
-clerkship somewhere, letting some one of more
-ambition and ability do the thinking necessary
-to run the business.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE MULTIPLICATION OF OPPORTUNITIES TO-DAY IN AMERICA</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Are the opportunities for making money
-as numerous to-day as they were when you
-started in business?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, the progress of science and invention
-has increased the opportunities a thousandfold,
-and a man can find them wherever he seeks
-them in the United States in particular. It has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>caused the field of employment of labor of all
-kinds to expand enormously, thus creating opportunities
-which never existed before. It is
-no longer necessary for a man to go to foreign
-countries or distant parts of his own country
-to make money. Opportunities come to him
-in every quarter. There is hardly a point in
-the country so obscure that it has not felt the
-revolutionizing influence of commercial enterprise.
-Probably railroads and electricity are
-the chief instruments in this respect. Other industries
-follow closely in their wake.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>WHERE ONE’S BEST CHANCE IS—THE KNOWLEDGE OF MEN</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“In what part of the country do you think
-the best chances for young men may be
-found?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The best place for a young man to make
-money is the town in which he was born and
-educated. There he learns all about everybody,
-and everybody learns about him. This is to
-his advantage if he bears a good character, and
-to the advantage of his towns-people if he bears
-a bad one. While a young man is growing up,
-he unconsciously absorbs a vast deal of knowledge
-of people and affairs, which would be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>equal to money if he only has the judgment to
-avail himself of it. A knowledge of men is the
-prime secret of business success. Upon reflection,
-how absurd it is for a man to leave a town
-where he knows everything and everybody, and
-go to some distant point where he doesn’t know
-anything about anybody or anything, and expect
-to begin on an equal footing with the people
-there who are thoroughly acquainted.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE BOTTOM OF THE LADDER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What lesson, Mr. Mills, do you consider
-it most needful for young men to learn?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The lesson of humility;—not in the sense
-of being servile or undignified, but in that of
-paying due respect to men who are their superiors
-in the way of experience, knowledge
-and position. Such a lesson is akin to that of
-discipline. Members of the royal families of
-Europe are put in subordinate positions in the
-navies or armies of their respective countries,
-in order that they may receive the training
-necessary to qualify them to take command.
-They must first know how to obey, if they
-would control others.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In this country, it is customary for the
-sons of the presidents of great railroads, or
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>other companies, to begin at the bottom of the
-ladder and work their way up step by step, just
-the same as any other boy in the employ of the
-corporation. This course has become imperatively
-necessary in the United States, where each
-great business has become a profession in itself.
-Most of the big machine shops number among
-their employees, scions of old families who
-carry dinner pails, and work with files or lathes,
-the same as anyone else. Such shoulder-to-shoulder
-experience is invaluable to a man who
-is destined to command, because he not only
-masters the trade technically, but learns all
-about the men he works with and qualifies himself
-to grapple with labor questions which may
-arise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is no end of conspicuous examples
-of the wisdom of this system in America. There
-are also many instances of disaster to great industrial
-concerns due to the inexperience or the
-lack of tact of men placed suddenly in control.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE BENEFICENT USE OF CAPITAL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Upon this point, Mr. Mills said:—“A man
-can, in the accumulation of a fortune, be just as
-great a benefactor of mankind as in the distribution
-of it. In organizing a great industry,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>one opens up fields of employment for a multitude
-of people who might otherwise be practically
-helpless, giving them not only a chance
-to earn a living for themselves and their families,
-but also to lay by a competency for old
-age. All honest, sober men, if they have half a
-chance, can do that; but only a small percentage
-can ever become rich. Now the rich man, having
-acquired his wealth, knows better how to
-manage it than those under him would, and
-having actual possession, he has the power to
-hold the community of his employees and their
-interests together, and prevent disintegration,
-which means disaster so much oftener to the
-employee than to the employer.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE WHOLESOME DISCIPLINE OF EARNING AND SPENDING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What is the responsibility of wealth, Mr.
-Mills?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A man must learn not to think too much of
-money. It should be considered as a means
-and not an end; and the love for it should never
-be permitted to so warp a man’s mind as to
-destroy his interest in progressive ideas. Making
-money is an education, and the wide experience
-thus acquired teaches a man discrimination
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>in both men and projects, where money
-is under consideration. Very few men who
-make their own money use it carelessly. Most
-good projects that fail owe their failure to bad
-business management, rather than to lack of intrinsic
-merit. An inventor may have a very
-good thing, and plenty of capital may be enlisted
-but if a man not acquainted with the
-peculiar line, or one who is not a good salesman
-or financier be employed as manager, the
-result is disastrous. A man should spend his
-money in a way that tends to advance the best
-interests of society in the country he lives in,
-or in his own neighborhood at least. There is
-only one thing that is a greater harm to the
-community than a rich spendthrift, and that is
-a miser.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PERSONAL: A WORD ABOUT CHEAP HOTELS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“How did you happen to establish the system
-of hotels which bears your name, Mr.
-Mills?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had been looking around for several years
-to find something to do that would be for the
-good of the community. My mind was largely
-on other matters, but it occurred to me that the
-hotel project was the best, and I immediately
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>went to work at it. My purpose was to do the
-work on so large a scale that it would be appreciated
-and spread all over the country; for as
-the sources of education extend, we find more
-and more need of assisting men who have a
-disposition for decency and good citizenship.
-<i>The mechanic is well paid, and the man who
-has learned to labor is much more independent
-than he who is prepared for a profession or a
-scientific career, or other objects in life that call
-for higher education.</i> Clerks commencing at
-small salaries need good surroundings and
-economy to give themselves a start. Such are
-the men for whom the hotels were established.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>X</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Nordica: What it Costs to Become a Queen of Song</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>OF the internationally famous singers,
-none is a greater favorite than Madame
-Lillian Nordica. She has had
-honors heaped upon her by every music-loving
-country. Milan, St. Petersburg, Paris, London
-and New York, in turn accepted her. Jewel
-cases filled with bracelets, necklaces, tiaras and
-diadems, of gold and precious stones, attest the
-unaffected sincerity of her admirers in all the
-great music-centers of the world. She enjoys,
-in addition, the distinction of being one of the
-first two American women to attain to international
-fame as a singer in grand opera.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Madame Nordica I met on appointment at
-the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, where she kindly
-detailed for me</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>THE DIFFICULTIES</h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c017'>she encountered at the outset:—“Distinction
-in the field of art is earned: it is not thrust upon
-anyone. The material for a great voice may
-be born in a person—it is, in fact,—but the
-making of it into a great voice is a work of the
-most laborious character.</p>
-<p class='c011'>“In some countries the atmosphere is not
-very favorable to beginners. Almost any of the
-greater European nations is probably better in
-this respect than the United States: not much
-better, however, because nearly all depends
-upon strength of character, determination, and
-the will to work. If a girl has these, she will
-rise as high, in the end, anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Madame Nordica came of New England
-stock, being born at Farmington, Maine, and
-reared in Boston. Her parents, bearing the
-name Norton, possessed no musical talent.
-“Their opinion of music,” said Madame, “was
-that it is an airy, inviting art of the devil, used
-to tempt men’s feet to stray from the solemn
-path of right. They believed music, as a vocation,
-to be nearly as reprehensible as a stage
-career, and for the latter they had no tolerance
-whatever. I must be just, though, and own
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>that they did make an exception in the case of
-church music, else I should never have received
-the slightest encouragement in my aspirations.
-They considered music in churches to be permissible,—even
-laudable, so when I displayed
-some ability as a singer, I was allowed to use
-it in behalf of religion, and I did. I joined the
-church choir and sang hymns about the house
-almost constantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But I needed a world of training. I
-had no conception of what work lay ahead of
-anyone who contemplates singing perfectly. I
-had no idea of how high I might go myself. All
-I knew was that I could sing, and that I would
-win my way with my voice if I could.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you accomplish it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By devoting all my time, all my thought,
-and all my energy to that one object. I devoured
-church music,—all I could get hold of. I practised
-new and difficult compositions all the time
-I could spare.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I became a very good church singer; so
-much so that when there were church concerts
-or important religious ceremonies, I was always
-in demand. Then there began to be a
-social demand for my ability, and, later, a public
-demand in the way of concerts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>“At first, I ignored all but church singing.
-My ambition ran higher than concert singing,
-and I knew my parents would not consent. I
-persuaded them to let me have my voice trained.
-This was not very difficult, because my church
-singing, as it had improved, became a source
-of considerable profit; and they saw even
-greater results for me in the large churches, and
-in the religious field. So I went to a teacher of
-vocal culture, Professor John O’Neill, one of
-the instructors in the New England Conservatory
-of Music, Boston. He was a fine old
-teacher, a man with the highest ideals concerning
-music, and of the sternest and most exacting
-method. He made me feel, at first, that</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE WORLD WAS MINE, IF I WOULD WORK.</h3>
-<p class='c017'>Hard work was his constant cry. There must
-be no play, no training for lower forms of public
-entertainment, no anything but study and
-practice. I must work and perfect myself in
-private, and then suddenly appear unheralded
-in the highest class of opera and take the world
-by storm.</p>
-<p class='c011'>“It was a fine fancy, but it would not have
-been possible. O’Neill was a fine musician. Under
-him I studied the physiology of the voice,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>and practiced singing oratorios. I also took up
-Italian, familiarizing myself with the language,
-with all the songs and endless <i>arias</i>. In fact, I
-made myself as perfect in Italian as possible. In
-<i>three years</i> I had been greatly improved. Mr.
-O’Neill, however, employed methods of making
-me work which discouraged me. He was
-a man who would magnify and storm over the
-slightest error, and make light of or ignore the
-sincerest achievements. He put his grade of
-perfection so high that I began to consider it
-unattainable, and lost heart. Finally, I gave
-it up and rested awhile, uncertain of everything.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After I had thought awhile and regained
-some confidence, I came to New York to see
-Mme. Maretzek. She was not only a teacher,
-but also a singer quite famous in her day, and
-she thoroughly knew the world of music. She
-considered my voice to be of the right quality
-for the highest grade of operatic success;
-and gave me hope that, with a little more training,
-I could begin my career. She not only
-did that, but also set me to studying the great
-operas, ‘Lucia’ and the others, and introduced
-me to the American musical celebrities.
-Together we heard whatever was worth hearing
-in New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>“When the renowned Brignola came to New
-York, she took me to the Everett House, where
-he was stopping and introduced me. They
-were good friends, and, after gaining his opinion
-on the character of my voice, she had him
-play ‘Faust.’ That was a wonderful thing for
-me. To hear the great Brignola! It fired my
-ambition. As I listened I felt that I could also
-be great and that people, some day, might listen
-to me as enraptured as I then was by him.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“IT PUT NEW FIRE INTO ME</h3>
-<p class='c017'>and caused me to fairly toil over my studies. I
-would have given up all my hours if only I had
-been allowed or requested.</p>
-<p class='c011'>“So it went, until <i>after several years of
-study</i>, Madame Maretzek thought I was getting
-pretty well along and might venture some
-important public singing. We talked about different
-ways of appearing and what I would
-sing, and so on, until finally Gilmore’s band
-came to Madison Square Garden. He was in
-the heyday of his success then, and carried important
-soloists with him. Madame Maretzek
-decided that she would take me to see him and
-get his opinion; and so, one day, toward the
-very last of his Madison Square engagement,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>we went to see him. Madame Maretzek was
-on good terms with him also. I remember that
-she took me in, one morning, when he was rehearsing.
-I saw a stout, kindly, genial-looking
-man who was engaged in tapping for attention,
-calling certain individuals to notice certain
-points, and generally fluttering around over a
-dozen odds and ends. Madame Maretzek
-talked with him a little while and then called
-his attention to me. He looked toward me.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Thinks she can sing, eh? Yes, yes. Well,
-all right! Let her come right along.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then he called to me,—‘Come right along
-now. Step right up here on the stage. Yes, yes.
-Now, what can you sing?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I told him I could sing almost anything in
-oratorio or opera, if he so wished. He said:
-‘Well, well, have a little from both. Now,
-what shall it be?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall never forget his kindly way. He
-was like a good father, gentle and reassuring,
-and seemed really pleased to have me there and
-to hear me. I went up on the platform and told
-him that I would begin with ‘Let the Bright
-Seraphim,’ and he called the orchestra to order
-and had them accompany me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was slightly nervous at first, but recovered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>my equanimity and sang up to my full
-limit of power. When I was through, he remarked,
-‘Very good! very good!’ and ‘Now,
-what else?’ I next sang an <i>aria</i> from ‘Somnambula.’
-He did not hesitate to express his
-approval, which was always, ‘Very good! very
-good! Now, what you want to do,’ he said, ‘is
-to get some roses in your cheeks, and come
-along and sing for me.’ After that, he continued
-his conference with Madame Maretzek
-and then we went away together.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“I WAS TRAVELING ON AIR</h3>
-<p class='c017'>when I left, I can assure you. His company
-was famous. Its engagement had been most
-successful. Madame Poppenheim was singing
-with it, and there were other famous names.
-There were only two more concerts to conclude
-his New York engagement, but he had told
-Madame Maretzek that if I chose to come and
-sing on these occasions, he would be glad to
-have me. I was more than glad of the opportunity
-and agreed to go. We arranged with
-him by letter, and, when the evening came, I
-sang. My work made a distinct impression on
-the audience, and pleased Mr. Gilmore wonderfully.
-After the second night, when all was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>over, he came to me, and said: ‘Now, my
-dear, of course there is no more concert this
-summer, but I am going West in the fall. Now,
-how would you like to go along?’</p>
-<p class='c011'>“I told him that I would like to go very
-much, if it could be arranged; and, after some
-negotiation, he agreed to pay the expenses of
-my mother and myself, and give me one hundred
-dollars a week besides. I accepted, and
-when the western tour began, we went along.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I gained thorough control of my nerves
-upon that tour, and learned something of audiences,
-and of what constitutes distinguished
-‘stage presence.’ <i>I studied all the time</i>, and,
-with the broadening influence of travel, gained
-a great deal. At the end of the tour, my voice
-was more under my control than ever before,
-and I was a better singer all around.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You did not begin with grand opera, after
-all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, I did not. It was not a perfect conclusion
-of my dreams, but it was a great deal.
-My old instructor, Mr. O’Neill, took it worse
-than I did. He regarded my ambitions as having
-all come to naught. I remember that he
-wrote me a letter in which he thus called me to
-account:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>“‘After all my training, my advice, that you
-should come to this! A whole lifetime of ambition
-and years of the hardest study consumed
-to fit you to go on the road with a brass band!
-Poh!’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I pocketed the sarcasm in the best of humor,
-because I was sure of my dear old teacher’s
-unwavering faith in me, and knew that he
-wrote only for my own good. Still, I felt that
-I was doing wisely in getting before the public,
-and so decided to wait quietly and see if time
-would not justify me.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When the season was over, Mr. Gilmore
-came to me again. He was the most kindly
-man I ever knew. His manner was as gentle
-and his heart as good as could be.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘I am going to Europe,’ he said. ‘I am going
-to London and Paris and Vienna and
-Rome, and all the other big cities. There will
-be a fine chance for you to see all those places
-and let Europeans hear you. They appreciate
-good singers. Now, little girl, do you want to
-come? If you do, you can.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I talked it over with my mother and Madame
-Maretzek, and decided to go; and so, the
-next season, we were</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>IN EUROPE.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“We gave seventy-eight concerts in England
-and France. We opened the Trocadero at
-Paris, and mine was the first voice of any kind
-to sing there. This European tour of the
-American band was a great and successful venture.
-American musicians still recall the <i>furore</i>
-which it created, and the prestige which it
-gained at home. Mr. Gilmore was proud of his
-leading soloists. In Paris, where the great audiences
-went wild over my singing, he came to
-praise me personally in unmeasured terms. ‘My
-dear,’ he said, ‘you are going to be a great
-singer. You are going to be crowned in your
-own country yet. Mark my words: they are
-going to put diamonds on your brow!’ [Madame
-Nordica had good occasion to recall this,
-in 1898, many years after, when her enthusiastic
-New York admirers crowned her with a
-diamond tiara as a tribute of their admiration
-and appreciation.]</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was at the time when Gilmore was at
-the height of his Paris engagement that his
-agent ran off with his funds and left the old
-bandmaster almost stranded. Despite his sincere
-trouble, he retained his imperturbable good
-nature, and came out of it successfully. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>came to me, one morning, smiling good-naturedly,
-as usual. After greeting me and inquiring
-after my health, he said: ‘My dear
-child, you have saved some little money on this
-tour?’ I told him I had.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Now, I would like to borrow that little
-from you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was very much surprised at the request,
-for he said nothing whatever of his loss. Still,
-he had been so uniformly kind and generous,
-and had won our confidence and regard so
-wholly, that I could not hesitate. I turned over
-nearly all I had, and he gathered it up and went
-away, simply thanking me. Of course, I heard
-of the defalcation later. It became generally
-known. Our salaries went right on, however,
-and in a few months the whole thing
-had been quite forgotten, when he came to me
-one morning with money ready in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘To pay you what I owe you, my dear,’ he
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Oh, yes!’ I said; ‘so and so much,’—naming
-the amount.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Here it is,’ he said; and, handing me a roll
-of bills, he went away. Of course, I did not
-count it until a little later; but, when I did, I
-found just double the amount I had named,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>and no persuasion would ever induce him to
-accept a penny of it back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When did you part with Gilmore?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the end of that tour. He determined to
-return to America, and I had decided to spend
-some of my earnings on further study in Italy.
-Accordingly, I went to Milan, to the singing
-teacher San Giovanni. On arriving there, I
-visited the old teacher and stated my object. I
-said that I wanted to sing in grand opera.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“‘WHY DON’T YOU SING IN GRAND OPERA?’</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“He answered; ‘let me hear your voice.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I sang an <i>aria</i> from ‘Lucia’; and, when I
-was through, he said, dryly: ‘You want to
-sing in grand opera?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Yes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Well, why don’t you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘I need training.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Nonsense!’ he answered. ‘We will attend
-to that. You need a few months to practice
-Italian methods,—that is all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So I spent three months with him. After
-much preparation, I made my <i>début</i> as Violetta
-in Verdi’s opera, ‘La Traviata,’ at the Teatro
-Grande, in Brescia.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The details of Madame Nordica’s Italian appearance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>are very interesting. Her success was
-instantaneous. Her fame went up and down
-the land, and across the water—to her home.
-She next sang in Gounod’s “Faust,” at Geneva,
-and soon afterwards appeared at Navarro,
-singing Alice in Meyerbeer’s “Roberto,” the
-enthusiastic and delighted subscribers presenting
-her with a handsome set of rubies and
-pearls. After that, she was engaged to sing
-at the Russian capital, and accordingly went to
-St. Petersburg, where, in October, 1881, she
-made her <i>début</i> as La Filina in “Mignon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There, also her success was great. She was
-the favorite of the society of the court, and received
-pleasant attentions from every quarter.
-Presents were made her, and inducements for
-her continued presence until two winters had
-passed. Then she decided to revisit France and
-Paris.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THIS WAS HER CROWNING TRIUMPH</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I wanted to sing in grand opera at Paris,”
-she said to me. “I wanted to know that I could
-appear successfully in that grand place. I
-counted my achievements nothing until I could
-do that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And did you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>“Yes. In July, 1882, I appeared there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This was her greatest triumph. In the part
-of Marguerite, she took the house by storm,
-and won from the composer the highest encomiums.
-Subsequently, she appeared with equal
-success as Ophélie, having been specially prepared
-for both these rôles by the respective
-composers, Charles Gounod and Ambroise
-Thomas.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You should have been satisfied, after that,”
-I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was,” she answered. “So thoroughly
-was I satisfied that soon afterwards I gave up
-my career, and was married. For two years, I
-remained away from the public; but after that
-time, my husband having died, I decided to
-return.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I made my first appearance at the Burton
-Theatre in London, and was doing well enough
-when Colonel Mapleson came to me. He was
-going to produce grand opera,—in fact he was
-going to open Covent Garden, which had been
-closed for a long time, with a big company. He
-was another interesting character. I found him
-to be generous and kind-hearted and happy-spirited
-as anyone could be. When he came to
-me, it was in the most friendly manner. ‘I am
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>going to open Covent Garden.’ he said. ‘Now,
-here is your chance to sing there. All the great
-singers have appeared there. Patti, Gerster,
-Nilsson, Tietjens; now it’s your turn,—come
-and sing.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘How about terms?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Terms!’ he exclaimed; ‘terms! Don’t
-let such little details stand in your way. What
-is money compared to this? Ignore money.
-Think of the honor, of the memories of the
-place, of what people think of it.’ And then he
-waved his arms dramatically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yet, we came to terms, not wholly sacrificial
-on my part, and the season began. Covent
-Garden had not been open for a long time. It
-was in the spring of the year, cold and damp.
-There was a crowded house, though, because
-fashion accompanied the Prince of Wales there.
-He came, night after night, and heard the opera
-through with an overcoat on.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was no pleasant task for me, or healthy,
-either, but the Lord has blessed me with a
-sound constitution. I sang my parts, as they
-should be sung—some in bare arms and shoulders,
-with too little clothing for such a temperature.
-I nearly froze, but it was Covent Garden
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>and a great London audience, and so I bore up
-under it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Things went on this way very successfully
-until Sir Augustus Harris took Drury Lane
-and decided to produce grand opera. He started
-in opposition to Colonel Mapleson, and so Covent
-Garden had to be given up. Mr. Harris
-had more money, more prestige with society,
-and Colonel Mapleson could not live under the
-division of patronage. When I saw the situation,
-I called on the new manager and talked
-with him concerning the next season. He was
-very proud and very condescending, and made
-sure to show his indifference to me. He told
-me all about the brilliant season he was planning,
-gave me a list of the great names he intended
-to charm with, and wound up by saying
-he would call on me, in case of need, but
-thought he had all the celebrities he could use,
-but would let me know.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of course, I did not like that; but I knew
-I could rest awhile, and so was not much disturbed.
-The time for the opening of the season
-arrived. The papers were full of accounts
-of the occasion, and there were plenty of remarks
-concerning my non-appearance. Then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>‘Aida’ was produced, and I read the criticisms
-of it with interest.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SHE WAS INDISPENSABLE IN “AIDA”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“The same afternoon a message came for
-me: ‘Would I come?’ and ‘Would I do so and
-so?’ I would, and did. I sang ‘Aida’ and then
-other parts, and gradually all the parts but one,
-which I had longed to try, but had not
-yet had the opportunity given to me. I was
-very successful, and Sir Augustus was very
-friendly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The summer after that season, I visited
-Ems, where the De Reszkes were. One day
-they said: ‘We are going to Beirut, to hear
-the music,—don’t you want to go along?’ I
-thought it over, and decided that I did. My
-mother and I packed up and departed. When I
-got there and saw those splendid performances,
-I was entranced. It was perfectly beautiful.
-Everything was arranged after an ideal fashion.
-I had a great desire to sing there, and
-boasted to my mother that I would. When I
-came away, I was fully determined to carry it
-out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Could you speak German?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all. I began, though, at once, to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>study it; and, when I could talk it sufficiently,
-I went to Beirut and saw Madame Wagner.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE KINDNESS OF FRAU WAGNER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you find her the imperious old lady she
-is said to be?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all. She welcomed me most heartily;
-and, when I told her that I had come to see if
-I could not sing there, she seemed much
-pleased. She treated me like a daughter, explained
-all that she was trying to do, and gave
-me a world of encouragement. Finally, I arranged
-to sing and create ‘Elsa’ after my own
-idea of it, during the season following the one
-then approaching.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Meanwhile I came to New York to fulfill
-my contract for the season of 1894-1895.
-While doing that, I made a study of Wagner’s,
-and, indeed, of all German music; and, when
-the season was over, went back and sang it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Madame Nordica has found her work very
-exacting. For it she has needed a good physique;
-her manner of study sometimes calling
-for an extraordinary mental strain:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I remember once, during my season under
-Augustus Harris, that he gave a garden party,
-one Sunday, to which several of his company
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>were invited,—myself included. When the
-afternoon was well along, he came to me and
-said: ‘Did you ever sing “Valencia” in “The
-Huguenots?”’ I told him I had not.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Do you think you could learn the music
-and sing it by next Saturday night?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I felt a little appalled at the question, but
-ventured to say that I could. I knew that hard
-work would do it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Then do,’ he replied; ‘for I must have
-you sing it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The De Reszkes, Jean and Edouard, were
-near at the time, and offered to assist me. ‘Try
-it,’ they said, and so I agreed. We began rehearsals,
-almost without study, the very next
-day, both the De Reszkes prompting me, and
-by Friday they had me letter-perfect and ready
-to go on. Since the time seemed so peculiarly
-short, they feared for me, and, during the performance,
-stationed themselves, one in either
-wing, to reassure me. Whenever I approached
-near to either side of the stage, it was always to
-hear their repeated ‘Be calm!’ whispered so
-loud that the audience could almost hear it. Yet
-I sang easily, never thinking of failure.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>MUSICAL TALENT OF AMERICAN GIRLS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Let me ask you one thing,” I said. “Has
-America good musical material?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As much as any other country, and more,
-I should think. The higher average of intelligence
-here should yield a greater percentage of
-musical intelligence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then there ought to be a number of American
-women who can do good work of a high
-order?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There ought to be, but it is a question
-whether there will be. They are not cut out
-for the work which it requires to develop a
-good voice. I have noticed that young women
-seem to <i>underestimate the cost of distinction</i>.
-It means more than most of them are prepared
-to give; and, when they face the exactions of
-art, they falter and drop out. Hence we have
-many middle-class singers, but few really powerful
-ones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What are these exactions you speak of?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>Time, money, and loss of friends, of pleasure.
-To be a great singer means, first, to be a
-great student. To be a great student means
-that you have no time for balls and parties, very
-little for friends, and less for carriage rides and</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span><i>pleasant strolls. All that is really left is a
-shortened allowance of sleep, of time for meals,
-and time for exercise.</i>”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE PRICE OF FAME</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Permanent recognition, which cannot be
-taken away from you, is acquired only by <i>a
-lifetime of most earnest labor</i>. People are
-never internationally recognized until they have
-reached middle life. Many persons gain notoriety
-young, but that goes as quickly as it
-comes. <i>All true success is founded on real accomplishment
-acquired with difficulty.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Many young people have genius; but they
-need training for valuable service. The world
-gives very little recognition for a great deal of
-labor paid in; and, when I earn a thousand
-dollars for a half hour’s singing sometimes, it
-does not nearly average up for all the years and
-for the labor much more difficult which I contributed
-without recompense.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>How William Dean Howells Worked to Secure a Foothold</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>IN answer to my question, what constitutes
-success in life, Mr. Howells replied that
-everything is open to the beginner who
-has sufficient energy, perseverance and brains.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A young man stands at the parting of two
-ways,” he added, “and can take his path this
-way or that. It is comparatively easy then,
-with good judgment. Youth is certainly the
-greatest advantage which life supplies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Upon my inquiring about his early life, he
-replied: “I was born in a little southeastern
-Ohio village—Martin’s Ferry,—which had
-little of what people deem advantages in
-schools, railroads, or population. I am not
-sure, however, that compensation was not had
-in other things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As to any special talent for literary composition,
-Mr. Howells remarked that he came of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>reading race, which had always loved literature
-in a way, and that it was his inclination
-to read.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Upon this, I ventured to ask: “Would you
-say that, with a leaning toward a special study,
-and good health, a fair start, and perseverance,
-anyone can attain to distinction?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is a probability, only. You may be
-sure that distinction will not come without
-those qualities. The only way to succeed, is to
-have them; although having them will not
-necessarily guarantee distinction. I can only
-say that I began with</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A LOFTY IDEAL.</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“My own youth was not specially marked
-by advantages. There were none, unless you
-can call a small bookcase full of books, which
-my home contained, an advantage. The printing-office
-was my school from a very early date.
-My father thoroughly believed in it, and he
-had his belief as to work, which he illustrated
-as soon as we were old enough to learn the
-trade he followed. We could go to school and
-study, or we could go into the printing-office
-and work, with perhaps an equal chance of
-learning; but we could not be idle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>“And you chose the printing-office?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not wholly. As I recall it, I went to and
-fro between the schoolhouse and the printing-office.
-When I tired of one, I was promptly
-given the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As the world goes now, we were poor.
-My father’s income was never above twelve
-hundred a year, and his family was large; but
-nobody was rich then. We lived in the simple
-fashion of that time and place.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My reading, somehow, went on pretty constantly.
-No doubt my love for it won me a
-chance to devote time to it. The length varied
-with varying times.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sometimes I read but little. There were
-so many years of work—of over-work, indeed,
-which falls to the lot of many,—that I should
-be ashamed to speak of it except in accounting
-for the fact of my little reading. My father
-had sold his paper in Hamilton, and bought
-an interest in another at Dayton, and at that
-time we were all straining our utmost to help
-pay for it. In that period very few hours were
-given to literature. My daily tasks began so
-early, and ended so late, that I had little time,
-even if I had the spirit for reading. Sometimes
-I had to sit up until midnight, waiting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>for telegraphic news, and be up again at dawn
-to deliver the papers, working afterwards at
-the case; but that was only for a few years.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>ACQUIRING A LITERARY STYLE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“When did you find time to seriously apply
-yourself to literature?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think I did so before I really had the
-time. Literary aspirations were stirred in me
-by the great authors whom I successively discovered,
-and I was perpetually imitating the
-writings of these,—modeling some composition
-of my own after theirs, but never willing to
-own it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you attribute your style to the composite
-influence of these various models?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No doubt they had their effect, as a whole,
-but individually I was freed from the last by
-each succeeding author, until at length I came
-to understand that I must be like myself, and
-no other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Had you any conveniences for literary research,
-beyond the bookcase in your home?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If you mean a place to work, I had a narrow,
-little space, under the stairs. There was
-a desk pushed back against the wall, which the
-irregular ceiling sloped down to meet, behind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>it; and at my left was a window, which gave
-a good light on the writing leaf of my desk.
-This was</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>MY WORKSHOP</h3>
-<p class='c017'>for six or seven years,—and it was not at all
-a bad one. It seemed, for a while, so very
-simple and easy to come home in the middle
-of the afternoon, when my task at the printing-office
-was done, and sit down to my books in
-my little study, which I did not finally leave
-until the family were all in bed. My father
-had a decided bent for literature; and, when I
-began to show a liking for it, he was eager to
-direct my choice. This finally changed to
-merely recommending books, and eventually I
-was left to my own judgment,—a perplexed
-and sorrowfully mistaken judgment, at times.”</p>
-<p class='c011'>“In what manner did you manage to read
-the works of all your favorite authors?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My hours in the printing-office began at
-seven and ended at six, with an hour at noon
-for dinner, which I used for putting down such
-verses as had come to me in the morning. As
-soon as supper was over I got out my manuscripts,
-and sawed, and filed, and hammered
-away at my blessed poems, which were little
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>less than imitations, until nine, when I went
-regularly to bed, to rise again at five. Sometimes
-the foreman gave me an afternoon off on
-Saturday, which I devoted to literature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As I questioned further, it was said: “As
-I recall it, my father had secured one of those
-legislative clerkships in 1858, which used to
-fall sometimes to deserving country editors;
-and together we managed and carried out a
-scheme for corresponding with some city
-papers. Going to Columbus, the State Capital,
-we furnished a daily letter giving an account
-of the legislative proceedings, which I mainly
-wrote from the material he helped me to gather.
-The letters found favor, and my father withdrew
-from the work wholly. These letters I
-furnished during two years.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the end of the first winter, a Cincinnati
-paper offered me the city editorship, but one
-night’s round with the reporters at the police
-station satisfied me that I was not meant for
-that kind of work. I then returned home for
-the summer, and spent my time in reading,
-<i>and in sending off poems, which regularly came
-back</i>. I worked in my father’s printing-office;
-but, as soon as my task was done, went home
-to my books, and worked away at them until
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>supper. Then a German bookbinder, with
-whom I was endeavoring to read Heine in the
-original, met me in my father’s editorial room,
-and with a couple of candles on the table between
-us, and our Heine and the dictionary
-before us, we read until we were both tired
-out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As to the influence of this constant writing
-and constant study, Mr. Howells remarked:
-“It was not without its immediate use. I
-learned</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HOW TO CHOOSE BETWEEN WORDS,</h3>
-<p class='c017'>after a study of their fitness; and, though I
-often employed them decoratively, and with no
-vital sense of their qualities, still, in mere decoration,
-they had to be chosen intelligently, and
-after some thought about their structure and
-meaning. I could not imitate great writers
-without imitating their method, which was to
-the last degree intelligent. They knew what
-they were doing, and, although I did not always
-know what I was doing, they made me
-wish to know, and ashamed of not knowing.
-The result was beneficial.”</p>
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Howells then spoke of his astonishment,
-when one day he was at work as usual in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>printing-office at home, upon being invited to
-take a place upon a Republican newspaper at
-Columbus, the Capital; where he was given
-charge of the news department. This included
-the literary notices and book reviews, to which,
-at once, he gave his prime attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When did you begin to contribute to the
-literature of the day?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If you mean, when did I begin to attempt
-to contribute, I should need to fix an early date,
-for I early had experience with rejected manuscripts.
-One of my pieces, upon the familiar
-theme of Spring, was the first thing I ever had
-in print. My father offered it to the editor of
-the paper I worked on in Columbus, where we
-were then living, and I first knew what he had
-done, when with mingled shame and pride, I
-saw it in the journal. In the tumult of my
-emotions, I promised myself that if I ever got
-through that experience safely, I would never
-suffer anything else of mine to be published;
-but it was not long before I offered the editor
-a poem, myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When did you publish your first story?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My next venture was a story in the Ik
-Marvel manner, which it was my misfortune
-to carry into print. I did not really write it,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>but composed it, rather, in type, at the case.
-It was not altogether imitated from Ik Marvel,
-for I drew upon the easier art of Dickens, at
-times, and helped myself out in places with
-bold parodies of ‘Bleak House.’ It was all
-very well at the beginning, but I had not
-reckoned with the future sufficiently to start
-with any clear ending in my mind; and, as I
-went on, I began to find myself more and more
-in doubt about it. My material gave out; my
-incidents failed me; the characters wavered,
-and threatened to perish in my hands. To
-crown my misery, there grew up an impatience
-with the story among its readers; and this
-found its way to me one day, when I overheard
-an old farmer, who came in for his paper, say
-that he ‘did not think that story amounted to
-much.’ I did not think so either, but it was
-deadly to have it put into words, and how I
-escaped the moral effect of the stroke I do not
-know. Somehow, I managed to bring the
-wretched thing to a close, and to live it slowly
-down.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE FATE FOLLOWING COLLABORATION</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“My next contribution to literature was
-jointly with John J. Piatt, the poet, who had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>worked with me as a boy in the printing-office
-at Columbus. We met in Columbus, where I
-was then an editor, and we made our first
-literary venture together in a volume entitled,
-‘Poems of Two Friends.’ <i>The volume became
-instantly and lastingly unknown to fame</i>;
-the West waited, as it always does, to hear
-what the East should say. The East said nothing,
-and two-thirds of the small edition of five
-hundred copies came back upon the publisher’s
-hands. This did not deter me, however, from
-contributing to the periodicals, which from
-time to time, accepted my efforts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I remained as an editor, in Columbus, until
-1861, when I was appointed</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>CONSUL AT VENICE.</h3>
-<p class='c017'>I really wanted to go to Germany, that I might
-carry forward my studies in German literature;
-and I first applied for the Consulate at
-Munich. The powers at Washington thought
-it quite the same thing to offer me Rome, but
-I found that the income of the Roman Consulate
-would not give me a living, and I was
-forced to decline it. Then the President’s private
-secretaries, Mr. John Nicolay and Mr.
-John Hay, who did not know me, except as a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>young Westerner who had written poems in
-the ‘Atlantic Monthly,’ asked me how I would
-like Venice, promising that the salary would be
-put up to $1,000 a year. It was really put up
-to $1,500, and I accepted. I had four years of
-nearly uninterrupted leisure at Venice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Was it easier, when you returned from
-Venice?”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Not at all. On my return to America, my
-literary life took such form that most of my
-reading was done for review. I wrote at first
-a good many of the lighter criticisms in ‘The
-Nation;’ and then I went to Boston, to become
-assistant editor of ‘The Atlantic Monthly,’
-where I wrote the literary notices for that
-periodical for four or five years; then I became
-editor until 1881. And I have had some sort of
-close relation with magazines ever since.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Would you say that all literary success is
-very difficult to achieve?” I ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“All that is enduring.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“It seems to me ours is an age when fame
-comes quickly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Speaking of quickly made reputations,”
-said Mr. Howells, meditatively, “did you ever
-hear of Alexander Smith? He was a poet who,
-in the fifties, was proclaimed immortal by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>critics, and ranked with Shakespeare. I myself
-read him with an ecstasy which, when I
-look over his work to-day, seems ridiculous.
-His poem, ‘Life-Drama,’ was heralded as an
-epic, and set alongside of ‘Paradise Lost.’ I
-cannot tell how we all came out of this craze,
-but the reading world is very susceptible to
-such lunacies. He is not the only third-rate
-poet who has been thus apotheosized, before
-and since. You might have envied his great
-success, as I certainly did; but it was not success,
-after all; and I am sure that real success
-is always difficult to achieve.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>MY LITERARY EXPERIENCE</h3>
-
-<p class='c017'>“Do you believe that success comes to those
-who have a special bent or taste, which they
-cultivate by hard work?”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“I can only answer that out of <i>my literary
-experience</i>. For my own part, I believe I have
-<i>never got any good from a book, that I did not
-read merely because I wanted to read it</i>. I
-think this may be applied to anything a person
-does. The book, I know, which you read from
-a sense of duty, or because for any reason you
-must, is apt to yield you little. This, I think,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>is also true of everything, and the endeavor
-that does one good—and lasting good,—is <i>the
-endeavor one makes with pleasure</i>. Labor
-done in another spirit will serve in a way, but
-pleasurable labor brings, on the whole, I think,
-the greatest reward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>Referring again to his early years, it was remarked:
-“A definite literary ambition grew
-up in me; and in the long reveries of the afternoon,
-when I was distributing my case in the
-printing-office, I fashioned a future of over-powering
-magnificence and undying celebrity.
-I should be ashamed to say what literary triumphs
-I achieved in those preposterous deliriums.
-But I realize now that such dreams are
-nerving, and sustain one in an otherwise barren
-struggle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“Were you ever tempted and willing to
-abandon your object of a literary life for something
-else?”</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“I was, once. My first and only essay
-aside from literature was in <i>the realm of law</i>.
-It was arranged with a United States Senator
-that I should study law in his office. I tried it
-a month, but almost from the first day, I
-yearned to return to my books. <i>I had not only</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span><i>to go back to literature, but to the printing-office,
-and I gladly chose to do it,—a step I
-never regretted.</i>”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AS TO A HAPPY LIFE,</h3>
-<p class='c017'>it was said by Mr. Howells, at the close of our
-interview:—</p>
-<p class='c011'>“I have come to see life, not as the chase of
-a forever-impossible personal happiness, but
-as <i>a field for endeavor toward the happiness of
-the whole human family</i>. There is no other
-success. I know, indeed, of nothing more
-subtly satisfying and cheering than a knowledge
-of the real good will and appreciation of
-others. Such happiness does not come with
-money, nor does it flow from a fine physical
-state. It cannot be bought. But it is the keenest
-joy, after all; and the toiler’s truest and
-best reward.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>THE richest man in the United States,
-John Davidson Rockefeller, has consented
-to break his rule never to talk
-for publication; and he has told me the story
-of his early struggles and triumphs, and given
-utterance to some strikingly interesting observations
-anent the same. In doing so, he was
-influenced by the argument that there is something
-of helpfulness, of inspiration, in the
-career of every self-made man.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While many such careers have been prolific of
-vivid contrasts, this one is simply marvelous.
-Whatever may be said by political economists
-of the dangers of vast aggregations of wealth
-in the hands of the few, there can be no question
-of the extraordinary interest attaching to
-the life story of a man who was a farm laborer
-at the age of fifteen, who left school at eighteen,
-because he felt it to be his duty to care for his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>mother and brother, and who, at the zenith of
-his business career, has endowed Chicago University
-with $7,500,000 out of a fortune estimated
-at over $300,000,000,—probably the
-largest single fortune on earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The story opens in a fertile valley in Tioga
-County, New York, near the village of Richford,
-where John D. Rockefeller was born on
-his father’s farm in July, 1838. The parents of
-the boy were church-going, conscientious, debt-abhorring
-folk, who preferred the independence
-of a few acres to a mortgaged domain. They
-were Americans to the backbone, intelligent,
-industrious people, not very poor and certainly
-not very rich, for at fourteen John hired out to
-neighboring farmers during the summer
-months, in order to earn his way and not be
-dependent upon those he loved. His father
-was able to attend to the little farm himself,
-and thus it happened that the youth spent several
-summers away from home, toiling from
-sunrise to sunset, and sharing the humble life
-of the people he served.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS EARLY DREAM AND PURPOSE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Did the tired boy, peering from his attic window,
-ever dream of his future?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>He said to a youthful companion of Richford,
-a farmer’s boy like himself: “I would
-like to own all the land in this valley, as far as
-I can see. I sometimes dream of wealth and
-power. Do you think we shall ever be worth
-one hundred thousand dollars, you and I? I
-hope to,—some day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Who can estimate the influence such a life as
-this must have had upon the future multi-millionaire?
-I asked Mr. Rockefeller about this,
-and found him enthusiastic over the advantages
-which he had received from his rural surroundings,
-and full of faith in the ability of the
-country boy to surpass his city cousin.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To my mind,” he said, “there is something
-unfortunate in being born in a city. Most
-young men raised in New York and other large
-centers have not had the struggles which come
-to us who were reared in the country. It is a
-noticeable fact that the country men are crowding
-out the city fellows who have wealthy
-fathers. They are willing to do more work and
-go through more for the sake of winning success
-in the end. Sons of wealthy parents
-haven’t a ghost of a show in competition with
-the fellows who come from the country with a
-determination to do something in the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>The next step in the young man’s life was
-his going to Cleveland, Ohio, in his sixteenth
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That was a great change in my life,” said
-he. “Going to Cleveland was my first experience
-in a great city, and I shall never forget
-those years. I began work there as an office-boy,
-and learned a great deal about business
-methods while filling that position. But what
-benefited me most in going to Cleveland was
-the new insight I gained as to what a great
-place the world really is. I had plenty of ambition
-then, and saw that, if I was to accomplish
-much, I would have to work very, very
-hard, indeed.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SCHOOL DAYS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>He found time, during the year 1854, to attend
-the sessions of the school which is now
-known as the Central High School. It was a
-brick edifice, surrounded by grounds which
-contained a number of hickory trees. It has
-long since been superseded by a larger and
-handsomer building, but Andrew J. Freese, the
-teacher, is still living. It is one of the proudest
-recollections of this delightful old gentleman’s
-life that John D. Rockefeller went to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>school with him. I visited him at his residence
-in Cleveland the other day, and he said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“John was one of the best boys I had. He
-was always polite, but when the other boys
-threw hickory clubs at him, or attempted any
-undue familiarities with him, he would stop
-smiling and sail into them. Young Hanna—Marcus
-A. Hanna,—who was also a pupil,
-learned this, to his cost, more than once, and
-so did young Jones, the present Nevada senator.
-I have had several very distinguished pupils,
-you see, and one of my girls is now Mrs. John
-D. Rockefeller. I had Edward Wolcott, the
-Colorado senator, later on. Yes, John was
-about as intelligent and well-behaved a chap as
-I ever had. Here is one of his essays which
-you may copy, if you wish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Rockefeller, I am quite sure, will pardon
-me for copying his composition at this late day,
-for its tone and subject matter reflect credit
-upon him:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Freedom is one of the most desirable of all
-blessings. Even the smallest bird or insect loves
-to be free. Take, for instance, a robin that has
-always been free to fly from tree to tree, and
-sing its cheerful song from day to day,—catch
-it, and put it into a cage which is to it nothing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>less than a prison, and, although it may be there
-tended with the choicest care, yet it is not content.
-How eloquently does it plead, though in
-silence, for liberty. From day to day it sits
-mournfully upon its perch, meditating, as it
-were, some way for its escape, and when at
-last this is effected, how cheerfully does it wing
-its way out from its gloomy prison-house to
-sing undisturbed in the branches of the first
-trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If even the birds of the air love freedom, is
-it not natural that man, the lord of creation,
-should? I reply that it is, and that it is a
-violation of the laws of our country, and the
-laws of our God, that man should hold his fellowman
-in bondage. Yet how many thousands
-there are at the present time, even in our own
-country, who are bound down by cruel masters
-to toil beneath the scorching sun of the South.
-How can America, under such circumstances,
-call herself free? Is it extending freedom by
-granting to the South one of the largest divisions
-of land that she possesses for the purpose
-of holding slaves? It is a freedom that,
-if not speedily checked, will end in the ruin
-of our country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was greatly to the regret of the teacher
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>that John came to him one day to announce his
-purpose to leave school. Mr. Freese urged him
-to remain two years longer, in order that he
-might complete the course, but the young man
-told him he felt obliged to earn more money
-than he was getting, because of his desire to
-provide for his mother and brother. He had
-received an offer, he said, of a place on the
-freight docks as a bill clerk, and this job would
-take him away from his studies.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A RAFT OF HOOP POLES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>A short time afterwards, when Mr. Freese
-visited his former pupil at the freight dock, he
-found the young man seated on a bale of goods,
-bill book and pencil in hand. Pointing to a raft
-of hoop poles in the water, John told his caller
-that he had purchased them from a Canadian
-who had brought them across Lake Erie, expecting
-to sell them. Failing in this, the owner
-gladly accepted a cash offer from young Rockefeller,
-who named a price below the usual market
-rates. The young man explained that he
-<i>had saved a little money out of his wages</i>, and
-that this was his first speculation. He afterwards
-told Mr. Freese that he rafted the purchase
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>himself to a flour mill, and disposed of
-his bargain at a profit of fifty dollars.<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c019'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f3'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This hoop pole story is matched by another, related
-by a friend, of Rockefeller’s later warehouse days in
-Cleveland. He one day bought a lot of beans. He
-bought them cheap, because they were damaged. Instead
-of selling them at a slight advance, as most dealers
-would have done, he spent all his spare time, for weeks,
-in the attic of his warehouse, sorting over those beans.
-He took out all the blackened and injured ones, and in
-the end he got a fancy price for the remainder, because
-they were of extra quality.</p>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE ODOR OF OIL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>It was Mr. Freese, too, who first got the
-young man interested in oil. They were using
-sperm oil in those days, at a dollar and a half
-a gallon. Somebody had found natural petroleum,
-thick, slimy, and foul-smelling, in the
-Pennsylvania creeks, and a quantity of it had
-been received in Cleveland by a next-door
-neighbor of the schoolmaster. The neighbor
-thought it could be utilized in some way, but
-his experiments were as crude as the ill-favored
-stuff itself. These consisted of boiling,
-burning, and otherwise testing the oil, and the
-only result was the incurring of the disfavor of
-the near-by residents. The young man became
-interested at once. He, too, experimented with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>the black slime, draining off the clearer portions
-and touching matches to it. The flames
-were sickly, yellow, and malodorous.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>There must be some way of deodorizing
-this oil</i>,” said John, “<i>and I will find it</i>. There
-ought to be a good sale for it for illuminating
-purposes, if the good oil can be separated from
-the sediment, and that awful smell gotten rid
-of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>How well the young man profited by the accidental
-meeting is a matter of history. But
-I am digressing.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS FIRST LEDGER, AND THE ITEMS IN IT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>While in Cleveland, slaving away at his
-tasks, Mr. Rockefeller was training himself for
-the more busy days to come. He kept a small
-ledger in which he entered all his receipts and
-expenditures, and I had the privilege of examining
-this interesting little book, and having its
-contents explained to me. It was nothing more
-than a small, paper-backed memorandum book.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When I looked this book up the other day,
-I thought I had but the cover,” said Mr. Rockefeller,
-“but, on examination, I perceived that I
-had utilized the cover to write on. In those
-days I was very economical, just as I am economical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>now. Economy is a virtue. I hadn’t
-seen my little ledger for a long time, when I
-found it among some old things. It is more
-than forty-two years ago since I wrote what it
-contains. I called it ‘Ledger A,’ and I wouldn’t
-exchange it now for all the ledgers in New
-York city and their contents. A glance through
-it shows me how carefully I kept account of
-my receipts and disbursements. I only wish
-more young men could be induced to keep accounts
-like this nowadays. It would go far
-toward teaching them the value of money.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>Every young man should take care of his
-money. I think it is a man’s duty to make all
-the money he can, keep all he can, and give
-away all he can.</i> I have followed this principle
-religiously all my life, as is evidenced in this
-book. It tells me just what I did with my money
-during my first few years in business. Between
-September, 1855, and January, 1856, I received
-just fifty dollars. Out of this sum I paid for
-my washing and my board, and managed to
-save a little besides. I find, in looking through
-the book, that I gave a cent to Sunday school
-every Sunday. It wasn’t much, but it was all
-that I could afford to give to that particular
-object. <i>What I could afford to give to the</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span><i>various religious and charitable works, I gave
-regularly. It is a good habit for a young man
-to get into.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“During my second year in Cleveland, I
-earned twenty-five dollars a month. I was beginning
-to be a capitalist,” said Mr. Rockefeller,
-“and I suppose I ought to have considered
-myself a criminal for having so much
-money. I paid all my own bills at this time,
-and had some money to give away. I also
-had the happiness of saving some. I am not
-sure, but I was more independent then than
-now. I couldn’t buy the most fashionable cut
-of clothing, but I dressed well enough. I certainly
-did not buy any clothes I couldn’t pay
-for, as some young men do that I know of. I
-didn’t make any obligations I could not meet,
-and <i>my earnest advice is for every young man
-to live within his means. One of the swiftest
-‘toboggan slides’ I know of, is for a young
-fellow just starting out into the world to go
-into debt.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“During the time between November, 1855,
-and April, 1856, I paid out just nine dollars
-and nine cents for clothing. And there is one
-item that was certainly extravagant as I usually
-wore mittens in the winter. This item is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>for fur gloves, two dollars and a half. In this
-same period <i>I gave away five dollars and fifty-eight
-cents. In one month I gave to foreign
-missions, ten cents, to the mite society, fifty
-cents, and twelve cents to the Five Points Mission,
-in New York.</i> I wasn’t living here then,
-of course, but I suppose I thought the Mission
-needed money. These little contributions of
-mine were not large, but they brought me into
-direct contact with church work, and that has
-been a benefit to me all my life. It is a mistake
-for a man to think that he must be rich to help
-others.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'><i>He earned and saved ten thousand dollars
-before he was twenty-five years old.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before he attained his majority, Rockefeller
-formed a partnership with another young man
-named Hewett, and began a warehouse and
-produce business. This was the natural outgrowth
-of his freight clerkship on the docks.
-<i>In five years, he had amassed about ten thousand
-dollars</i> besides earning a reputation for
-business capacity and probity.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>HE REMEMBERED THE OIL</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>He never forgot those experiments with the
-crude oil. Discoveries became more and more
-frequent in the Pennsylvania oil territory.
-There was a rush of speculators to the new
-land of fortune. Men owning impoverished
-farms suddenly found themselves rich. Thousands
-of excited men bid wildly against each
-other for newly-shot wells, paying fabulous
-sums occasionally for dry holes.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>KEEPING HIS HEAD</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>John D. Rockefeller looked the entire field
-over carefully and calmly. Never for a moment
-did he lose his head. His Cleveland bankers and
-business friends had asked him to purchase
-some wells, if he saw fit, offering to back him
-up with $75,000 for his own investment [he
-was worth about $10,000 at the time], and to
-put in $400,000 more on his report.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><i>The business judgment of this young man
-at twenty-five was so good, that his neighbors
-were willing to invest half a million dollars at
-his bidding.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He returned to Cleveland without investing
-a dollar. Instead of joining the mad crowd
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>of producers, he sagaciously determined to begin
-at the other end of the business,—the refining
-of the product.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THERE WAS MORE MONEY IN A REFINERY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The use of petroleum was dangerous at that
-time, on account of the highly inflammable
-gases it contained. Many persons stuck to
-candles and sperm oil through fear of an explosion
-if they used the new illuminant. The
-process of removing these superfluous gases by
-refining, or distilling, as it was then called, was
-in its infancy. There were few men who knew
-anything about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Among Rockefeller’s acquaintances in Cleveland
-was one of these men. His name was
-Samuel Andrews. He had worked in a distillery,
-and was familiar with the process. He
-believed that there was a great business to be
-built up by removing the gases from the crude
-oil and making it safe for household use.
-Rockefeller listened to him, and became convinced
-that he was right. Here was a field as
-wide as the world, limited only by the production
-of crude oil. It was a proposition on which
-he could figure and make sure of the result. It
-was just the thing Rockefeller had been looking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>for. He decided to leave the production of
-oil to others, and to devote his attention to preparing
-it for market.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Andrews was a brother commission merchant.
-The two started a refinery, each closing
-out his former business connection. In two
-weeks it was running night and day to fill orders.
-So great was the demand, and so great
-was the judgment of young Rockefeller,—seeing
-what no one else had seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A second refinery had to be built at once, and
-in two years their plants were turning out two
-thousand barrels of refined petroleum per day.
-Henry M. Flagler, already wealthy, came into
-the firm, the name of which then became
-Rockefeller, Flagler and Andrews. More refineries
-were built, not only at Cleveland, but
-also at other advantageous points. Competing
-refineries were bought or rendered ineffective
-by the cutting of prices.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is related that Mr. Andrews became one
-day dissatisfied, and he was asked,—“What
-will you take for your interest?” Andrews
-wrote carelessly on a piece of paper,—“One
-million dollars.” Within twenty-four hours he
-was handed that amount; Mr. Rockefeller saying,—“Cheaper
-at one million than ten.” In
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>building up the refinery business Rockefeller
-was the head; the others were the hands. He
-was always the general commanding, the tactician.
-He made the plans and his associates
-carried them out. Here was the post for which
-he had fitted himself, and in which his genius
-for planning had full sway. In the conduct of
-the refinery affairs, as in every enterprise in
-which he has taken part, he exemplified another
-rule to which he had adhered from his boyhood
-days. He was the leader in whatever he undertook.
-In going into any undertaking, John D.
-Rockefeller has made it his rule to have the
-chief authority in his own hands or to have
-nothing to do with the matter.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>STANDARD OIL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>In 1870, when Mr. Rockefeller was thirty-two
-years old, the business was merged into the
-Standard Oil Company, starting with a capital
-of one million dollars. Other pens have written
-the later story of that great corporation;
-how it started pipe lines to carry the oil to the
-seaboard; how it earned millions in by-products
-which had formerly run to waste; how it covered
-the markets of the world in its keen search
-for trade, distancing all competition, and cheapening
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>its own processes so that its dividends in
-one year, 1899, amounted to $23,000,000 in
-excess of the fixed dividend upon the whole
-capital stock. This is the outcome of thirty
-years’ development. The corporation is now
-the greatest business combination of modern
-times, or of any age of the world. Mr. Rockefeller’s
-annual income from his holdings of
-Standard Oil stock is estimated at about sixteen
-millions of dollars.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>MR. ROCKEFELLER’S PERSONALITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The brains of all this, the owner of the largest
-percentage of the stock in the parent corporation,
-and in most of the lesser ones, is now
-sixty-two years old. His personality is simple
-and unaffected, his tastes domestic, and the
-trend of his thoughts decidedly religious. His
-Cleveland residential estate is superb, covering
-a large tract of park-like land,—but even there
-he has shown his unselfishness by donating a
-large portion of his land to the city for park
-purposes. His New York home is not a pretentious
-place,—solid, but by no means elegant
-in outward appearance. Between the two
-homes he divides his time with his wife and
-children. He is an earnest and hardworking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>member of the Fifth Avenue Baptist Church,
-in New York, and does much to promote the
-good work carried on by that organization. He
-is particularly interested in the Sunday-school
-work.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AT THE OFFICE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>He arises early in the morning, at his home,
-and, after a light breakfast, attends to some of
-his personal affairs there. He is always early
-on hand at the great Standard Oil building on
-lower Broadway, New York, and, during the
-day, he transacts business connected with the
-management of that vast corporation. There
-is hardly one of our business men of whom the
-public at large knows so little. He avoids publicity
-as most men would the plague. The result
-is that he is the only one of our very wealthy
-men who maintains the reputation of being different
-from the ordinary run of mortals. To
-most newspaper readers, he is a man of mystery,
-a sort of financial wizard who sits in his
-office and heaps up wealth after the fashion of
-Aladdin and other fairy-tale heroes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All this is wide of the mark. It would be
-hard to find a more commonplace, matter-of-fact
-man than John D. Rockefeller. His tall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>form, with the suggestion of a stoop in it, his
-pale, thoughtful face and reserved manner,
-suggest the scholar or professional man rather
-than an industrial Hercules or a Napoleon of
-finance. He speaks in a slow, deliberate manner,
-weighing each word. There is nothing
-impulsive or bombastic about him. But his
-conversation impresses one as consisting of
-about one hundred per cent. of cold, compact,
-boiled-down common sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Here is to be noted one characteristic of the
-great oil magnate which has helped to make
-him what he is. The popular idea of a multi-millionaire
-is a man who has taken big risks,
-and has come out luckily. He is a living refutation
-of this conception. He is careful and
-cautious by nature, and he has made these traits
-habitual for a lifetime; he conducts all his affairs
-on the strictest business principles.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>FORESIGHT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The qualities which have made him so successful
-are largely those which go to the making
-of any successful business man,—industry,
-thrift, perseverance, and foresight. Three of
-these qualities would have made him a rich
-man; the last has distinguished him as the richest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>man. One of his business associates said of
-him, the other day:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe the secret of his success, so far
-as there is any secret, lies in power of foresight,
-which often seems to his associates to be wonderful.
-It comes simply from his habit of looking
-at every side of a question, of weighing the
-favorable and unfavorable features of a situation,
-and of sifting out the inevitable result
-through his unfailing good judgment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This is his own personal statement, put into
-other words, so it may be accepted as true.
-The encouraging part of it is that, while such
-foresight as Rockefeller displays may be ascribed
-partly to natural endowment, both he
-and his friend say that it is more largely a
-matter of habit, made effective by continual
-practice.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HYGIENE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>At noon he takes a very simple lunch at his
-club, or at some downtown restaurant. The
-lunch usually consists of a bowl of bread and
-milk. He remains at the office until late in the
-afternoon, and before dinner he takes some
-exercise. <i>In winter, he skates when possible.</i>
-And at other seasons of the year he nearly always
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>drives in the park or on the avenues.
-Mr. Rockefeller has great faith in fresh air as a
-tonic.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AT HOME</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The evenings are nearly always spent at
-home, for neither Mr. Rockefeller nor any of
-the children are fond of “society,” as the word
-is understood in New York. The children
-seem to have inherited many of their father’s
-sensible ideas, and John D. Rockefeller, Jr., has
-apparently escaped the fate of most rich men’s
-sons. He has a deep sense of responsibility as
-the heir-apparent to so much wealth; and, since
-his graduation from college, he has devoted
-himself to a business career, starting at the bottom
-and working upward, step by step. It is
-now generally known that he has been very
-successful in his business ventures, and he bids
-fair to become a worthy successor to his father.
-He is now actively engaged in important philanthropic
-enterprises in New York. Miss Bessie
-became the wife of a poor clergyman of
-the Baptist Church in Cleveland; while Miss
-Alta is married to a prominent young business
-man in Chicago.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>PHILANTHROPY</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Mr. Rockefeller has during many years
-turned over to his children a great many letters
-from needy people, asking them to exercise
-their own judgment in distributing charities.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While he has himself given away millions
-for education and charity, he would have given
-more were it not for his dread of seeming ostentatious.
-But he never gives indiscriminately,
-nor out of hand. When a charity appeals to
-him, he investigates it thoroughly, just as he
-would a business scheme. If he decides that
-its object is worthy, he gives liberally; otherwise,
-not a cent can be got out of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It may be imagined that such a man is busy
-to the full limit of his working capacity. This
-is true. He is too busy for any of the pastimes
-and pleasures in which most wealthy men seek
-diversion. He is thoroughly devoted to his
-home and family, and spends as much as possible
-of his time with them. He is a man who
-views life seriously, but in his quiet way he can
-get as much enjoyment out of a good story or
-a meeting with an old friend as can any other
-man.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>PERSEVERANCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>When I asked Mr. Rockefeller what he considers
-has most helped him in obtaining success
-in business, he answered: “It was early training,
-and the fact that I was willing to persevere.
-I do not think there is any other quality
-so essential to success of any kind as the quality
-of perseverance. It overcomes almost everything,
-even nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is to be said of his business enterprises,
-looking at them in a large way, that he has
-given to the world good honest oil, of standard
-quality; that his employees are always well
-paid; that he has given away more money in
-benevolence than any other business man in
-America. And everything about the man indicates
-that he is likely to “persevere” in the
-course he has so long pursued, turning his
-vast wealth into institutes for public service.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A GENIUS FOR MONEY MAKING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“There are men born with a genius for
-money-making,” says Mathews. “They have
-the instinct of accumulation. The talent and
-the inclination to convert dollars into doubloons
-by bargains or shrewd investments are in them
-just as strongly marked and as uncontrollable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>as were the ability and the inclination of
-Shakespeare to produce Hamlet and Othello,
-of Raphael to paint his cartoons, of Beethoven
-to compose his symphonies, or Morse to invent
-an electric telegraph. As it would have been a
-gross dereliction of duty, a shameful perversion
-of gifts, had these latter disregarded the instincts
-of their genius and engaged in the
-scramble for wealth, so would a Rothschild, an
-Astor, and a Peabody have sinned had they
-done violence to their natures, and thrown their
-energies into channels where they would have
-proved dwarfs and not giants.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The opportunity which came to young
-Rockefeller does not occur many times in many
-ages: and in a generous interpretation of his
-opportunity he has already invested a great
-deal of his earnings in permanently useful
-philanthropies.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>The Author of the Battle Hymn of the Republic—Her Views of Education for Young Women</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>A&nbsp;POET, author, lecturer, wit and conversationalist,
-Mrs. Julia Ward Howe
-unites with the attributes of a tender,
-womanly nature—which has made her the idol
-of her husband and children—the sterner virtues
-of a reformer; the unflinching courage
-which dares to stand with a small minority in
-the cause of right; the indomitable perseverance
-and force of character which persist in the
-demand for justice in face of the determined
-opposition of narrow prejudice and old-time
-conservatism.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Although more Bostonian than the Bostonians
-themselves, Mrs. Howe first saw the light
-in New York, and has spent much of her later
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>life at Newport. Born in 1819, in a stately
-mansion near the Bowling Green, then the most
-fashionable quarter of New York, she was the
-fourth child of Samuel Ward and Julia Cutler
-Ward, people of unusual culture, refinement,
-and high ideals. Mr. Ward was a man of spotless
-honor and business integrity; and, although
-not wealthy as compared with the millionaires
-of to-day, his fortune was ample
-enough to surround his wife and children with
-all the luxuries and refinements that the most
-fastidious nature could crave. Mrs. Ward possessed
-a rare combination of personal charms
-and mental gifts, which endeared her to all who
-had the privilege of knowing her. All too soon,
-the death angel came and bore away the lovely
-young wife and mother, then in her twenty-eighth
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Rousing himself, with a great effort, from
-the grief into which the death of his wife had
-plunged him, Mr. Ward devoted himself to the
-training, and education of his children. Far
-in advance of his age in the matter of higher
-education for women he selected as the tutor
-of his daughters the learned Doctor Joseph
-Green Cogswell, with instruction to teach
-them the full curriculum of Harvard college.</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>“LITTLE MISS WARD”</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The scholarly and refined atmosphere of her
-father’s home, which was the resort of the most
-distinguished men of letters of the day, was an
-admirable school for the development of the
-literary and philosophic mind of the “little
-Miss Ward,” as Mr. Ward’s eldest daughter
-had been called from childhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Learned even beyond advanced college
-graduates of to-day, an accomplished linguist,
-a musical amateur of great promise, the young
-and beautiful Miss Julia Ward, of Bond street,
-soon became a leader of the cultured and fashionable
-circle in which she moved. In the
-series, “Authors at Home,” by M. C. Sherwood,
-we get a glimpse of her, about that time,
-in a whimsical entry from the diary of a Miss
-Hamilton, written at the time of the return
-of Doctor Howe, from Greece, whither he had
-gone to fight the Turks:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I walked down Broadway with all the
-fashion and met the pretty blue stocking, Miss
-Julia Ward, with her admirer, Doctor Howe,
-just home from Europe. She had on a blue
-satin cloak and a white muslin dress. I looked
-to see if she had on blue stockings, but I think
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>not. I suspect that her stockings were pink,
-and she wore low slippers, as grandmamma
-does. They say she dreams in Italian and
-quotes French verses. She sang very prettily
-at a party last evening. I noticed how white
-her hands were. Still, though attractive, the
-muse is not handsome.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SHE MARRIED A REFORMER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Soon after the loss of her father, in 1839,
-Miss Ward paid the first of a series of visits to
-Boston, where she met, among other distinguished
-people who became life-long friends,
-Sarah Margaret Fuller, Horace Mann, Charles
-Sumner, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. In 1843
-she was married to the director of the institute
-for the blind, in South Boston, the physician
-and reformer, Doctor Samuel G. Howe, of
-whom Sydney Smith spoke—referring to the
-remarkable results attained in his education of
-Laura Bridgman,—as “a modern Pygmalion
-who has put life into a statue.” Immediately
-after their marriage, Doctor and Mrs. Howe
-sailed for Europe, making London their first
-stopping place. There they met many famous
-men and women, among them Charles Dickens,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>Thomas Carlyle, Sydney Smith, Thomas
-Moore, the Duchess of Sutherland, John Forster,
-Samuel Rogers, Richard Monckton
-Milnes, and many others. After an extensive
-continental tour, including the Netherlands,
-Switzerland, Germany, France, and Italy, Doctor
-and Mrs. Howe returned home and took up
-their residence in South Boston.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>One of her friends has said: “Mrs. Howe
-wrote leading articles from her cradle;” and it
-is true that at seventeen, at least, she was an
-anonymous but valued contributor to the <i>New
-York Magazine</i>, then a prominent periodical.
-In 1854, her first volume of poems was published.
-She named it “Passion Flowers,” and
-the Boston world of letters hailed her as a new
-poet. Though published anonymously, the
-volume at once revealed its author; and Mrs.
-Howe was welcomed into the poetic fraternity
-by such shining lights as Emerson, Whittier,
-Longfellow, Bryant, and Holmes. The poem
-by which the author will be forever enshrined
-in her country’s memory is, <i>par excellence</i>,
-“The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” which,
-like Kipling’s “Recessional,” sang itself at
-once into the heart of the nation. As any
-sketch of Mrs. Howe would be incomplete
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>without the story of the birth of this great
-song of America, it is here given in brief.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>STORY OF THE “BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>It was in the first year of our Civil War that
-Mrs. Howe, in company with her husband and
-friends, visited Washington. During their
-stay in that city, the party went to see a review
-of troops, which, however, was interrupted by
-a movement of the enemy, and had to be put
-off for the day. The carriage in which Mrs.
-Howe was seated with her friends was surrounded
-by armed men; and, as they rode
-along, she began to sing, to the great delight
-of the soldiers, “John Brown.” “Good for
-you!” shouted the boys in blue, who, with a
-will, took up the refrain. Mrs. Howe then
-began conversing with her friends on the momentous
-events of the hour, and expressed the
-strong desire she felt to write some words
-which might be sung to this stirring tune, adding
-that she feared she would never be able to
-do so. “She went to sleep,” says her daughter,
-Maude Howe Eliot, “full of thoughts of
-battle, and awoke before dawn the next morning
-to find the desired verses immediately present
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>to her mind. She sprang from her bed,
-and in the dim gray light found a pen, and
-paper, whereon she wrote, scarcely seeing
-them, the lines of the poem. Returning to her
-couch, she was soon asleep, but not until she
-had said to herself, ‘I like this better than anything
-I have ever written before.’”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“EIGHTY YEARS YOUNG”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Of Mrs. Howe it may very fittingly be said
-that she is eighty years young. Her blue eye
-retains its brightness, and her dignified carriage
-betokens none of the feebleness of age.
-Above all, her mind seems to hold, in a marvelous
-degree, its youthful vigor and elasticity;
-a fact that especially impressed me as the author
-of “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”
-expressed her views on the desirability of a college
-training for girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The girls who go to college,” said Mrs.
-Howe, “are very much in request, I should say
-for everything,—certainly for teaching. Then,
-naturally, if they wish to follow literature, they
-have a very great advantage over those who
-have not had the benefit of a college course,
-having a liberal education to begin with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>“Which is the greater advantage to a girl,
-to have talent or great perseverance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In order to accomplish anything really
-worth doing, I think great perseverance is of
-the first importance. On the other hand, one
-cannot do a great deal without talent, while
-special talent without perseverance never
-amounts to much. I once heard Mr. Emerson
-say, ‘Genius without character is mere friskiness;’
-and we all know of highly gifted people,
-who, because lacking the essential quality of
-perseverance, accomplish very little in the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you think the college girl will exercise
-a greater influence on modern progress and the
-civilization of the future than her untrained
-sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, very much greater,” was the quick,
-emphatic reply. “In the first place, I think
-that college-bred girls are quite as likely to
-marry as others, and when a college girl marries,
-then the whole family is lifted to a higher
-plane, the natural result of the well-trained,
-cultivated mind. Mothers of old, you know,
-were very ignorant. Indeed, it is sad to think
-what few advantages they had. Of course,
-some of them had opportunities to study alone,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>but this solitary study could not accomplish
-for them what the colleges, with their corps of
-specialists and trained professors, are doing
-for the young women of to-day.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE IDEAL COLLEGE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Speaking of the advantages and disadvantages
-of coeducational institutions, Mrs. Howe
-said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“While there are many advantages in coeducation,
-there are also some dangers. The
-great advantage consists in the mingling of
-both sorts of mind, the masculine and the feminine.
-This gives a completeness that cannot
-otherwise be obtained. I have observed that
-when committees are made up of both men and
-women, we get a roundness and completeness
-that are lacking when the membership is composed
-of either sex alone; and so in college
-recitations, where the boys present their side
-and the girls theirs, we get better results. This,
-of course, is natural. Fortunately, so far,
-scandals have been very rare, if found at all,
-in coeducation at colleges. Many people, however,
-would not care to trust their children,
-nor would we send every girl, to such colleges;
-and, for this reason, I am glad that we have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>women’s colleges. I think, however, that, if
-the students are at all earnest, and have high
-ideals set before them, the coeducational is the
-ideal college; for the course in these colleges
-is like a great intellectual race, which arouses
-and stimulates all the nobler faculties.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What influence do you think environment
-has on one’s career,—on success in life?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you mean by environment?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I mean especially the sort of people
-with whom one is associated; their order of
-mind?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think it has a very important effect. If
-we are kept perpetually under lowering influences—lowering
-both morally and æsthetically,—the
-tendency will inevitably be to drag us
-down. I say æsthetically, because I think in
-that sense good taste is a part of good morals.
-You can, of course, have good taste without
-good morals; but with morality there is a certain
-feeling or measure of reserve and nicety
-which does not accompany good taste without
-good morals. You know St. Paul says: ‘Evil
-communications corrupt good manners.’ That
-is as true to-day as it ever was. We can’t always
-be with our equals or our superiors, however;
-we must take people as we find them.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>But we should try to be with people who stand
-for high things, morally and intellectually.
-Then, when we have to be among people of a
-lower grade, we can help them, because I think
-human nature, on the whole, desires to be elevated
-rather than lowered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you think it is necessary to success in
-life to have a special aim?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think it is a great thing to have a special
-aim or talent, and it is better to make one thing
-the leading interest in life than to run after
-half-a-dozen.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>A TALK WITH EDISON</p>
-
-<p class='c022'>DRAMATIC INCIDENTS IN HIS EARLY LIFE</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>TO discover the opinion of Thomas A.
-Edison concerning what makes and
-constitutes success in life is an easy
-matter—if one can first discover Mr. Edison.
-I camped three weeks in the vicinity of Orange,
-N.J., awaiting the opportunity to come upon
-the great inventor and voice my questions. It
-seemed a rather hopeless and discouraging
-affair until he was really before me; but, truth
-to say, he is one of the most accessible of men,
-and only reluctantly allows himself to be hedged
-in by pressure of endless affairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Edison is always glad to see any visitor,”
-said a gentleman who is continually with
-him, “except when he is hot on the trail of
-something he has been working for, and then
-it is as much as a man’s head is worth to come
-in on him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He certainly was not hot on the trail of anything
-on the morning when, for the tenth time,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>I rang at the gate in the fence which surrounds
-the laboratory on Valley Road, Orange. A
-young man appeared, who conducted me up
-the walk to the Edison laboratory office.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE LIBRARY</h3>
-<p class='c017'>is a place not to be passed through without
-thought, for, with a further store of volumes
-in his home, it contains one of the most
-costly and well-equipped scientific libraries in
-the world; the collection of writings on patent
-laws and patents, for instance, is absolutely
-exhaustive. It gives, at a glance, an idea of
-the breadth of thought and sympathy of this
-man who grew up with scarcely a common
-school education.</p>
-<p class='c011'>On the second floor, in one of the offices of
-the machine shop, I was asked to wait, while a
-grimy youth disappeared with my card, which
-he said he would “slip under the door of Mr.
-Edison’s office.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Curious,” I thought; “what a lord this
-man must be if they dare not even knock at his
-door!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Thinking of this and gazing out the window,
-I waited until a working man, who had entered
-softly, came up beside me. He looked with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>sort of “Well, what is it?” in his eyes, and
-quickly it began to come to me that the man in
-the sooty, oil-stained clothes was Edison himself.
-The working garb seemed rather incongruous,
-but there was no mistaking the broad
-forehead, with its shock of blackish hair
-streaked with gray. The gray eyes, too, were
-revelations in the way of alert comprehensiveness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh!” was all I could get out at the time.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Want to see me?” he said, smiling in the
-most youthful and genial way.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why,—yes, certainly, to be sure,” I stammered.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He looked at me blankly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You’ll have to talk louder,” said an assistant
-who worked in another portion of the
-room; “he don’t hear well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This fact was new to me, but I raised my
-voice with celerity, and piped thereafter in an
-exceedingly shrill key. After the usual humdrum
-opening remarks, in which he acknowledged
-his age as fifty-two years, and that he
-was born in Erie county, O., of Dutch parentage,
-the family having emigrated to America
-in 1730, the particulars began to grow more
-interesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>His great-grandfather, I learned, was a
-banker of high standing in New York; and,
-when Thomas was but a child of seven years,
-the family fortune suffered reverses so serious
-as to make it necessary that he should become a
-wage-earner at an unusually early age, and
-that the family should move from his birth-place
-to Michigan.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you enjoy mathematics as a boy?” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not much,” he replied. “I tried to read
-Newton’s ‘Principia,’ at the age of eleven.
-That disgusted me with pure mathematics, and
-I don’t wonder now. I should not have been
-allowed to take up such serious work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You were anxious to learn?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, indeed, <i>I attempted to read through
-the entire Free Library at Detroit</i>, but other
-things interfered before I had done.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A CHEMICAL NEWSBOY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Were you a book-worm and dreamer?” I
-questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all,” he answered, using a short,
-jerky method, as though he were unconsciously
-checking himself up. “I became a newsboy,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>and liked the work. Made my first coup as a
-newsboy in 1869.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What was it?” I ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I bought up on ‘futures’ a thousand copies
-of the <i>Detroit Free Press</i> containing important
-war news,—gained a little time on my
-rivals, and sold the entire batch like hot cakes.
-The price reached twenty-five cents a paper
-before the end of the route,” and he laughed.
-“I ran the <i>Grand Trunk Herald</i>, too, at that
-time—a little paper I issued from the train.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When did you begin to be interested in invention?”
-I questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well,” he said, “I began to dabble in
-chemistry at that time. I fitted up a small
-laboratory on the train.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In reference to this, Mr. Edison subsequently
-admitted that, during the progress of some occult
-experiments in this workshop, certain
-complications ensued in which a jolted and
-broken bottle of sulphuric acid attracted the
-attention of the conductor. He, who had been
-long suffering in the matter of unearthly odors,
-promptly ejected the young devotee and all his
-works. This incident would have been only
-amusing but for its relation to, and explanation
-of, his deafness. A box on the ear, administered
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>by the irate conductor, caused the lasting
-deafness.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TELEGRAPHY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What was your first work in a practical
-line?” I went on.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A telegraph line between my home and
-another boy’s, I made with the help of an old
-river cable, some stove-pipe wire, and glass-bottle
-insulators. I had my laboratory in the
-cellar and studied telegraphy outside.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What was the first really important thing
-you did?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I saved a boy’s life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The boy was playing on the track near the
-depot. I saw he was in danger and caught
-him, getting out of the way just in time. His
-father was station-master, and taught me telegraphy
-in return.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Dramatic situations appear at every turn of
-this man’s life. He seems to have been continually
-arriving on the scene at critical moments,
-and always with the good sense to take
-things in his own hands. The chance of learning
-telegraphy only gave him a chance to show
-how apt a pupil he was, and the railroad company
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>soon gave him regular employment. At
-seventeen, he had become one of the most expert
-operators on the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you make much use of your inventive
-talent at this time?” I questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he answered. “I invented an automatic
-attachment for my telegraph instrument
-which would send in the signal to show I
-was awake at my post, when I was comfortably
-snoring in a corner. I didn’t do much of that,
-though,” he went on; “for some such boyish
-trick sent me in disgrace over the line into Canada.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Were you there long?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only a winter. If it’s incident you want,
-I can tell you one of that time. The place
-where I was and Sarnier, the American town,
-were cut off from telegraphic and other means
-of communication by the storms, until I got at
-a locomotive whistle and tooted a telegraphic
-message. I had to do it again and again, but
-eventually they understood over the water and
-answered in the same way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>According to his own and various recorded
-accounts, Edison was successively in charge of
-important wires in Memphis, Cincinnati, New
-Orleans, and Louisville. He lived in the free-and-easy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>atmosphere of the tramp operators—a
-boon companion with them, yet absolutely
-refusing to join in the dissipations to which
-they were addicted. So highly esteemed was
-he for his honesty, that it was the custom of his
-colleagues, when a spree was on hand, to make
-him the custodian of those funds which they
-felt obliged to save. On a more than usually
-hilarious occasion, one of them returned rather
-the worse for wear, and knocked the treasurer
-down on his refusal to deliver the trust money;
-the other depositors, we may be glad to note,
-gave the ungentlemanly tippler a sound thrashing.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS USE OF MONEY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Were you good at saving your own
-money?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No,” he said, smiling. “I never was
-much for saving money, as money. I devoted
-every cent, regardless of future needs, to
-scientific books and materials for experiments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You believe that an excellent way to succeed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, it helped me greatly to future success.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>INVENTIONS</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What was your next invention?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“An automatic telegraph recorder—a machine
-which enabled me to record dispatches at
-leisure, and send them off as fast as needed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you come to hit upon that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, at the time, I was in such straits that
-I had to walk from Memphis to Louisville. At
-the Louisville station they offered me a place.
-I had perfected a style of handwriting which
-would allow me to take legibly from the wire,
-long hand, forty-seven and even fifty-four
-words a minute, but I was only a moderately
-rapid sender. I had to do something to help
-me on that side, and so I thought out that little
-device.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Later I discovered an article by one of his
-biographers, in which a paragraph referring to
-this Louisville period, says:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True to his dominant instincts, he was not
-long in gathering around him a laboratory,
-printing-office, and machine shop. He took
-press reports during his whole stay, including
-on one occasion, the Presidential message, by
-Andrew Johnson, and this at one sitting, from
-3.30 <span class='sc'>p.m.</span> to 4.30 <span class='sc'>a.m.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>“He then paragraphed the matter he had
-received over the wires, so that printers had
-exactly three lines each, thus enabling them to
-set up a column in two or three minutes’ time.
-For this, he was allowed all the exchanges he
-desired, and the Louisville press gave him a
-dinner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you manage to attract public attention
-to your ability?” I questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I didn’t manage,” said the Wizard.
-“Some things I did created comment. A device
-that I invented in 1868, which utilized one
-sub-marine cable for two circuits, caused considerable
-talk, and the Franklin telegraph office
-of Boston gave me a position.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is related of this, Mr. Edison’s first trip
-East, that he came with no ready money and
-in a rather dilapidated condition. His colleagues
-were tempted by his “hayseed” appearance
-to “salt” him, as professional slang
-terms the process of giving a receiver matter
-faster than he can record it. For this purpose,
-the new man was assigned to a wire manipulated
-by a New York operator famous for his
-speed. But there was no fun at all. Notwithstanding
-the fact that the New Yorker was
-in the game and was doing his most speedy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>clip, Edison wrote out the long message accurately,
-and, when he realized the situation, was
-soon firing taunts over the wire at the sender’s
-slowness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Had you patented many things up to the
-time of your coming East?” I queried.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing,” said the inventor, ruminatively.
-“I received my first patent in 1869.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A machine for recording votes, and designed
-to be used in the State Legislature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I didn’t know such machines were in use,”
-I ventured.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They ar’n’t,” he answered, with a merry
-twinkle. “The better it worked, the more impossible
-it was; the sacred right of the minority,
-you know,—couldn’t filibuster if they used
-it,—didn’t use it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, it was an ingenious thing. Votes were
-clearly pointed and shown on a roll of paper,
-by a small machine attached to the desk of each
-member. I was made to learn that such an
-innovation was out of the question, but it
-taught me something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And that was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To be sure of the practical need of, and demand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>for, a machine, before expending time
-and energy on it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is that one of your maxims of success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is. It is a good rule to give people
-something they want, and they will pay money
-to get it.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS ARRIVAL AT THE METROPOLIS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>In this same year, Edison removed from Boston
-to New York, friendless and in debt on
-account of the expenses of his experiment. For
-several weeks he wandered about the town
-with actual hunger staring him in the face.
-It was a time of great financial excitement, and
-with that strange quality of Fortunism, which
-seems to be his chief characteristic, he entered
-the establishment of the Law Gold Reporting
-Company just as their entire plant had shut
-down on account of an accident in the machinery
-that could not be located. The heads of
-the firm were anxious and excited to the last
-degree, and a crowd of the Wall street fraternity
-waited about for the news which came
-not. The shabby stranger put his finger on
-the difficulty at once, and was given lucrative
-employment. In the rush of the metropolis,
-a man finds his true level without delay especially
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>when his talents are of so practical
-and brilliant a nature as were this young telegrapher’s.
-It would be an absurdity to imagine
-an Edison hidden in New York. Within a
-short time, he was presented with a check for
-$40,000, as his share of a single invention—an
-improved stock printer. From this time,
-a national reputation was assured him. He
-was, too, now engaged upon the duplex and
-quadruplex systems—systems for sending two
-and four messages at the same time over a
-single wire,—which were to inaugurate almost
-a new era in telegraphy.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>MENTAL CONCENTRATION</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Recalling the incident of the Law Gold Reporting
-Company, I inquired: “Do you believe
-want urges a man to greater efforts, and
-so to greater success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It certainly makes him keep a sharp look-out.
-I think it does push a man along.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you believe that invention is a gift, or
-an acquired ability?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think it’s born in a man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And don’t you believe that familiarity
-with certain mechanical conditions and defects
-naturally suggests improvements to any one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>“No. Some people may be perfectly familiar
-with a machine all their days, knowing it
-inefficient, and never see a way to improve it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you think is the first requisite for
-success in your field, or any other?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>The ability to apply your physical and
-mental energies to one problem incessantly
-without growing weary.</i>”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TWENTY HOURS A DAY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you have regular hours, Mr. Edison?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh,” he said, “I do not work hard now.
-I come to the laboratory about eight o’clock
-every day and go home to tea at six, and then I
-study or work on some problem until eleven,
-which is my hour for bed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fourteen of fifteen hours a day can scarcely
-be called loafing,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well,” he replied, “for fifteen years I have
-worked on an average of twenty hours a day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When he was forty-seven years old, he estimated
-his true age at eighty-two, since working
-only eight hours a day would have taken
-till that time.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Edison has sometimes worked sixty
-consecutive hours upon one problem. Then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>after a long sleep, he was perfectly refreshed
-and ready for another.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A RUN FOR BREAKFAST</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Mr. Dickson, a neighbor and familiar, gives
-an anecdote told by Edison which well illustrates
-his untiring energy and phenomenal endurance.
-In describing his Boston experience,
-Edison said he bought Faraday’s works on
-electricity, commenced to read them at three
-o’clock in the morning and continued until his
-room-mate arose, when they started on their
-long walk to get breakfast. That object was
-entirely subordinated in Edison’s mind to
-Faraday, and he suddenly remarked to his
-friend: “‘Adams, I have got so much to do,
-and life is so short, that I have got to hustle,’
-and with that I started off on a dead run for my
-breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’ve known Edison since he was a boy of
-fourteen,” said another friend; “and of my
-own knowledge I can say he never spent an idle
-day in his life. Often, when he should have
-been asleep, I have known him to sit up half the
-night reading. He did not take to novels or
-wild Western adventures, but read works on
-mechanics, chemistry, and electricity; and he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>mastered them too. But in addition to his
-reading, which he could only indulge in at odd
-hours, he carefully cultivated his wonderful
-powers of observation, till at length, when he
-was not actually asleep, it may be said he was
-learning all the time.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>NOT BY ACCIDENT AND NOT FOR FUN</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Are your discoveries often brilliant intuitions?
-Do they come to you while you are
-lying awake nights?” I asked him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I never did anything worth doing by accident,”
-he replied, “nor did any of my inventions
-come indirectly through accident, except
-the phonograph.<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c019'><sup>[4]</sup></a> No, when I have fully decided
-that a result is worth getting, I go about
-it, and make trial after trial, until it comes.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f4'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“I was singing to the mouthpiece of a telephone,”
-said Edison, “when the vibrations of my voice caused a
-fine steel point to pierce one of my fingers held just behind
-it. That set me to thinking. If I could record
-the motions of the point and send it over the same surface
-afterward, I saw no reason why the thing would
-not talk. I determined to make a machine that would
-work accurately, and gave my assistants the necessary
-instructions, telling them what I had discovered.
-That’s the whole story. The phonograph is the result
-of the pricking of a finger.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>“I have always kept,” continued Mr. Edison,
-“strictly within the lines of commercially
-useful inventions. I have never had any time
-to put on electrical wonders, valuable only as
-novelties to catch the popular fancy.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“I LIKE IT—I HATE IT”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What makes you work?” I asked with
-real curiosity. “What impels you to this constant,
-tireless struggle? You have shown that
-you care comparatively nothing for the money
-it makes you, and you have no particular enthusiasm
-for the attending fame. What is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I like it,” he answered, after a moment of
-puzzled expression. “I don’t know any other
-reason. Anything I have begun is always on
-my mind, and I am not easy while away from
-it, until it is finished; and then I hate it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hate it?” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he affirmed, “when it is all done
-and is a success, I can’t bear the sight of it.
-I haven’t used a telephone in ten years, and I
-would go out of my way any day to miss an
-incandescent light.”<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c019'><sup>[5]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f5'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“After I have completed an invention,” remarked
-Edison, upon another occasion, “I seem to lose interest
-in it. One might think that the money value of an invention
-constitutes its reward to the man who loves his
-work. But, speaking for myself, I can honestly say
-this is not so. Life was never more full of joy to me,
-than when, a poor boy, I began to think out improvements
-in telegraphy, and to experiment with the cheapest
-and crudest appliances. But now that I have all the
-appliances I need, and am my own master, I continue
-to find my greatest pleasure, and so my reward, in the
-work that precedes what the world calls success.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>DOING ONE THING EIGHTEEN HOURS IS THE SECRET</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“You lay down rather severe rules for one
-who wishes to succeed in life,” I ventured,
-“working eighteen hours a day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all,” he said. “You do something
-all day long, don’t you? Every one does. If
-you get up at seven o’clock and go to bed at
-eleven, you have put in sixteen good hours,
-and it is certain with most men, that they have
-been doing something all the time. They have
-been either walking, or reading, or writing, or
-thinking. The only trouble is that they do it
-about a great many things and I do it about
-one. If they took the time in question and
-applied it in one direction, to one object, they
-would succeed. Success is sure to follow such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>application. The trouble lies in the fact that
-people do not have an object—one thing to
-which they stick, letting all else go. Success
-is the product of the severest kind of mental
-and physical application.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>POSSIBILITIES IN THE ELECTRICAL FIELD</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“You believe, of course,” I suggested, “that
-much remains to be discovered in the realm of
-electricity?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is the field of fields,” he answered. “We
-can’t talk of that, but it holds the secrets which
-will reorganize the life of the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have discovered much about it,” I
-said, smiling.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he said, “and yet very little in comparison
-with the possibilities that appear.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>ONLY SIX HUNDRED INVENTIONS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“How many inventions have you patented?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only six hundred,” he answered, “but I
-have made application for some three hundred
-more.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And do you expect to retire soon, after all
-this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I hope not,” he said, almost pathetically.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>“I hope I will be able to work right on to the
-close. I shouldn’t care to loaf.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS COURTSHIP AND HIS HOME</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The idea of the great electrician’s marrying
-was first suggested by an intimate friend, who
-told him that his large house and numerous
-servants ought to have a mistress. Although
-a very shy man, he seemed pleased with the
-proposition, and timidly inquired whom he
-should marry. The friend, annoyed at his apparent
-want of sentiment, somewhat testily replied,—“Anyone.”
-But Edison was not without
-sentiment when the time came. One day,
-as he stood behind the chair of a Miss Stillwell,
-a telegraph operator in his employ, he was not
-a little surprised when she suddenly turned
-round and said:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Edison, I can always tell when you are
-behind me or near me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was now Miss Stillwell’s turn to be surprised,
-for, with characteristic bluntness and
-ardor, Edison fronted the young lady, and,
-looking her full in the face, said:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’ve been thinking considerably about you
-of late, and, if you are willing to marry me, I
-would like to marry you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>The young lady said she would consider the
-matter, and talk it over with her mother. The
-result was that they were married a month later,
-and the union proved a very happy one.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was in fact no more an accident than other
-experiments in the Edison laboratory—his
-bride having been long the subject of the Wizzard’s
-observation—her mental capacity, her
-temper and temperament, her aptitude for
-home-making being duly tested and noted.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i241fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic004'>
-<p><i>General Lew Wallace in his study.</i><br />(<i>See page <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XV</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>A FASCINATING STORY</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>BY GENERAL LEW WALLACE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c018'>IN his study, a curiously-shaped building
-lighted from the top, and combining in
-equal portions the Byzantine, Romanesque
-and Doric styles of architecture, the gray-haired
-author of “Ben-Hur,” surrounded by
-his pictures, books, and military trophies, is
-spending, in serene and comfortable retirement,
-the evening of his life. As I sat beside him,
-the other day, and listened to the recital of his
-earlier struggles and later achievements, I
-could not help contrasting his dignified bearing,
-careful expression, and gentle demeanor, with
-another occasion in his life, when, as a vigorous,
-black-haired young military officer, in the
-spring of 1861, he appeared, with flashing eye
-and uplifted sword, at the head of his regiment,
-the gallant and historic Eleventh Indiana Volunteers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>General Wallace never repels a visitor, and
-his greeting is cordial and ingenuous.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If I could say anything to stimulate or encourage
-the young men of to-day,” he said, “I
-would gladly do so, but I fear that the story of
-my early days would be of very little interest
-or value to others. So far as school education
-is concerned, it may be truthfully said that I
-had but little, if any; and if, in spite of that
-deficiency, I ever arrived at proficiency, I
-reached it, I presume, as Topsy attained her
-stature,—‘just growed into it.’”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A BOYHOOD OF WASTED OPPORTUNITIES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Were you denied early school advantages?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not in the least. On the contrary, I had
-most abundant opportunity in that respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My father was a lawyer, enjoying a lucrative
-practice in Brookville, Indiana,—a small
-town which bears the distinction of having
-given to the world more prominent men than
-any other place in the Hoosier State. Not long
-after my birth, he was elected lieutenant-governor,
-and, finally, governor of the state. He,
-himself, was an educated man, having been
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>graduated from the United States Military
-Academy at West Point, and having served as
-instructor in mathematics there. He was not
-only an educated man, but a man of advanced
-ideas generally, as shown by the fact that <i>he
-failed of a re-election to congress in 1840, because,
-as a member of the committee on commerce,
-he gave the casting vote in favor of an
-appropriation to develop Morse’s magnetic telegraph</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of course, he believed in the value, and
-tried to impress upon me the necessity of a
-thorough school training. But, in the face of
-all the solicitude and encouragement which an
-indulgent father could waste on an unappreciative
-son, I remained vexatiously indifferent.
-I presume I was like some man in history,—it
-was Lincoln, I believe,—who said that his father
-taught him to work, but he never quite
-succeeded in teaching him to love it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My father sent me to school, and regularly
-paid tuition,—for in those days there were no
-free schools; but, much to my discredit, he
-failed to secure anything like regular attendance
-at recitations, or even a decent attempt to
-master my lessons at any time. In fact, much
-of the time that should have been given to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>school was spent in fishing, hunting, and roaming
-through the woods.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HIS BOYHOOD LOVE FOR HISTORY AND LITERATURE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“But were you thus indifferent to all forms
-of education?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, my case was not quite so hopeless as
-that. I did not desert the schools entirely, but
-my attendance was so provokingly irregular
-and my indifference so supreme, I wonder now
-that I was tolerated at all. But I had one
-mainstay; I loved to read. I was a most inordinate
-reader. In some lines of literature,
-especially history and some kinds of fiction, my
-appetite was insatiate, and many a day, while
-my companions were clustered together in the
-old red brick schoolhouse, struggling with
-their problems in fractions or percentage, I
-was carefully hidden in the woods near by,
-lying upon my elbows, munching an apple, and
-reveling in the beauties of Plutarch, Byron or
-Goldsmith.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you not attend college, or the higher
-grade of schools?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, for a brief period. My brother was
-a student in Wabash College,—here in Crawfordsville,—and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>hither I also was sent; but
-within six weeks I had tired of the routine, was
-satiated with discipline, and made my exit from
-the institution.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall never forget what my father did
-when I returned home. He called me into his
-office, and, reaching into one of the pigeon-holes
-above his desk, withdrew therefrom a
-package of papers neatly folded and tied with
-the conventional red tape. He was a very systematic
-man, due, perhaps, to his West Point
-training, and these papers proved to be the receipts
-for my tuition, which he had carefully
-preserved. He called off the items, and asked
-me to add them together. The total, I confess,
-staggered me.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A FATHER’S FRUITFUL WARNING</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“‘That sum, my son,’ he said, with a tone
-of regret in his voice, ‘represents what I have
-expended in these many years past to provide
-you with a good education. How successful I
-have been, you know better than anyone else.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘After mature reflection, I have come to
-the conclusion that I have done for you in that
-direction all that can reasonably be expected of
-any parent; and I have, therefore, called you in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>to tell you that you have now reached an age
-when you must take up the lines yourself. If
-you have failed to profit by the advantages
-with which I have tried so hard to surround
-you, the responsibility must be yours. I shall
-not upbraid you for your neglect, but rather
-pity you for the indifference which you have
-shown to the golden opportunities you have,
-through my indulgence, been enabled to enjoy.’”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A MANHOOD OF SPLENDID EFFORT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What effect did his admonition have on
-you? Did it awaken or arouse you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It aroused me, most assuredly. It set me
-to thinking as nothing before had done. The
-next day, I set out with a determination to accomplish
-something for myself. My father’s
-injunction rang in my ears. New responsibilities
-rested on my shoulders, as I was, for the
-first time in my life, my own master. I felt
-that I must get work on my own account.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After much effort, I finally obtained employment
-from the man with whom I had
-passed so many afternoons strolling up and
-down the little streams in the neighborhood,
-trying to fish. He was the county clerk, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>he hired me to copy what was known as the
-complete record of one of the courts. I
-worked for months in a dingy, half-lighted
-room, receiving for my pay something like ten
-cents per hundred words. The tediousness
-and</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE REGULARITY OF THE WORK WAS A SPLENDID DRILL FOR ME,</h3>
-<p class='c017'>and taught me the virtue of persistence as one
-of the avenues of success. It was at this time
-I began to realize <i>the deficiency in my education</i>,
-especially as I had an ambition to become
-a lawyer. Being deficient in both mathematics
-and grammar, <i>I was forced to study evenings</i>.
-Of course, the latter was a very exacting study,
-after a full day’s hard work; but I was made
-to realize that <i>the time I had spent with such
-lavish prodigality could not be recovered</i>, and
-that I must extract every possible good out of
-the golden moments then flying by all too fast.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SELF-EDUCATION BY READING AND LITERARY COMPOSITION</h3>
-<p class='c016'>“Had you a distinct literary ambition at
-that time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I had always had a sort of literary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>bent or inclination. I read all the literature
-of the day, besides the standard authors, and
-finally began to devote my odd moments to a
-book of my own,—a tale based on the days of
-the crusades. When completed, it covered
-about three hundred and fifty pages, and bore
-the rather high-sounding title, ‘The Man-at-Arms.’
-I read a good portion of it before a
-literary society to which I belonged; the members
-applauded it, and I was frequently urged
-to have it published.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Mexican War soon followed, however,
-and I took the manuscript with me when
-I enlisted. But before the close of my service
-it was lost, and my production, therefore, never
-reached the public eye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But did not the approval which the book
-received from the few persons who read it encourage
-you to continue writing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fully fifty years have elapsed since then,
-and it is, therefore, rather difficult, at this late
-day, to recall just how such things affected me.
-I suppose I was encouraged thereby, for, in
-due course of time, another book which turned
-out to be</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>“THE FAIR GOD”</h3>
-</div>
-<p class='c017'>my first book to reach the public,—began to
-shape itself in my mind. The composition of
-this work was not, as the theatrical people
-would say, a continuous performance, for there
-were many and singular interruptions; and it
-would be safe to say that months, and, in one
-case, years, intervened between certain chapters.
-A few years after the war, I finished the
-composition, strung the chapters into a continuous
-narrative, leveled up the uneven places,
-and started East with the manuscript. A letter
-from Whitelaw Reid, then editor of the
-New York <i>Tribune</i>, introduced me to the
-head of one of the leading publishing houses
-in Boston. There I was kindly received, and
-delivered my manuscript, which was referred
-to a professional reader, to determine its literary,
-and also, I presume, its commercial
-value.</p>
-<p class='c011'>“It would be neither a new nor an interesting
-story to acquaint the public with the degree
-of anxious suspense that pervaded my mind
-when I withdrew to await the reader’s judgment.
-Every other writer has, I assume, at one
-time or another, undergone much the same experience.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>It was not long until I learned from
-the publisher that the reader reported in favor
-of my production. Publication soon followed,
-and for the first time, in a literary sense, I
-found myself before the public, and my book
-before the critics.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE ORIGIN OF “BEN-HUR”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“How long after this did ‘Ben-Hur’ appear,
-and what led you to write it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I began ‘Ben-Hur’ about 1876, and it was
-published in 1880. The purpose, at first, was
-a short serial for one of the magazines, descriptive
-of the visit of the wise men to Jerusalem
-as mentioned in the first two verses of
-the second chapter of Matthew. It will be
-recognized in ‘Book First’ of the work as now
-published. For certain reasons, however, the
-serial idea was abandoned, and the narrative,
-instead of ending with the birth of the Saviour,
-expanded into a more pretentious novel and
-only ended with the death scene on Calvary.
-The last ten chapters were written in the old
-adobe palace at Santa Fé, New Mexico, where
-I was serving as governor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is difficult to answer the question, ‘what
-led me to write the book;’ or why I chose a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>piece of fiction which used Christ as its leading
-character. In explanation, it is proper to
-state that I had reached an age in life when
-men usually begin to study themselves with
-reference to their fellowmen, and reflect on the
-good they may have done in the world. <i>Up to
-that time, never having read the Bible</i>, I knew
-nothing about sacred history; and, in matters
-of a religious nature, although I was not in
-every respect an infidel, I was persistently and
-notoriously indifferent. <i>I did not know, and
-therefore, did not care.</i> I resolved to begin the
-study of the good book in earnest.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>INFLUENCE OF THE STORY OF THE CHRIST UPON THE AUTHOR</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I was in quest of knowledge, but I had no
-faith to sustain, no creed to bolster up. The
-result was that the whole field of religious and
-biblical history opened up before me; and, my
-vision not being clouded by previously formed
-opinions, I was enabled to survey it without the
-aid of lenses. I believe I was thorough and persistent.
-I know I was conscientious in my
-search for the truth. I weighed, I analyzed, I
-counted and compared. The evolution from
-conjecture into knowledge, through opinion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>and belief, was gradual but irresistible; and at
-length I stood firmly and defiantly on the solid
-rock.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Upward of seven hundred thousand copies
-of ‘Ben-Hur’ have been published, and it has
-been translated into all languages from French
-to Arabic. But, whether it has ever influenced
-the mind of a single reader or not, I am sure
-its conception and preparation—if it has done
-nothing more—have convinced its author of the
-divinity of the lowly Nazarene who walked and
-talked with God.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XVI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Carnegie as a Metal Worker</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>“THERE is no doubt,” said Mr. Carnegie,
-in reply to a question from
-me, “that it is becoming harder
-and harder, as business gravitates more and
-more to immense concerns, for a young man
-without capital to get a start for himself,
-and in the large cities it is especially so,
-where large capital is essential. Still it
-can be honestly said that there is no
-other country in the world, where able and
-energetic young men and women can so readily
-rise as in this. A president of a business college
-informed me, recently, that he has never
-been able to supply the demand for capable,
-first-class [Mark the adjective.] bookkeepers,
-and his college has over nine hundred students.
-In America, young men of ability rise with
-most astonishing rapidity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As quickly as when you were a boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>“Much more so. When I was a boy, there
-were but very few important positions that a
-boy could aspire to. Every position had to be
-made. Now a boy doesn’t need to make the
-place,—all he has to do is to fit himself to take
-it.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>EARLY WORK AND WAGES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Where did you begin life?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In Dunfermline, Scotland, during my earliest
-years. The service of my life has all been
-in this country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In Pittsburg?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Largely so. My father settled in Allegheny
-City, when I was only ten years old, and
-I began to earn my way in Pittsburg.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you mind telling me what your first
-service was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all. I was a bobbin boy in a cotton
-factory, then an engine-man or boy in the same
-place, and later still I was a messenger boy for
-a telegraph company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At small wages, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One dollar and twenty cents a week was
-what I received as a bobbin boy, and I considered
-it pretty good, at that. When I was thirteen,
-I had learned to run a steam engine, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>for that I received a dollar and eighty cents a
-week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You had no early schooling, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“None except such as I gave myself.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>COLONEL ANDERSON’S BOOKS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“There were no fine libraries then, but in
-Allegheny City, where I lived, there was a
-certain Colonel Anderson, who was well to do
-and of a philanthropic turn. He announced,
-about the time I first began to work, that he
-would be in his library at home, every Saturday,
-ready to lend books to working boys and
-men. He had only about four hundred volumes,
-but I doubt if ever so few books were put
-to better use. Only he who has longed, as I
-did for Saturday to come, that the spring of
-knowledge might be opened anew to him, can
-understand what Colonel Anderson did for me
-and others of the boys of Allegheny. Quite a
-number of them have risen to eminence, and I
-think their rise can be easily traced to this
-splendid opportunity.”<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c019'><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f6'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>It was Colonel Anderson’s kindness that led Carnegie
-to bestow his wealth so generously for founding
-libraries, as he is now doing every year.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>HIS FIRST GLIMPSE OF PARADISE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“How long did you remain an engine-boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not very long,” Mr. Carnegie replied;
-“perhaps a year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I entered a telegraph office as a messenger
-boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Although Mr. Carnegie did not dwell much
-on this period, he once described it at a dinner
-given in honor of the American Consul at Dunfermline,
-Scotland, when he said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I awake from a dream that has carried me
-away back to the days of my boyhood, the day
-when the little white-haired Scottish laddie,
-dressed in a blue jacket, walked with his father
-into the telegraph office in Pittsburg to undergo
-examination as an applicant for a position as
-messenger boy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well I remember when my uncle spoke to
-my parents about it, and my father objected,
-because I was then getting one dollar and
-eighty cents per week for running the small
-engine in a cellar in Allegheny City, but my
-uncle said a messenger’s wages would be two
-dollars and fifty cents.... If you want
-an idea as to heaven on earth, imagine what it
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>is to be taken from a dark cellar, where I fired
-the boiler from morning until night, and dropped
-into an office, where light shone from all
-sides, with books, papers, and pencils in profusion
-around me, and oh, the tick of those
-mysterious brass instruments on the desk, annihilating
-space and conveying intelligence to
-the world. This was my first glimpse of paradise,
-and I walked on air.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you manage to rise from this
-position?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I learned how to operate a telegraph instrument,
-and then waited an opportunity to
-show that I was fit to be an operator. Eventually
-my chance came.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The truth is that James D. Reid, the superintendent
-of the office, and himself a Scotchman,
-favored the ambitious lad. In his “History
-of the Telegraph,” he says of him:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I liked the boy’s looks, and it was easy to
-see that, though he was little, he was full of
-spirit. He had not been with me a month when
-he asked me to teach him to telegraph. He
-spent all his spare time in practice, sending and
-receiving by sound and not by tape, as was the
-custom in those days. Pretty soon he could do
-as well as I could at the key.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>INTRODUCED TO A BROOM</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“As you look back upon it,” I said to Mr.
-Carnegie, “do you consider that so lowly a
-beginning is better than one a little less
-trying?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For young men starting upon their life
-work, it is much the best to begin as I did, at
-the beginning, and occupy the most subordinate
-positions. Many of the present-day leading
-men of Pittsburg, had serious responsibility
-thrust upon them at the very threshold of their
-careers. They were introduced to the broom,
-and spent the first hours of their business life
-sweeping out the office. I notice we have janitors
-and janitresses now in offices, and our
-young men, unfortunately, miss that salutary
-branch of early education. It does not hurt the
-newest comer to sweep out the office.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Many’s the time. And who do you suppose
-were my fellow sweepers? David McBargo,
-afterwards superintendent of the Allegheny
-Valley Railroad; Robert Pitcairn, afterwards
-superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad;
-and Mr. Mooreland, subsequently City Attorney
-of Pittsburg. We all took turns, two
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>each morning doing the sweeping; and now I
-remember Davie was so proud of his clean
-shirt bosom that he used to spread over it an old
-silk handkerchief which he kept for the purpose,
-and we other boys thought he was putting
-on airs. So he was. None of us had a silk
-handkerchief.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After you had learned to telegraph, did you
-consider that you had reached high enough?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just at that time my father died, and the
-burden of the support of the family fell upon
-me. I earned as an operator twenty-five dollars
-a month, and a little additional money by
-copying telegraphic messages for the newspapers,
-and managed to keep the family independent.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AN EXPERT TELEGRAPHER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>More light on this period of Mr. Carnegie’s
-career is given by the “<i>Electric Age</i>,” which
-says:—“As a telegraph operator he was abreast
-of older and experienced men; and, although
-receiving messages by sound was, at that time,
-forbidden by authority as being unsafe, young
-Carnegie quickly acquired the art, and he can
-still stand behind the ticker and understand
-its language. As an operator, he delighted in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>full employment and the prompt discharge of
-business, and a big day’s work was his chief
-pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How long did you remain with the telegraph
-company?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Until I was given a place by the Pennsylvania
-Railroad Company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As an operator?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At first,—until I showed how the telegraph
-could minister to railroad safety and success;
-then I was made secretary to Thomas A. Scott,
-the superintendent; and not long afterwards,
-when Colonel Scott became vice-president, I
-was made superintendent of the western
-division.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Colonel Scott’s attention was drawn to Carnegie
-by the operator’s devising a plan for running
-trains by telegraph, so making the most
-of a single track. Up to this time no one had
-ever dreamed of running trains in opposite directions,
-towards each other, directing them by
-telegraph, one train being sidetracked while the
-other passed. The boy studied out a train-despatching
-system which was afterwards used
-on every single-track railroad in the country.
-Nobody had ever thought of this before, and
-the officials were so pleased with the ingenious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>lad, that they placed him in charge of a division
-office, and before he was twenty made him superintendent
-of the western division of the
-road.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>WHAT EMPLOYERS THINK OF YOUNG MEN</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Concerning this period of his life, I asked
-Mr. Carnegie if his promotion was not a matter
-of chance, and whether he did not, at the time,
-feel it to be so. His answer was emphatic.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Never. Young men give all kinds of reasons
-why, in their cases, failure is attributable
-to exceptional circumstances, which rendered
-success impossible. Some never had a chance,
-according to their own story. This is simply
-nonsense. No young man ever lived who had
-not a chance, and a splendid chance, too, if he
-was ever employed at all. He is assayed in the
-mind of his immediate superior, from the day
-he begins work, and, after a time, if he has
-merit, he is assayed in the council chambers of
-the firm. His ability, honesty, habits, associations,
-temper, disposition,—all these are
-weighed and analyzed. The young man who
-never had a chance is the same young man who
-has been canvassed over and over again by his
-superiors, and found destitute of necessary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>qualifications, or is deemed unworthy of closer
-relations with the firm, owing to some objectionable
-act, habit or association, of which he
-thought his employers ignorant.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It sounds true.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE RIGHT MEN IN DEMAND</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Another class of young men attributes
-failure to rise to employers having near
-relatives or favorites whom they advance unfairly.
-They also insist that their employers
-dislike brighter intelligences than their own,
-and are disposed to discourage aspiring genius,
-and delighted in keeping young men down.
-There is nothing in this. On the contrary, there
-is no one suffering more for lack of the right
-man in the right place as the average employer,
-nor anyone more anxious to find him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was this your theory on the subject when
-you began working for the railroad company?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had no theory then, although I have
-formulated one since. It lies mainly in this:
-Instead of the question, ‘What must I do for
-my employer?’ substitute, ‘What can I do?’
-Faithful and conscientious discharge of duties
-assigned you is all very well, but the verdict in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>such cases generally is that you perform your
-present duties so well, that you would better
-continue performing them. Now, this will not
-do. It will not do for the coming partners.
-There must be something beyond this. We
-make clerks, bookkeepers, treasurers, bank tellers
-of this class, and there they remain to the
-end of the chapter. <i>The rising man must do
-something exceptional, and beyond the range
-of his special department. He must attract attention.</i>”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HOW TO ATTRACT ATTENTION</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“How can he do that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, if he is a shipping clerk, he may do
-so by discovering in an invoice an error with
-which he has nothing to do and which has escaped
-the attention of the proper party. If a
-weighing clerk, he may save for the firm in
-questioning the adjustment of the scales, and
-having them corrected, even if this be the province
-of the master mechanic. If a messenger
-boy, he can lay the seed of promotion by going
-beyond the letter of his instructions in order
-to secure the desired reply. There is no service
-so low and simple, neither any so high, in which
-the young man of ability and willing disposition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>cannot readily and almost daily prove himself
-capable of greater trust and usefulness,
-and, what is equally important, show his invincible
-determination to rise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In what manner did you reach out to establish
-your present great fortune?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By saving my money. I put a little money
-aside, and it served me later as a matter of
-credit. Also, I invested in a sleeping-car industry,
-which paid me well.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SLEEPING-CAR INVENTION</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Although I tried earnestly to get the great
-iron-king to talk of this, he said little, because
-the matter has been fully dealt with by him in
-his “Triumphant Democracy.” From his own
-story there, it appears that one day at this time,
-when Mr. Carnegie still had his fortune to
-make, he was on a train examining the line
-from a rear window of a car, when a tall, spare
-man, accosted him and asked him to look at an
-invention he had made. He drew from a green
-bag a small model of a sleeping-berth for railway
-cars, and proceeded to point out its advantages.
-It was Mr. T. T. Woodruff, the inventor
-of the sleeping-car. As Mr. Carnegie
-tells the story:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>“He had not spoken a moment before, like
-a flash, the whole range of the discovery burst
-upon me. ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘that is something
-which this continent must have,’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Upon my return, I laid it before Mr. Scott,
-declaring that it was one of the inventions of
-the age. He remarked: ‘You are enthusiastic,
-young man, but you may ask the inventor
-to come and let me see it.’ I did so, and arrangements
-were made to build two trial cars,
-and run them on the Pennsylvania Railroad. I
-was offered an interest in the venture, which
-I gladly accepted.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The notice came that my share of the first
-payment was $217.50. How well I remember
-the exact sum. But two hundred and seventeen
-dollars and a half were as far beyond my means
-as if it had been millions. I was earning fifty
-dollars per month, however, and had prospects,
-or at least I always felt that I had. I decided to
-call on the local banker and boldly ask him to
-advance the sum upon my interest in the affair.
-He put his hand on my shoulder and said:
-‘Why, of course, Andie; you are all right. Go
-ahead. Here is the money.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is a proud day for a man when he pays
-his last note, but not to be named in comparison
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>with the day in which he makes his first one, and
-gets a banker to take it. I have tried both, and I
-know. The cars furnished the subsequent payments
-by their earnings. I paid my first note
-from my savings, so much per month, and thus
-I got my foot upon fortune’s ladder. It was
-easy to climb after that.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE MARK OF A MILLIONAIRE</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I would like some expression from you,”
-I said to Mr. Carnegie, “in reference to the
-importance of laying aside money from one’s
-earnings, as a young man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You can have it. There is one sure mark
-of the coming partner, the future millionaire;
-his revenues always exceed his expenditures.
-He begins to save early, almost as soon as he
-begins to earn. I should say to young men,
-no matter how little it may be possible to save,
-save that little. Invest it securely, not necessarily
-in bonds, but in anything which you have
-good reason to believe will be profitable. Some
-rare chance will soon present itself for investment.
-The little you have saved will prove the
-basis for an amount of credit utterly surprising
-to you. Capitalists trust the saving man.
-For every hundred dollars you can produce as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>the result of hard-won savings, Midas, in
-search of a partner, will lend or credit a thousand;
-for every thousand, fifty thousand. <i>It is
-not capital that your seniors require, it is the
-man who has proved that he has the business
-habits which create capital. So it is the first
-hundred dollars that tell.</i>”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AN OIL FARM</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What,” I asked Mr. Carnegie, “was the
-next enterprise with which you identified yourself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In company with several others, I purchased
-the now famous Storey farm, on Oil
-Creek, Pennsylvania, where a well had been
-bored and natural oil struck the year before.
-This proved a very profitable investment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In “Triumphant Democracy,” Mr. Carnegie
-has expatiated most fully on this venture,
-which is so important. “When I first visited
-this famous well,” he says, “the oil was running
-into the creek, where a few flat-bottomed
-scows lay filled with it, ready to be floated
-down the Alleghany River, on an agreed-upon
-day each week, when the creek was flooded by
-means of a temporary dam. This was the beginning
-of the natural-oil business. We purchased
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>the farm for $40,000, and so small was
-our faith in the ability of the earth to yield for
-any considerable time the hundred barrels per
-day, which the property was then producing,
-that we decided to make a pond capable of
-holding one hundred thousand barrels of oil,
-which, we estimated, would be worth, when the
-supply ceased, $1,000,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unfortunately for us, the pond leaked fearfully;
-evaporation also caused much loss, but
-we continued to run oil in to make the losses
-good day after day, until several hundred thousand
-barrels had gone in this fashion. Our
-experience with the farm is worth reciting:
-its value rose to $5,000,000; that is—the shares
-of the company sold in the market upon this
-basis; and one year it paid cash dividends of
-$1,000,000—upon an investment of $40,000.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>IRON BRIDGES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Were you satisfied to rest with these enterprises
-in your hands?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No. Railway bridges were then built almost
-exclusively of wood, but the Pennsylvania
-Railroad had begun to experiment with cast-iron.
-It struck me that the bridge of the future
-must be of iron; and I organized, in Pittsburg,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>a company for the construction of iron bridges.
-That was the Keystone Bridge Works. We
-built the first iron bridge across the Ohio.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His entrance of the realm of steel was much
-too long for Mr. Carnegie to discuss, although
-he was not unwilling to give information relating
-to the subject. It appears that he realized
-the immensity of the steel manufacturing business
-at once. The Union Iron Mills soon followed
-as one of the enterprises, and, later, the
-famous Edgar Thompson Steel Rail Mill. The
-last was the outcome of a visit to England, in
-1868, when Carnegie noticed that English railways
-were discarding iron for steel rails. The
-Bessemer process had been then perfected, and
-was making its way in all the iron-producing
-countries. Carnegie, recognizing that it was
-destined to revolutionize the iron business, introduced
-it into his mills and made steel rails
-with which he was enabled to compete with
-English manufacturers.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HOMESTEAD STEEL WORKS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>His next enterprise was the purchase of the
-Homestead Steel Works,—his great rival in
-Pittsburg. In 1888, he had built or acquired
-seven distinct iron and steel works, all of which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>are now included in the Carnegie Steel Company,
-Limited. All the plants of this great firm
-are within a radius of five miles of Pittsburg.
-Probably in no other part of the world can be
-found such an aggregation of splendidly equipped
-steel works as those controlled by this association.
-It now comprises the Homestead
-Steel Works, the Edgar Thompson Steel
-Works and Furnaces, the Duquesne Steel
-Works and Furnaces, all within two miles of
-one another; the Lucy Furnaces, the Keystone
-Bridge Works, the Upper Union Rolling Mills,
-and the Lower Union Rolling Mills.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In all branches, including the great coke
-works, mines, etc., there are employed twenty-five
-thousand men. The monthly pay roll exceeds
-one million, one hundred and twenty-five
-thousand dollars, or nearly fifty thousand dollars
-for each working day. Including the Frick
-Coke Company, the united capital of the Carnegie
-Steel Company exceeds sixty million
-dollars.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A STRENGTHENING POLICY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“You believe in taking active measures,” I
-said, “to make men successful.”</p>
-<div class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i270fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic004'>
-<p><i>Partial view of the Homestead Steel Works.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>“I believe in anything which will help men
-to help themselves. To induce them to save,
-every workman in our company is allowed to
-deposit part of his earnings, not exceeding two
-thousand dollars, with the firm, on which the
-high interest rate of six per cent. is allowed.
-The firm also lends to any of its workmen to
-buy a lot, or to build a house, taking its pay by
-installments.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Has this contributed to the success of your
-company?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think so. The policy of giving a personal
-interest to the men who render exceptional
-service is strengthening. With us there
-are many such, and every year several more
-are added as partners. It is the policy of the
-concern to interest every superintendent in the
-works, every head of a department, every exceptional
-young man. Promotion follows exceptional
-service, and there is no favoritism.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PHILANTHROPY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“All you have said so far, merely gives the
-idea of getting money, without any suggestion
-as to the proper use of great wealth. Will you
-say something on that score?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>“My views are rather well known, I think.
-What a man owns is already subordinate, in
-America, to what he knows; but in the final
-aristocracy, the question will not be either of
-these, but what has he done for his fellows?
-Where has he shown generosity and self-abnegation?
-Where has he been a father to the
-fatherless? And the cause of the poor, where
-has he searched that out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>That Mr. Carnegie has lived up in the past,
-and is still living up to this radical declaration
-of independence from the practice of men who
-have amassed fortunes around him, will be best
-shown by a brief enumeration of some of his
-almost unexampled philanthropies. His largest
-gift has been to the city of Pittsburg, the
-scene of his early trials and later triumphs.
-There he has built, at a cost of more than a
-million dollars, a magnificent library, museum,
-concert hall and picture gallery, all under one
-roof, and endowed it with a fund of another million,
-the interest of which (fifty thousand dollars
-per annum) is being devoted to the purchase
-of the best works of American art. Other
-libraries, to be connected with this largest as a
-center, are now being constructed, which will
-make the city of Pittsburg and its environs a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>beneficiary of his generosity to the extent of
-five million dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While thus endowing the city where his fortune
-was made, he has not forgotten other
-places endeared to him by association or by
-interest. To the Allegheny Free Library he
-has given $375,000; to the Braddock Free Library,
-$250,000; to the Johnstown Free Library,
-$50,000; and to the Fairfield (Iowa)
-Library, $40,000. To the Cooper Institute,
-New York, he has given $300,000. To his native
-land he has been scarcely less generous. To
-the Edinburgh Free Library he has given
-$250,000, and to his native town of Dunfermline,
-$90,000. Other Scottish towns to the
-number of ten have received helpful donations
-of amounts not quite so large. He has given
-$50,000 to aid poor young men and women
-to gain a musical education at the Royal College
-of Music in London.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“THE MISFORTUNE OF BEING RICH MEN’S SONS”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I should like to cause you to say some other
-important things for young men to learn and
-benefit by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Our young partners in the Carnegie company
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>have all won their spurs by <i>showing that
-we did not know half as well what was wanted
-as they did</i>. Some of them have acted upon
-occasions with me as if they owned the firm
-and I was but some airy New Yorker, presuming
-to <i>advise upon what I knew very little
-about</i>. Well, they are not now interfered with.
-<i>They were the true bosses,—the very men we
-were looking for.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is this all for the poor boy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Every word. Those who have the misfortune
-to be rich men’s sons are heavily
-weighted in the race. A basketful of bonds
-is the heaviest basket a young man ever had to
-carry. He generally gets to staggering under
-it. 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 much, but look out that 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 grand stand. Look out for the boy
-who has to plunge into work direct from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>common school, and begins by sweeping out
-the office. He is the probable dark horse that
-will take all the money and win all the applause.”<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c019'><sup>[7]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f7'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Mr. Carnegie’s recent retirement from business, and
-the sale of his vast properties to the Morgan Syndicate,
-marks a new era in his remarkable career; and it gives
-him the more leisure to consider carefully every
-dollar he bestows in the series of magnificent charities
-that he has inaugurated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XVII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Herreshoff, the Yacht Builder</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>I</div>
- <div class='c000'>THE VOYAGE OF LIFE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c021'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Total eclipse; no sun, no moon;</div>
- <div class='line'>Darkness amid the blaze of noon!—<span class='sc'>Milton</span></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c017'>AMID the ranks of the blind, we often
-find men and women of culture and
-general ability, but we do not look for
-world-renowned specialists. No one is surprised
-at a display of enterprise in a “booming”
-western town, where everybody is “hustling;”
-but in a place which has once ranked as
-the third seaport in America, but has seen its
-maritime glory decline, a man who can establish
-a marine industry on a higher plane than
-was ever before known, and attract to his work
-such world-wide attention as to restore the
-vanished fame of his town, is no ordinary person.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>Moreover, if such a man has laid his
-plans and done his work in the disheartening
-eclipse of total blindness, he must possess qualities
-of the highest order.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The office of the Herreshoff Manufacturing
-Company, at Bristol, Rhode Island, is in a
-building that formerly belonged to the Burnside
-Rifle Company. It is substantial, but unpretentious,
-and is entered by a short stairway
-on one side. The furniture throughout is also
-plain, but has been selected with excellent
-taste, and is suggestive of the most effective
-adaptation of means to ends in every detail.
-On the mantel and on the walls are numerous
-pictures, most of them of vessels, but very few
-relating directly to any of the great races for
-the “America’s” cup. The first picture to
-arrest one’s attention, indeed, is an excellent
-portrait of the late General Ambrose E. Burnside,
-who lived in Bristol, and was an intimate
-friend of John B. Herreshoff.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Previous inquiry had elicited the information
-that the members of the firm are very busy
-with various large orders, in addition to the
-rush of work on Cup Defenders; so it was a
-very agreeable surprise when I was invited into
-the tasteful private office, where the blind president
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>sat, having just concluded a short conversation
-with an attorney.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“LET THE WORK SHOW”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Well, sir,” said he, rising and grasping my
-hand cordially, “what do you wish?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I realize how very busy you must be, Mr.
-Herreshoff,” I replied, “and will try to be as
-brief as possible; but I venture to ask a few
-minutes of your time, to obtain suggestions and
-advice from you to young people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But why select me, in particular, as an adviser?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This was “a poser,” at first, especially when
-he added, noting my hesitation:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We are frequently requested to give interviews
-in regard to our manufacturing business;
-but, since as it is the settled policy of our house
-to do our work just as well as we possibly can
-and then leave it to speak for itself, we have
-felt obliged to decline all these requests. It
-would be repugnant to our sense of propriety
-to talk in public about our special industry.
-‘Let the work show!’ seems to us a good
-motto.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>THE VOYAGE OF LIFE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“True,” said I. “But the readers of my
-books may not care to read of cutters or
-‘skimming dishes,’ center-boards or fin keels, or
-copper coils <i>versus</i> steel tubes for boilers. They
-leave the choice in such matters to you, realizing
-that you have always proved equal to the
-situation. What I want now is advice in regard
-to the race of life,—the voyage in which each
-youth must be his own captain, but in which
-the words of others who have successfully
-sailed the sea before will help to avoid rocks
-and shoals, and to profit by favoring currents
-and trade winds. You have been handicapped
-in an unusual degree, sailing in total darkness
-and beset by many other difficulties, but have,
-nevertheless, made a very prosperous voyage.
-In overcoming such serious obstacles, you must
-have learned much of the true philosophy of
-both success and failure, and I think you will
-be willing to help the young with suggestions
-drawn from your experience.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I always want to help young people, or old
-people, either, for that matter, if anything I
-can say will do so. But what can I say?”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>A MOTHER’S MIGHTY INFLUENCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What do you call the prime requisite of
-success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall have to answer that by a somewhat
-humorous but very shrewd suggestion of another,—select
-a good mother. Especially for
-boys, I consider an intelligent, affectionate but
-considerate mother an almost indispensable
-requisite to the highest success. If you would
-improve the rising generation to the utmost,
-appeal first to the mothers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In what way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<i>Above all things else, show them that reasonable
-self-denial is a thousandfold better for
-a boy than to have his every wish gratified.
-Teach them to encourage industry, economy,
-concentration of attention and purpose, and indomitable
-persistence.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But most mothers try to do this, don’t
-they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, in a measure; but many of them, perhaps
-most of them, do not emphasize the matter
-half enough. A mother may wish to teach
-all these lessons to her son, but she thinks too
-much of him, or believes she does, to have him
-suffer any deprivation, and so indulges him in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>things which are luxuries for him, under the
-circumstances, rather than necessaries. Many
-a boy, born with ordinary intellect, would follow
-the example of an industrious father, were
-it not that his mother wishes him to appear as
-well as any boy in the neighborhood. So, without
-exactly meaning it, she gets to making a
-show of her boy, and brings him up with a
-habit of idling away valuable time, to keep up
-appearances. The prudent mother, however,
-sees the folly of this course, and teaches her
-son to excel in study and work, rather than in
-vain display. The difference in mothers makes
-all the difference in the world to children, who
-like brooks, can be turned very easily in their
-course of life.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SELF HELP</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What ranks next in importance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Boys and girls themselves, especially as
-they grow older, and have a chance to understand
-what life means, should not only help
-their parents as a matter of duty, but should
-learn to help themselves, for their own good.
-I would not have them forego recreation, a
-reasonable amount every day, but let them
-learn the reality and earnestness of existence,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>and resolve to do the whole work and the very
-best work of thorough, reliable young men and
-women.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>WHAT CAREER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What would you advise as to choosing a
-career?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In that I should be governed largely by
-the bent of each youth. What he likes to do
-best of all, that he should do; and he should
-try to do it better than anyone else. That is
-legitimate emulation. Let him devote his full
-energy to his work; with the provision, however,
-that he needs change or recreation more
-in proportion as he uses his brain more. The
-more muscular the work, if not too heavy, the
-more hours, is a good rule: the more brain
-work, the fewer hours. Children at school
-should not be expected to work so long or so
-hard as if engaged in manual labor. Temperament,
-too, should be considered. A highly organized,
-nervous person, like a racehorse, may
-display intense activity for a short time, but it
-should be followed by a long period of rest;
-while the phlegmatic person, like the ox or the
-draft horse, can go all day without injury.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>EDUCATION</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I believe in education most thoroughly, and
-think no one can have too much knowledge, if
-properly digested. But in many of our colleges,
-I have often thought, not more than one
-in five is radically improved by the course.
-Most collegiates waste too much time in frivolity,
-and somehow there seems to be little restraining
-power in the college to prevent this.
-I agree that students should have self-restraint
-and application themselves, but, in the absence
-of these, the college should supply more compulsion
-than is now the rule.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>APPRENTICES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Do you favor reviving the old apprentice
-system for would-be mechanics?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only in rare cases. As a rule, we have
-special machines now that do as perfect work
-as the market requires; some of them, indeed,
-better work than can be done by hand. A boy
-or man can soon learn to tend one of these,
-when he becomes, for ordinary purposes, a specialist.
-Very few shops now have apprentices.
-No rule, however, will apply to all, and it may
-still be best for one to serve an apprenticeship
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>in a trade in which he wishes to advance beyond
-any predecessor or competitor.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PREPARE TO THE UTMOST: THEN DO YOUR BEST</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Is success dependent more upon ability or
-opportunity?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of course, opportunity is necessary. You
-couldn’t run a mammoth department store on
-the desert of Sahara. But, given the possibility,
-the right man can make his opportunity,
-and should do so, if it is not at hand, or does
-not come, after reasonable waiting. Even Napoleon
-had to wait for his. On the other hand,
-if there is no ability, none can display itself,
-and the best opportunity must pass by unimproved.
-The true way is to first develop your
-ability to the last ounce, and then you will be
-ready for your opportunity, when it comes, or
-to make one, if none offers.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>PRESENT OPPORTUNITIES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Is the chance for a youth as good as it was
-twenty-five or fifty years ago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, and no. In any country, as it becomes
-more thickly populated, the chance for
-purely individual enterprises is almost sure to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>diminish. One notices this more as he travels
-through other and older countries, where, far
-more than with us, boys follow in the footsteps
-of their fathers, generation after generation.
-But for those who are willing to adapt
-themselves to circumstances, the chance, to-day,
-at least from a pecuniary standpoint, is
-better than ever before, for those starting in
-life. There was doubtless more chance for the
-individual boat-builder, in the days of King
-Philip, when each Indian made his own canoe;
-but there is certainly more profit now for an
-employee of our firm of boat-builders.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>NATURAL EXECUTIVE ABILITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Granted, however, that he can find employment,
-how do his chances of rising compare
-with those of your youth?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They still depend largely upon the individual.
-<i>Some seem to have natural executive
-ability, and others develop it, while most men
-never possess it. Those who lack it cannot
-hope to rise far, and never could.</i> Jefferson’s
-idea that all men are created equal is true
-enough, perhaps, so far as their political rights
-are concerned, but from the point of view of
-efficiency in business, it is ridiculous. In any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>shop of one hundred men, you will find one
-who is acknowledged, at least tacitly, as the
-leader, and he sooner or later becomes so in
-fact. A rich boy may get and hold a place in
-an office, on account of his wealth or influence;
-but in the works, merit alone will enable a man
-to hold a place long.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE DEVELOPMENT OF POWER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“But what is his chance of becoming a proprietor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is smaller, of course, as establishments
-grow larger and more valuable. It is all
-bosh for every man to expect to become a Vanderbilt
-or a Rockefeller, or to be President.
-But, in the long run, a man will still rise and
-prosper in almost exact proportion to his real
-value to the business world. He will rise or fall
-according to his ability.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can he develop ability?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, to a certain extent. As I have said,
-we are not all alike, and no amount of cultivation
-will make some minds equal to those of
-others who have had but little training. But,
-whether great or small, everyone has some
-weak point; let him first study to overcome
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>“How can he do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The only way I know of is to—do it. But
-this brings me back to what I told you at first.
-A good mother will show one how to guard
-against his weak points. She should study
-each child and develop his individual character,
-for character is the true foundation, after all.
-She should check extravagance and encourage
-industry and self-respect. My mother is one
-of the best, and I feel I owe her a debt I can
-never repay.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“MY MOTHER”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Your mother? Why, I thought you had
-been a boat-builder for half a century! How
-old is she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is eighty-eight, and still enjoys good
-health. If I have one thing more than another
-to be thankful for, it is her care in childhood
-and her advice and sympathy through life.
-How often have I thought of her wisdom when
-I have seen mothers from Europe (where they
-were satisfied to be peasants), seek to outshine
-all their neighbors after they have been in
-America a few years, and so bring financial
-ruin to their husbands or even goad them into
-crime, and curse their children with contempt
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>for honest labor in positions for which they are
-fitted, and a foolish desire to keep up appearances,
-even by living beyond their means and
-by seeking positions they cannot fill properly.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A BOAT-BUILDER IN YOUTH</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“You must have been quite young, when
-you began to build boats?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About thirteen or fourteen years old. You
-see, my father was an amateur boat-builder, in
-a small way, and did very good work, but usually
-not for sale. But I began the work as a
-business thirty-six years ago, when I was about
-twenty-two.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HE WOULD NOT BE DISCOURAGED</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“You must have been terribly handicapped
-by your blindness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was an obstacle, but I simply would not
-allow it to discourage me, and did my best, just
-the same as if I could see. My mother had
-taught me to think, and so I made thought and
-memory take the place of eyes. I acquired a
-kind of habit of mental projection which has
-enabled me to see models in my mind, as it
-were, and to consider their good and bad points
-intelligently. Besides, I cultivated my powers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>of observation to the utmost, in other respects.
-Even now, I take an occasional trip of observation,
-for I like to see what others are doing,
-and so keep abreast of the progress of the age.
-But I must stop or I shall get to ‘talking shop,’
-the thing I declined to do at first.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE SUM OF IT ALL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“The main thing for a boy is to have a good
-mother, to heed her advice, to do his best, and
-not get a ‘swelled head’ as he rises,—in other
-words, not to expect to put a gallon into a pint
-cup, or a bushel into a peck measure. Concentration,
-decision, industry and economy should
-be his watchwords, and invincible determination
-and persistence his rule of action.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With another cordial handshake, he bade me
-good-by.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>II</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>WHAT THE HERRESHOFF BROTHERS HAVE BEEN DOING</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Their recent Cup Defenders have made their
-names familiar to all, but shipping circles have
-long known them. The business of the firm
-was long confined almost wholly to the creation
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>of boats with single masts, each craft from
-twenty to thirty-six feet long. In their first ten
-years of associated work, they built nearly two
-thousand of these. But they were wonderful
-little boats, and of unrivaled swiftness. Then
-they made as wonderful a success in building
-steam fishing yachts. Then came torpedo boats.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i290fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic004'>
-<p><i>The race between the “Vigilant” and the “Valkyrie.”</i><br />(<i>The “Vigilant,” Herreshoff boat, the winner.</i>)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>And in 1881 their proposal to the British
-government to build two vedette boats was accepted
-on condition they should outmatch the
-work of White, the naval launch builder at
-Cowes. No firm had ever been able to compete
-with White. But in the following July
-the two Herreshoff boats were in the Portsmouth
-dockyard, England, ready for trial.
-They were each forty-eight feet long, nine feet
-in beam, and five feet deep, exactly the same
-size as White’s. They made fifteen and one-half
-knots an hour, while White’s only recorded
-twelve and two-fifths knots. “With
-all their machinery coal and water in place,
-the Herreshoff boats were filled with water,
-and then twenty men were put aboard each,
-that human load being just so much in excess
-the admiralty test, and even then each had a
-floating capacity of three tons. The examiners
-pronounced enthusiastically in favor of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>Herreshoff safety coil boilers as unexplodable,
-less liable to injury from shock, capable of raising
-steam more quickly, far lighter, and in all
-respects superior to those that had been formerly
-used for the purpose.” The boats were accepted,
-and orders given at once for two pinnaces,
-each thirty-three feet long. Again John
-Samuel White competed, but his new boats
-could only make seven and one-eighth knots,
-while the Herreshoff’s easily scored nine and
-one-quarter.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>RACING JAY GOULD</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>In July, 1883, Jay Gould was highly elated
-over the speed of his beautiful steam yacht
-“Atalanta,” which had several times met and
-distanced Edward S. Jaffray’s wonderful
-“Stranger;” but, on the twentieth of that
-month, his happiness, as the story is told, was
-very suddenly dashed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>After a hard day’s work, the jaded Jay
-boarded the “Atalanta” and began to shake
-out his pin-feathers a little, figuratively speaking.
-But before his boat had gone far on her
-run to Irvington, the bold manipulator of Wall
-Street made out a craft on his weather-quarter
-that seemed to be gliding after the “Atalanta”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>with intent to overhaul her. He had a good
-start, however, and sang out to the captain to
-keep a sharp eye on the persistent little
-stranger, so unlike the “Stranger” he had
-vanquished.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I wonder what it is!” he exclaimed to a
-friend beside him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The friend looked long and carefully at the
-oncoming boat, then turned a quizzical eye on
-Jay, remarking:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In a little while we can tell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will she get that close?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think she will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It was not long before the strange boat was
-abreast of the “Atalanta,” and Jay was then
-able to make out the mystical number “100”
-on her. He rubbed his eyes. Those were the
-very figures he had long hoped to see on the
-stock ticker, after the words “Western
-Union,” but that day they had lost their charm.
-Before long he was not only able to see the
-broadside of the “100,” but also had a good
-view of the stern of the vessel, whereon the
-same figures soon appeared and nearly as soon
-disappeared, as the “100” bade good-by to the
-“Atalanta,” which was burning every pound
-of coal that could possibly be carried without
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>putting Mr. Gould or some efficient substitute
-on the safety valve.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He seems to be out of humor to-night,”
-said his coachman, after leaving his employer
-at the door of his Irvington mansion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The mystic “100” which, by the way, was
-just one hundred feet over all, was merely the
-hundredth steamer built by the Herreshoffs,
-but on her first trip up the Hudson she attracted
-as much attention as the “Half Moon”
-of Henry Hudson or the “Clermont” of Robert
-Fulton. She was the fastest yacht in the
-world, and was beaten on the river by only one
-vessel, the “Mary Powell”—four and one-half
-minutes in twenty miles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Although Mr. Gould was considerably irritated
-at his defeat, he knew a good thing when
-he saw it, and the next year he ordered a small
-steam launch of the Herreshoffs.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The “100” made a great stir in Boston
-Harbor. Later on she steamed through the
-Erie canal and the Great Lakes, and made her
-home with the millionaire Mark Hopkins.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE “STILETTO”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The versatility of the Herreshoffs has appeared
-in their famous boiler improvement, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>in the great variety of vessels they have built.
-The “Stiletto” only ninety-four feet long,
-over all, astonished the yachting world in 1885.
-On June 10, she beat the “Mary Powell” two
-miles in a race of twenty-eight miles on the
-Hudson. At one time, the “Stiletto” circled
-completely around the big steamer and then
-moved rapidly away from her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Secretary Whitney bought the “Stiletto”
-for the United States navy, in which she has
-done valuable service. She was followed, in
-1890, by the still faster “Cushing,” whose record
-in the recent Spanish-American war is so
-well known.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Admiral Porter wrote to Secretary of the
-Navy Chandler, that the little Herreshoff
-steam launches were faster than any other
-owned by the government, their great superiority
-showing especially against a strong head
-wind and sea, when they would remain dry
-while their rivals required constant bailing.
-They were better trimmed, lighter, more buoyant,
-and in every way superior in nautical qualities,
-and twice as fast as others in a gale.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Nineteen vessels have been built by this firm
-for the United States government.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is a certain speed that attaches to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>every vessel, which may be called its natural
-rate,” says Lewis Herreshoff; “it is mainly
-governed by its length and the length of the
-carrier wave which always accompanies a vessel
-parallel to her line of motion. When she
-reaches a speed great enough to form a wave of
-the same length as the moving body, then that
-vessel has reached her natural rate of speed,
-and all that can be obtained above that is done
-by sheer brute force. The natural limit of speed
-of a boat forty feet long is about ten miles an
-hour; of a vessel sixty feet in length, twelve
-and one-quarter miles; of one a hundred feet
-long, fifteen and three-fourths miles; of one
-two hundred feet long, twenty-two miles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the speed is increased, this double or carrier
-wave, one-half on either side of the yacht,
-lengthens in such a way that the vessel seems
-to settle more the faster she goes, and so has
-to climb the very wave she makes. Hence the
-motive power must be increased much faster
-than the speed increases. Further, in order to
-avoid this settling and consequent climbing as
-much as possible, lightness of construction,
-next to correct proportions, is made the great
-desideratum in the Herreshoffs’ ideal boat.
-They use wood wherever possible, as it is not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>only lighter than metal, but is reasonably strong
-and generally much more durable. Wherever
-heavy strains come, a bracing form of construction
-is adopted, and metal is used also.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The engine of the “Stiletto” weighs ten
-pounds for each indicated horse-power; that
-of the “Cushing,” fifteen. The entire motive
-plant of the “Cushing” weighs sixty-five
-pounds for each horse-power; that of the “City
-of Paris,” two hundred. Comparing displacement,
-the former has eight times the power of
-the latter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For four years our government kept a staff
-of officers stationed at the Herreshoff works to
-experiment with high-speed machinery, in
-which the firm then led the country. One of
-their steamers, ascending the St. Lawrence
-River to the Thousand Islands, ran up all the
-rapids except the Lachine, where a detour by
-canal was made. The Canadians were deeply
-impressed by this triumph.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE BLIND BROTHERS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>One of the Herreshoff sisters is blind and a
-remarkable musician; and one brother blind
-who studied music in Berlin, and who conducts
-a school of music in Providence. Lewis Herreshoff,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>one of the boat-builders, is also blind.
-He, too, is a fine musician and an excellent
-bass singer, having received careful vocal training
-in Europe. He has fine literary taste, a
-very clear style, and writes for magazines,
-especially on boat-building and engineering.
-He has a large foreign correspondence, all of
-which he answers personally on the typewriter.
-It would be difficult to find a greater favorite
-with young people, to whom he devotes much
-of his time, teaching them games or lessons,
-also how to sail or row a boat, how to swim or
-float, and how to save each other from drowning.
-When walking along the street with a
-group of chatting children, he will ask, “What
-time is it by the clock on St. Michael’s
-Church?” pointing right at the steeple. He
-will wind a clock and set it exactly, and regulate
-it, if it does not go right.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE PERSONALITY OF JOHN B. HERRESHOFF</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>From his boyhood, John B. Herreshoff
-evinced a great fondness for boats and machinery,
-finding most pleasure, in his leisure hours,
-when boys of his age usually think only of play,
-in haunting boat-builders’ yards and machine
-shops, studying how and why things were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>done, and reading what had been done elsewhere
-in those branches of industry, beyond his
-field of observation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the age of eleven, he was studying the
-best lines for vessels’ hulls and making models
-and three years later he began building boats.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His terrible affliction has never seemed to
-weaken his self-reliance or turn him aside from
-following the chosen pursuit of his life, but has
-rather strengthened his devotion to it and his
-capacity for it by concentrating all his faculties
-upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His many years of blindness have given him
-not only the serious, patient, introspective look
-common to those who suffer like him, and their
-gentle, clearly modulated voice, but have also
-developed all his other faculties to such an extent
-as to largely replace the missing sense.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He can tell as much about an ordinary-sized
-steam launch, her lines, methods of construction,
-etc., by feeling, as others can by seeing,
-and he goes on inventing and building just as if
-his eyes were not closed forever. He is a tall,
-big-brained man, who couldn’t help inventing
-and working if he tried. Such a man would
-have to suffer the loss of more than one of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>senses before his mental efficiency would be
-impaired. When he wanted to build some
-steam launches for the government, he went
-to the navy yard at Washington and felt of the
-government launches, to discover their shape
-and how they were made. Then he went to
-Bristol and made better launches suitable for
-the government’s use.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>HAS HE A SIXTH SENSE?</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>He reads and understands the most delicate
-intonations and modulations of voices addressing
-him, as others read and understand facial
-expression. His sensitive fingers detect differences
-in metals, and follow, as if with a gift
-of perception, the lines of models submitted to
-him, and his mind sees even more clearly than by
-mere physical sight the intricacies of the most
-complicated machinery intelligently described
-to him, or over which his fingers are allowed to
-move. “That is a good stick,” he will say, examining
-a pile of lumber with his fingers.
-“Here’s a shaky piece, throw it out; it won’t
-do for this work,” may come next, or, “Saw
-off this end; it’s poor stock. The rest is all
-right.” On hearing him criticize, direct, and
-explain things within his province, a stranger
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>finds it hard to believe he cannot see at least a
-little,—out of one eye.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>SEEING WITH THE FINGERS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>By the constant practice, he has, as he expresses
-it, learned to see with his hands, not
-quite so quickly, but he believes as perfectly, as
-he could with his eyes, and this means more
-than it does in the case of an ordinary blind
-man; for, by a touch, he can tell whether the
-graceful double curves of a boat’s bottom are
-in correct proportion, one with another, and
-then, by a few rapid sweeps of his hands, over
-all, he can instantly judge of the symmetry
-and perfection of the whole. Even more than
-this, he will give minute directions to the carpenters
-and mechanics, running his hand along
-the piece of work one had produced, will immediately
-detect the slightest deviation from
-the instruction he has given. If at all impatient,
-he will seize the plane or other tool, and
-do the work himself. And yet the world calls
-this man “blind!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While skill plays a material part, one of John
-B. Herreshoff’s boats is a product of the mind,
-in a very great degree. Psychologists tell us
-that we do not see with our eyes, but with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>brain proper. This blind man sees, and constructs,
-not that which is objective and real to
-others, but that which is evolved from a transcendental
-intelligence applied to the most practical
-purposes.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>BROTHER NAT</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>One of the brothers, who has good eyes, is
-a prominent chemist in New York; and one
-who can see is Nat the designer for the boat-building.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Nathaniel G., the great yacht designer, was
-born in 1848. When he was not more than two
-years old, he was often found asleep on the
-sand along shore, with the rising tide washing
-his bare feet. Whenever he was missing, he
-was sought for first on the shore, where he
-would generally be found watching the ships or
-playing with toy boats.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At nine years of age, he was an excellent
-helmsman, and at twelve he sailed the
-“Sprite” to her first victory and won a prize.
-When older grown, he was known as a vigilant
-watcher of every chance as well as a skillful
-sailor. Once, when steering the “Ianthe” in
-a failing wind, he veered widely from a crowd
-of contestants, so as to run into a good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>breeze he noted far to starboard, and won
-the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He took a four years’ course at the Massachusetts
-Institute of Technology, and then
-served an apprenticeship with the famous Corliss
-Engine Company. He worked on the great
-engine at the Centennial Exposition, and took
-a course of engineering abroad, visiting many
-noted shipyards. He joined the firm in 1877,
-fourteen years after the works were opened.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Nathaniel Greene Herreshoff, named for
-General Greene of Revolutionary fame, is seven
-years younger, and only less famous than his
-blind brother as a boat-builder,—only second
-to John B. in about the same way that Greene
-was second to Washington. “General Greene
-is second to no one,” said Washington. John
-B. would have done splendid work without Nat
-as he did for years before the latter joined the
-firm, but it would have been in a smaller way.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For years John B., his father, and his brothers,
-James B. or Lewis, and Nathaniel G., were
-accustomed to get together frequently in the
-dining-room of the old homestead, and talk and
-plan together in regard to boat-building. Nat
-would usually make the first model on lines
-previously agreed upon, and then John B.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>would feel it over and suggest changes, which
-would be made, and the consultation continued
-until all was satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Nathaniel is described as “a tall, thin man,
-with a full beard and a stoop,” the latter said
-to have been acquired in “watching his rivals
-in his races, craning his head in order to see
-them from under the boom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We have been always together from boyhood,”
-said John B., speaking of “Nat;”
-“we have had the same pleasures, the same
-purposes, the same aspirations; in fact, we
-have almost been one, and we have achieved
-nothing for which a full share of credit is not
-his just due. Nothing has ever been done by
-one without the other. Whenever one found
-an obstacle or difficulty, the other helped him to
-remove it; and he, being without the disadvantage
-I have, never makes a mistake.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>A Successful Novelist: Fame After Fifty<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c019'><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Practical Hints to Young Authors,</div>
- <div class='c000'>BY MRS. AMELIA E. BARR</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c018'>TO be successful! That is the legitimate
-ideal every true worker seeks to realize.
-But success is not the open secret
-which it appears to be; its elements are
-often uncomprehended; and its roots generally
-go deep down, into the very beginnings of life.
-I can compel my soul to look back into that
-twilight which shrouds my earliest years, and
-perceive, even in them, monitions and tendencies
-working for that future, which in my destiny
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>was fashioned and shaped when as yet
-there was neither hint nor dream of it. Fortunately,
-I had parents who understood the</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>VALUE OF BIBLICAL AND IMAGINATIVE LITERATURE</h3>
-<p class='c017'>in the formation of the intellect. The men and
-women whom I knew first and best were those
-of the Hebrew world. Sitting before the
-nursery fire, while the snow fell softly and
-ceaselessly, and all the mountains round were
-white, and the streets of the little English town
-choked with drifts, I could see the camels and
-the caravans of the Ishmaelitish merchants,
-passing through the hot, sandy desert. I could
-see Hagar weeping under the palm, and the
-waters of the Red Sea standing up like a wall.
-Miriam clashing the timbrels, and Deborah
-singing under the oak, and Ruth gleaning in
-the wheatfields of Bethlehem, were as real to
-me as were the women of my own home. Before
-I was six years old, I had been with Christian
-to the Celestial City, and had watched,
-with Crusoe, the mysterious footprint on the
-sand, and the advent of the savages. Then
-came the wonders of afrites and genii, and all
-the marvels and miracles of the Arabian tales.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>These were the mind-builders, and though
-schools and teachers and text-books did much
-afterwards, I can never nor will forget the
-glorious company of men and women from the
-sacred world, and that marvelous company of
-caliphs and kings and princesses from Wonder
-Land and Fairy Land, that expanded my whole
-nature, and fitted me for the future miracles of
-Nature and Science, and all the marvelous people
-of the Poet’s realm.</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f8'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This is a most remarkable story, communicated to
-me by Mrs. Barr, and related for the first time in this
-article. The distinguished novelist, being a perfect
-housekeeper and the mother of a large family, yet earns
-$20,000 a year by her books, which have been translated
-into the language of almost every civilized country.—O. S. M.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>For eighteen years I was amassing facts and
-fancies, developing a crude intelligence, waiting
-for the vitalization of the heart. Then
-Love, the Supreme Teacher, came; and his
-first lesson was,</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>RENUNCIATION.</h3>
-<p class='c017'>I was to give up father, and mother, home and
-kindred, friends and country, and follow where
-he would lead me, into a land strange and far
-off. Child-bearing and child-losing; the limitations
-and delights of frontier life; the intimate
-society of such great and individual men
-as Sam Houston, and the men who fought with
-him; the intense feelings induced by war, its
-uncertainties and possibilities, and the awful
-abiding in the Valley of the Shadow of Death,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>with the pestilence that walked in darkness and
-the sickness that destroyed at noonday;—all
-these events with their inevitable “asides”
-were instrumental in the education and preparation
-of the seventeen years of my married
-life.</p>
-<p class='c011'>The calamitous lesson of widowhood, under
-peculiarly tragic circumstances, was the last
-initiation of a heart already broken and humbled
-before Him who doeth all things well, no
-matter how hard the stroke may be. I thought
-all was over then; yet all was just beginning.
-It was the open door to a new life—a life full
-of comforts, and serene, still,</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>DELIGHTFUL STUDIES.</h3>
-<p class='c017'>Though I had written stories to please my
-children, and many things to please myself, it
-had never occurred to me that money could be
-made by writing. The late William Libbey,
-a man of singular wisdom and kindness, first
-made me understand that my brain and my
-ten fingers were security for a good living.
-From my first effort I began to gather in the
-harvest of all my years of study and reading
-and private writing. For there is this peculiarity
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>about writing—that if in any direction
-it has merit, it will certainly find a market.</p>
-<p class='c011'>For fifteen years I wrote short stories,
-poems, editorials, and articles on every conceivable
-subject, from Herbert Spencer’s theories,
-to gentlemen’s walking sticks; but bringing
-to every piece of work, if it was only ten
-lines, the best of my knowledge and ability;
-and so earning, with a great deal of pleasure,
-a very good living. During the earlier years
-of this time I worked and read on an average</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>FIFTEEN HOURS A DAY;</h3>
-<p class='c017'>for I knew that, to make good work, I must
-have constant fresh material; must keep up
-to date in style and method; and must therefore
-<i>read</i> far more than I wrote. But I have
-been an omnivorous reader all my life long,
-and no changes, no cares of home and children,
-have ever interfered with this mental necessity.
-In the most unlikely places and circumstances,
-I looked for books, and found them. These
-fifteen years on the weekly and monthly periodicals
-gave me the widest opportunities for
-information. I had an alcove in the Astor
-Library, and I practically lived in it. I slept
-and ate at home, but I lived in that City of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>Books. I was in the prime of life, but neither
-society, amusements, nor pleasures of any kind,
-could draw me away from the source of all my
-happiness and profit.</p>
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly, after this long novition, I received
-the “call” for a different work. I had</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>AN ACCIDENT</h3>
-<p class='c017'>which confined me to my room, and which, I
-knew, would keep me from active work for
-some months. I fretted for my work, as dry
-wood frets an inch from the flame, and said,
-“I shall lose all I have gained; I shall fall behind
-in the race; all these things are against
-me.” They were all for me. A little story
-of what seemed exceptional merit, had been
-laid away, in the hope that I might some day
-find time to extend it into a novel. A prisoner
-in my chair, I finished the book in six weeks,
-and sent it to Dodd, Mead &amp; Co. On Thanksgiving
-morning, a letter came, accepting the
-book, and any of my readers can imagine what
-a happy Thanksgiving Day that was! This
-book was “Jan Vedder’s Wife,” and its great
-and immediate success indicated to me the work
-I was at length ready for. I was then in my
-fifty-second year, and every year had been a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>preparation for the work I have since pursued.
-I went out from that sick room sure of my</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>VOCATION;</h3>
-<p class='c017'>and, with a confidence founded on the certainty
-of my equipment, and a determination to trust
-humanity, and take my readers only into green
-pastures and ways of purity and heroism, I
-ventured on my new path as a novelist.</p>
-<p class='c011'>I cannot close this paper without a few
-words to those who wish to profit by it. I
-want them to be sure of a few points which, in
-my narrative, I may not have emphasized sufficiently.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>WORDS OF COUNSEL</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>1. Men and women succeed <i>because they
-take pains to succeed</i>. Industry and patience
-are almost genius; and successful people are
-often more distinguished for resolution and
-perseverance than for unusual gifts. They
-make determination and unity of purpose supply
-the place of ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>2. Success is the reward of those who
-“spurn delights and live laborious days.” We
-learn to do things by <i>doing them. One of the
-great secrets of success is “pegging away.”</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>No disappointment must discourage, and a run
-back must often be allowed, in order to take a
-longer leap forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>3. <i>No opposition must be taken to heart.</i>
-Our enemies often help us more than our
-friends. Besides, a head-wind is better than
-no wind. Who ever got anywhere in a dead
-calm?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>4. <i>A fatal mistake is to imagine that success
-is some stroke of luck.</i> This world is run
-with far too tight a rein for luck to interfere.
-Fortune <i>sells</i> her wares; she never gives them.
-In some form or other, we pay for her favors;
-or we go empty away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>5. We have been told, for centuries, to
-watch for opportunities, and to strike while the
-iron is hot. Very good; but I think better of
-Oliver Cromwell’s amendment.—“<i>make the
-iron hot by striking it.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>6. Everything good needs time. Don’t do
-work in a hurry. Go into details; it pays in
-every way. <i>Time means power for your work.</i>
-Mediocrity is always in a rush; but whatever
-is worth doing at all is worth doing with consideration.
-For genius is nothing more nor
-less than doing well what anyone can do badly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>7. <i>Be orderly.</i> Slatternly work is never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>good work. It is either affectation, or there is
-some radical defect in the intellect. I would
-distrust even the spiritual life of one whose
-methods and work were dirty, untidy, and
-without clearness and order.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>8. Never be above your profession. I have
-had many letters from people who wanted all
-the emoluments and honors of literature, and
-who yet said, “Literature is the accident of
-my life; I am a lawyer, or a doctor, or a lady,
-or a gentleman.” <i>Literature is no accident.
-She is a mistress who demands the whole heart,
-the whole intellect, and the whole time of a
-devotee.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c011'>9. Don’t fail through defects of temper and
-over-sensitiveness at moments of trial. <i>One
-of the great helps to success is to be cheerful</i>;
-to go to work with a full sense of life; to be
-determined to put hindrances out of the way;
-to prevail over them and to get the mastery.
-<i>Above all things else, be cheerful</i>; there is no
-beatitude for the despairing.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Apparent success may be reached by sheer
-impudence, in defiance of offensive demerit.
-But men who get what they are manifestly
-unfit for, are made to feel what people think of
-them. Charlatanry may flourish; but when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>its bay tree is greenest, it is held far lower than
-genuine effort. The world is just; it may, it
-does, patronize quacks; but <i>it never puts them
-on a level with true men</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is better to have the opportunity of victory,
-than to be spared the struggle; for success
-comes but as the result of arduous experience.
-The foundations of my success were laid
-before I can well remember; <i>it was after at
-least forty-five years of conscious labor that I
-reached the object of my hope</i>. Many a time
-my head failed me, my hands failed me, my
-feet failed me, but, thank God, my <i>heart</i> never
-failed me. Because <i>I knew that no extremity
-would find God’s arm shortened</i>.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XIX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>How Theodore Thomas Brought the People Nearer to Music</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>MR. THOMAS is an early riser, and as
-I found him one morning, in his
-chambers in Chicago, he was preparing
-to leave for rehearsal. The hale old
-gentleman actively paced the floor, while I conversed
-with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Thomas,” I said, “those familiar with
-the events of your life consider them a lesson
-of encouragement for earnest and high-minded
-artists.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is kind,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should like, if you will, to have you
-speak of your work in building up your great
-orchestra in this country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is too long a story. I would have to
-begin with my birth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where were you born?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>“In the kingdom of Hanover, in 1835. My
-father was a violinist, and from him I inherited
-my taste, I suppose. He taught me music.
-When I was only six years old, I played the
-violin at public concerts.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>“I WAS NOT AN INFANT PRODIGY”</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I was not an infant prodigy, however. My
-father had too much wisdom to injure my
-chances in that way. He made me keep to my
-studies in a manner that did me good. I came
-to America in 1845.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was the American music field crowded
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On the contrary, there wasn’t any field to
-speak of. It had to be made. Music was the
-pastime of a few. The well-educated and fashionable
-classes possessed or claimed a knowledge
-of it. There was scarcely any music for
-the common people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you get your start in the New
-York world of music?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With four associates, William Mason, Joseph
-Mosenthal, George Matzka and Frederick
-Berguer, I began a series of concerts of Chamber
-Music, and for many years we conducted
-this modest artistic enterprise. There was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>much musical enthusiasm on our part, but very
-little reward, except the pleasure we drew from
-our own playing.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“These Mason and Thomas <i>soirées</i> are still
-remembered by old-time music lovers of New
-York, not only for their excellence, but for the
-peculiar character of the audiences. They
-were quiet little monthly reunions, to which
-most of the guests came with complimentary
-tickets. The critics hardly ventured to intrude
-upon the exercises, and the newspapers gave
-them little notice.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>BEGINNING OF THE ORCHESTRA</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“How did you come to found your great orchestra?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was more of a growth than a full-fledged
-thought to begin with. It was in 1861
-that I severed my connection with the opera
-and began to establish a genuine orchestra. I
-began with occasional performances, popular
-matinée concerts, and so on, and, in a few
-years, was able to give a series of Symphony
-<i>Soirées</i> at the old Irving Hall in New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To the average person this work of Mr.
-Thomas may seem to be neither difficult nor
-great. Yet while anyone could have collected
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>a band in a week, to make such an orchestra as
-Mr. Thomas meant to have, required time and
-patience. It was when the Philharmonic Society,
-after living through a great many hardships,
-was on the full tide of popular favor.
-Its concerts and rehearsals filled the
-Academy of Music with the flower of New
-York society. Powerful social influences had
-been won to its support, and Carl Bergmann
-had raised its noble orchestra of one hundred
-performers to a point of proficiency then quite
-unexampled in this country, and in some particulars
-still unsurpassed. Ladies and gentlemen
-who moved in the best circles hardly noticed
-the parallel entertainment offered in such
-a modest way, by Mr. Thomas, on the opposite
-side of the street. The patrons of his Chamber
-Concerts, of course, went in to see what the
-new orchestra was like; professional musicians
-hurried to the hall with their free passes; and
-there were a few curious listeners besides who
-found in the programmes a class of compositions
-somewhat different from those which Mr.
-Bergmann chiefly favored, and, in particular, a
-freshness and novelty in the selections, with an
-inclination, not yet very strongly marked, toward
-the modern German school. Among
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>such of the <i>dilettanti</i> as condescended to think
-of Mr. Thomas at all, there was a vague impression
-that his concerts were started in opposition
-to the Philharmonic Society, but that
-they were not so good and much less genteel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is true that Mr. Thomas was surpassed,
-at that time, by Mr. Bergmann’s larger and
-older orchestra, and that he had much less than
-an equal share of public favor, but there was no
-intentional rivalry. The two men had entirely
-different ideas and worked them out in perfectly
-original ways. It was only the artist’s
-dismal period of struggle and neglect, which
-every beginner must pass through. He had to
-meet cold and meager audiences, and the false
-judgment of both the critics and the people.
-Yet he was a singular compound of good
-American energy and German obstinacy, and
-he never lost courage.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was it a long struggle?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not very long. Matters soon began to
-mend. The orchestra improved, the dreadful
-gaps in the audience soon filled up, and at the
-end of the year the Symphony <i>Soirées</i>, if they
-made no excitement in musical circles, had at
-least achieved a high reputation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What was your aim, at that time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>“When I began, I was convinced that there
-is no music too high for the popular appreciation,—that
-no scientific education is required
-for the enjoyment of Beethoven. I believed
-that it is only necessary that a public whose
-taste has been vitiated by over-indulgence in
-trifles, should have time and opportunity to accustom
-itself to better things. The American
-people at large then (1864) knew little or
-nothing of the great composers for the orchestra.
-Three or four more or less complete organizations
-had visited the principal cities of
-the United States in former years, but they
-made little permanent impression. Juillien had
-brought over, for his monster concerts, only five
-or six solo players, and the band was filled up
-with such material as he found here. The celebrated
-Germania Band of New York, which
-had first brought Mr. Bergmann (famous then
-as the head of the New York Philharmonic Society)
-into notice, did some admirable work
-just previous to my start in New York, but it
-disbanded after six years of vicissitude, and,
-besides, it was not a complete orchestra.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You mean,” I said, as Mr. Thomas paused
-meditatively, “that you came at a time when
-there was a decided opportunity?”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>MUSIC HAD NO HOLD ON THE MASSES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Yes. There had been, and were then, good
-organizations, such as the New York Philharmonic
-Society and the Harvard Musical Association
-in Boston, and a few similar organizations
-in various parts of the country. I mean
-no disparagement to their honorable labors,
-but, in simple truth, none of them had great influence
-on the masses. They were pioneers of
-culture. They prepared the way for the modern
-permanent orchestra.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They were not important?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, no; that cannot be said. It would be
-the grossest ingratitude to forget what they
-did and have done and are still doing, or detract
-in the smallest degree from their well-earned
-fame. But from the very nature of their
-organization, it was inevitable that they
-should stand a little apart from the common
-crowd. To the general public, their performances
-were more like mysterious rites, celebrated
-behind closed doors, in the presence of
-a select and unchanging company of believers.
-Year after year, the same twenty-five hundred
-people filled the New York Academy of Music
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>at the Philharmonic concerts, applauding the
-same class of master works, and growing more
-and more familiar with the same standards of
-the strictly classical school. This was no cause
-for complaint; on the contrary, it was most
-fortunate that the reverence for the older forms
-of art and canons of taste were thus kept alive;
-and we know that, little by little, the culture
-which the Philharmonic Society diffuses,
-through the circle of its regular subscribers,
-spreads beyond that small company, and raises
-the æsthetic tone of metropolitan life. But I
-believed then, as I believe now, that it would
-require generations for this little leaven to
-leaven the whole mass, and so I undertook to
-do my part in improving matters by forming
-an orchestra.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You wanted to get nearer the people with
-good music?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, I wanted the people to get nearer to
-music. I was satisfied that the right course is
-to begin at the bottom instead of the top, and
-make the cultivation of symphonic music a
-popular movement.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was the idea of a popular permanent orchestra
-new at that time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why was it necessary to effect a permanent
-orchestra?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why? Because the first step in making
-music popular was to raise the standard of orchestral
-performances and increase their frequency.
-Our country had never possessed a
-genuine orchestra, for a band of players gathered
-together at rare intervals for a special
-purpose does not deserve the name. The musician
-who marches at the head of a target
-company all the morning and plays for a dancing
-party at night, is out of tune with the great
-masters. To express the deep emotions of
-Beethoven, the romanticism of Schumann, or
-the poetry of Liszt, he ought to live in an atmosphere
-of art, and keep not only his hand in
-practice, but his mind properly attempered. An
-orchestra, therefore, ought to be a permanent
-body, whose members play together every day,
-under the same conductor, and devote themselves
-exclusively to genuine music. Nobody
-had yet attempted to found an orchestra of this
-kind in America when I began; but I believed
-it could be done.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>WORKING OUT HIS IDEA</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Did you have an idea of a permanent building
-for your orchestra?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. I wanted something more than an
-ordinary concert-room. The idea needed it. It
-was to be a place suitable for use at all seasons
-of the year. There was to be communication in
-summer with an open garden, and in winter
-it was to be a perfect auditorium.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Thomas’s idea went even further. It
-must be bright, comfortable, roomy, well ventilated—for
-a close and drowsy atmosphere is
-fatal to symphonic music,—it must offer to the
-multitude every attraction not inconsistent with
-musical enjoyment. The stage must be adapted
-for a variety of performances, for popular summer
-entertainment as well as the most serious
-of classical concerts. There, with an uninterrupted
-course of entertainments, night after
-night, the whole year round, the noblest work
-of all the great masters might be worthily
-presented.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The scheme was never wholly worked out in
-New York, great as Mr. Thomas’s fame became,
-but it was partially realized in the old
-Exposition building in Chicago, where he afterwards
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>gave his summer concerts, and it is
-still nearer reality in the present permanent
-Chicago orchestra, which has the great Auditorium
-for its home and a $50,000 annual
-guarantee.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What were your first steps in this direction?”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I began with a series of <i>al fresco</i> entertainments
-in the old Terrace Garden, in June, 1866.
-They were well patronized; and repeated in
-1867. Then, in 1868, we removed to better
-quarters in Central Park Garden, and things
-prospered, so that, in 1869, I began those annual
-tours, which are now so common.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The first itinerary of this kind was not very
-profitable, but the young conductor fought
-through it. Each new season improved somewhat,
-but there were troubles and losses. More
-than once, the travelers trod close upon the
-heels of calamity. The cost of moving from
-place to place was so great that the most careful
-management was necessary to cover expenses.
-They could not afford to be idle, even
-for a night, and the towns capable of furnishing
-good audiences generally wanted fun.
-Hence they must travel all day, and Thomas
-took care that the road should be smoothed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>with all obtainable comforts. Special cars on
-the railways, special attendants to look after
-the luggage, and lodgings at the best hotels
-contributed to make the tour tolerably pleasant
-and easy, so that the men came to their evening
-work fresh and smiling. They were tied up by
-freshets and delayed by wrecks; but their fame
-grew, and the audiences became greater.
-Thomas’s fame as a conductor who could guarantee
-constant employment permitted him to
-take his choice of the best players in the country,
-and he brought over a number of European
-celebrities as the public taste improved.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Theodore Thomas did another wise thing.
-He treated New York like a provincial city,
-giving it a week of music once in a while as he
-passed through it on his travels. This excited
-the popular interest, and when he came to stay,
-the next season, a brilliantly successful series of
-concerts was the result. At the close, a number
-of his admirers united in presenting him a rich
-silver casket, holding a purse of thirty-five hundred
-dollars, as a testimonial of gratitude for
-his services. The Brooklyn Philharmonic Society
-placed itself under his direction. Chicago
-gave him a fine invitation to attend benefit entertainments
-to himself; and, when he came,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>decked the hall with abundant natural flowers,
-as if for the reception of a hero. He was successful
-financially and every other way, and
-from that time on he merely added to his
-laurels.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THE CHIEF ELEMENT OF HIS SUCCESS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What,” I asked of him, “do you consider
-the chief element of your success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is difficult to say. Perseverance,
-hard work, stern discipline,—each had its
-part.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have never attempted to become
-rich?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Poh!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you still believe in the best music for
-the mass of the people?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do. My success has been with them. It
-was so in New York; it is so here in Chicago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you still work as hard as ever?” I inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nearly so. The training of a large orchestra
-never ends. The work must be gone over
-and over. There is always something new.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And your life’s pleasure lies in this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Wholly so. To render perfect music perfectly—that
-is enough.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XX</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>John Burroughs at Home: The Hut on the Hill Top</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>WHEN I visited the hill-top retreat of
-John Burroughs, the distinguished
-writer upon nature, at West Park,
-New York, it was with the feeling that all success
-is not material; that mere dollars are nothing,
-and that the influential man is the successful
-man, whether he be rich or poor. John Burroughs
-is unquestionably both influential and
-poor. Relatively poor: being an owner of some
-real estate, and having a modest income from
-copyrights. He is content: knowing when he
-has enough. On the wooden porch of his little
-bark-covered cabin I waited, one June afternoon,
-until he should come back from the
-woods and fields, where he had gone for a ramble.
-It was so still that the sound of my rocker
-moving to and fro on the rough boards of the
-little porch seemed to shock the perfect quiet.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>From afar off came the plaintive cry of a wood-dove,
-and then all was still again. Presently
-the interpreter of out-door life appeared in the
-distance, and, seeing a stranger at his door,
-hurried homeward. He was without coat or
-vest and looked cool in his white outing shirt
-and large straw hat. After some formalities
-of introduction we reached the subject which I
-had called to discuss, and he said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is not customary to interview men of
-my vocation concerning success.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Any one who has made a lasting impression
-on the minds of his contemporaries,” I began,
-“and influenced men and women—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you refer to me?” he interrupted,
-naïvely.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>I nodded and he laughed. “I have not endowed
-a university nor made a fortune, nor
-conquered an enemy in battle,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And those who have done such things have
-not written ‘Locusts and Wild Honey’ and
-‘Wake-Robin.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I recognize,” he said quietly, “that success
-is not always where people think it is.
-There are many ways of being successful; and
-I do not approve of the mistake which causes
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>many to consider that a great fortune acquired
-means a great success achieved. On the contrary,
-our greatest men need very little money
-to accomplish the greatest work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I thought that anyone leading a life so
-wholly at variance with the ordinary ideas and
-customs would see success in life from a different
-point of view,” I observed. “Money
-is really no object with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The subject of wealth never disturbs me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You lead a very simple life here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Such as you see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The sight would impress anyone. So far is
-this disciple of nature away from the ordinary
-mode of the world, that his little cabin, set in
-the cup-shaped top of a hill, is practically bare of
-luxuries and the so-called comforts of life. His
-surroundings are of the rudest, the very rocks
-and bushes encroaching upon his back door.
-All about, the crest of the hill encircles him,
-and shuts out the world. Only the birds of the
-air venture to invade his retreat from the various
-sides of the mountain; and there is only
-one approach by a straggling, narrow path. In
-his house are no decorations but such as can be
-hung upon the exposed wood. The fireplace is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>of brick, and quite wide; the floor, rough
-boards scrubbed white; the ceiling, a rough array
-of exposed rafters; and his bed rudely constructed.
-Very few and very simple chairs, a
-plain table and some shelves for books make the
-wealth of the retreat and serve for his ordinary
-use.<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c019'><sup>[9]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f9'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>This hut on the hill-top is situated in an old lake bed,
-some three hundred yards wide, half filled with peat and
-decomposed matter, swampy and overgrown. This area
-was devoted by Mr. Burroughs to the raising of celery
-for the market, when he set out to earn a living upon
-the land.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Many people,” I said, “think that your
-method of living is an ideal example of the way
-people ought to live.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is nothing remarkable in that. A
-great many people are very weary of the way
-they think themselves compelled to live. They
-are mistaken in believing that the disagreeable
-things they find themselves doing, are the
-things they ought to do. A great many take
-their ideas of a proper aim in life from what
-other people say and do. Consequently, they
-are unhappy, and an independent existence such
-as mine strikes them as ideal. As a matter of
-fact, it is very natural.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Would you say that to work so as to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>able to live like this should be the aim of a
-young man?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By no means. On the contrary, his aim
-should be to live in such a way as will give his
-mind the greatest freedom and peace. This
-can be very often obtained by wanting less of
-material things and more of intellectual ones.
-A man who achieved such an aim would be as
-well off as the most distinguished man in any
-field. Money-getting is half a mania, and some
-other ‘getting’ propensities are manias also.
-The man who gets content comes nearest to being
-reasonable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should like,” I said, “to illustrate your
-point of view from the details of your own
-life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Students of nature do not, as a rule, have
-eventful lives. I was born at Roxbury, New
-York, in 1837. That was a time when conditions
-were rather primitive. My father was a
-farmer, and I was raised among the woods and
-fields. I came from an uncultivated, unreading
-class of society, and grew up among surroundings
-the least calculated to awaken the
-literary faculty. I have no doubt that daily
-contact with the woods and fields awakened my
-interest in the wonders of nature, and gave
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>me a bent toward investigation in that direction.”<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c019'><sup>[10]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f10'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“Blessed is he whose youth was passed upon a farm,”
-writes Mr. Burroughs; “and if it was a dairy farm his
-memories will be all the more fragrant. The driving of
-the cows to and from the pasture every day and every
-season for years,—how much of summer and of nature
-he got into him on these journeys! What rambles and
-excursions did this errand furnish the excuse for! The
-birds and birds’ nests, the berries, the squirrels, the
-woodchucks, the beech woods into which the cows loved
-so to wander and browse, the fragrant wintergreens,
-and a hundred nameless adventures, all strung upon that
-brief journey of half a mile to and from the remote pasture.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you begin early to make notes and
-write upon nature?” I questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not before I was sixteen or seventeen.
-Earlier than that, the art of composition had
-anything but charms for me. I remember that
-while at school, at the age of fourteen, I was
-required, like other students, to write ‘compositions’
-at stated times, but I usually evaded the
-duty one way or another. On one occasion, I
-copied something from a comic almanac, and
-unblushingly handed it in as my own. But the
-teacher detected the fraud, and ordered me to
-produce a twelve-line composition before I left
-school. I remember I racked my brain in vain,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>and the short winter day was almost closing
-when Jay Gould, who sat in the seat behind me,
-wrote twelve lines of doggerel on his slate and
-passed it slyly over to me. I had so little taste
-for writing that I coolly copied that, and
-handed it in as my own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You were friendly with Gould then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes, ‘chummy,’ they call it now. His
-father’s farm was only a little way from ours,
-and we were fast friends, going home together
-every night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“His view of life must have been considerably
-different from yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was. I always looked upon success as
-being a matter of mind, not money; but Jay
-wanted the material appearances. I remember
-that once we had a wrestling match, and as we
-were about even in strength, we agreed to abide
-by certain rules,—taking what we called
-‘holts’ in the beginning and not breaking them
-until one or the other was thrown. I kept to
-this in the struggle, but when Jay realized that
-he was in danger of losing the contest, he broke
-the ‘holt’ and threw me. When I remarked
-that he had broken his agreement, he only
-laughed and said, ‘I threw you, didn’t I?’ And
-to every objection I made, he made the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>answer. The fact of having won was pleasing
-to him. It satisfied him, although it wouldn’t
-have contented me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you ever talk over success in life with
-him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, quite often. He was bent on making
-money, and did considerable trading among
-us schoolboys,—sold me some of his books. I
-felt then that my view of life was more satisfactory
-to me than his would have been. I
-wanted to obtain a competence, and then devote
-myself to high thinking instead of to money-making.”<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c019'><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f11'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>An old schoolmate in the little red schoolhouse has
-said, that “John and Jay were not like the other boys.
-They learned their lessons easier; and at recess they
-looked on the games, but did not join in them. John
-always knew where to find the largest trout; he could
-show you birds’ nests, and name all the flowers. He
-was fond of reading, and would walk five miles to borrow
-a book. Roxbury is proud of John Burroughs.
-We celebrated ‘Burroughs Day’ instead of Arbor Day
-here last spring, in the high school, in honor of him.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How did you plan to attain this end?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By study. I began in my sixteenth or
-seventeenth year to try to express myself on
-paper, and when, after I had left the country
-school, I attended the seminary at Ashland and
-at Cooperstown, I often received the highest
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>marks in composition, though only standing
-about the average in general scholarship. My
-taste ran to essays, and I picked up the great
-works in that field at a bookstore, from time to
-time, and filled my mind with the essay idea.
-I bought the whole of Dr. Johnson’s works at
-a second-hand bookstore in New York, because,
-on looking into them I found his essays appeared
-to be solid literature, which I thought
-was just the thing. Almost my first literary
-attempts were moral reflections, somewhat in
-the Johnsonian style.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You were supporting yourself during these
-years?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I taught six months and ‘boarded round’
-before I went to the seminary. That put fifty
-dollars into my pocket, and the fifty paid my
-way at the seminary.<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c019'><sup>[12]</sup></a> Working on the farm,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>studying and teaching filled up the years until
-1863, when I went to Washington and found
-employment in the Treasury Department.”</p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f12'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>It was when he was attending the academy, that
-young Burroughs first saw that wonderful being—a
-living author:—</p>
-
-<p class='c018'>“I distinctly remember with what emotion I gazed
-upon him,” he said, “and followed him about in the
-twilight, keeping on the other side of the street. He
-was of little account,—a man who had failed as a lawyer,
-and then had written a history of Poland, which I have
-never heard of since that time; but to me he was the
-embodiment of the august spirit of authorship, and I
-looked upon him with more reverence and enthusiasm
-than I had ever before looked upon any man with. I
-cannot divine why I should have stood in such worshipful
-fear and awe of this obscure individual, but I suppose
-it was the instinctive tribute of a timid and imaginative
-youth to a power he was just beginning to see,—or
-to feel,—the power of letters.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You were connected with the Treasury
-then?”<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c019'><sup>[13]</sup></a></p>
-
-<div class='footnote c020' id='f13'>
-<p class='c018'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“My first book, ‘Wake-Robin,’ was written while I
-was a government clerk in Washington,” says Mr. Burroughs.
-“It enabled me to live over again the days I
-had passed with the birds, and in the scenes of my
-youth. I wrote the book while sitting at a desk in front
-of an iron wall. I was the keeper of a vault in which
-many million of bank-notes were stored. During my
-long periods of leisure, I took refuge in my pen. How
-my mind reacted from the iron wall in front of me, and
-sought solace in memories of the birds and of summer
-fields and woods.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes; for nearly nine years. I left the
-department in 1872, to become receiver of a
-bank, and subsequently for several years I performed
-the work of a bank examiner. I considered
-it only as an opportunity to earn and save
-up a little money on which I could retire. I
-managed to do that, and came back to this region,
-where I bought a fruit farm. I worked
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>that into paying condition, and then gave all
-my time to the pursuit of the studies I like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Had you abandoned your interest in nature
-during your Washington life?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No. I gave as much time to the study of
-nature and literature as I had to spare. When
-I was twenty-three I wrote an essay on ‘Expression,’
-and sent it to the ‘<i>Atlantic</i>.’ It was
-so Emersonian in style, owing to my enthusiasm
-for Emerson at that time, that the editor
-thought some one was trying to palm off on
-him an early essay of Emerson’s which he had
-not seen. He found that Emerson had not
-published any such paper, however, and printed
-it, though it had not much merit. I wrote off
-and on for the magazines.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The editor in question was James Russell
-Lowell, who, instead of considering it without
-merit, often expressed afterwards the delight
-with which he read this contribution from an
-unknown hand, and the swift impression of the
-author’s future distinction which came to him
-with that reading.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your successful work, then, has been in
-what direction?” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In studying nature. It has all come by living
-close to the plants and animals of the woods
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>and fields, and coming to understand them.
-There I have been successful. Men who, like
-myself, are deficient in self-assertion, or whose
-personalities are flexible and yielding, make a
-poor show in business, but in certain other
-fields these defects become advantages. Certainly
-it is so in my case. I can succeed with
-bird or beast, for I have cultivated my ability
-in that direction. I can look in the eye of an
-ugly dog or cow and win, but with an ugly man
-I have less success.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I consider the desire which most individuals
-have for the luxuries which money can
-buy, an error of mind” he added. “Those
-things do not mean anything except a lack of
-higher tastes. Such wants are not necessary
-wants, nor honorable wants. If you cannot get
-wealth with a noble purpose, it is better to
-abandon it and get something else. Peace of
-mind is one of the best things to seek, and finer
-tastes and feelings. The man who gets these,
-and maintains himself comfortably, is much
-more admirable and successful than the man
-who gets money and neglects these. The realm
-of power has no fascination for me. I would
-rather have my seclusion and peace of mind.
-This log hut, with its bare floors, is sufficient.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>I am set down among the beauties of nature,
-and in no danger of losing the riches that are
-scattered all about. No one will take my walks
-or my brook away from me. The flowers, birds
-and animals are plentifully provided. I have
-enough to eat and wear, and time to see how
-beautiful the world is, and to enjoy it. The entire
-world is after your money, or the things
-you have bought with your money. It is trying
-to keep them that makes them seem so precious.
-I live to broaden and enjoy my own life,
-believing that in so doing I do what is best for
-everyone. If I ran after birds only to write
-about them, I should never have written anything
-that anyone else would have cared to
-read. I must write from sympathy and love,—that
-is, from enjoyment,—or not at all. I come
-gradually to have a feeling that I want to write
-upon a given theme. Whenever the subject
-recurs to me, it awakens a warm, personal response.
-My confidence that I ought to write
-comes from the feeling or attraction which
-some subjects exercise over me. The work is
-pleasure, and the result gives pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And your work as a naturalist is what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Climbing trees to study birds, lying by the
-waterside to watch the fishes, sitting still in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>the grass for hours to study the insects, and
-tramping here and there, always to observe and
-study whatever is common to the woods and
-fields.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Men think you have done a great work,” I
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have done a pleasant work,” he said,
-modestly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the achievements of your schoolmate
-Gould do not appeal to you as having anything
-in them worth aiming for?” I questioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not for me. I think my life is better for
-having escaped such vast and difficult
-interests.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The gentle, light-hearted naturalist and recluse
-came down the long hillside with me, “to
-put me right” on the main road. I watched him
-as he retraced his steps up the steep, dark path,
-lantern in hand. His sixty years sat lightly upon
-him, and as he ascended I heard him singing.
-Long after the light melody had died away, I
-saw the serene little light bobbing up and down
-in his hand, disappearing and reappearing, as
-the lone philosopher repaired to his hut and his
-couch of content.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XXI</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>Vreeland’s Romantic Story: How He Came to Transport a Million Passengers a Day</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>A&nbsp;SHORT time ago, New York learned
-with interest and some astonishment,
-that the head of its greatest transportation
-system, Herbert H. Vreeland, had received
-from several of his associates as individuals,
-a “valentine” present of $100,000, in
-recognition of his superb management of their
-properties. Many New Yorkers then learned,
-for the first time, what railroad experts
-throughout the country had long known, that
-the transportation of a million people a day in
-New York’s busy streets, without serious friction
-or public annoyance, is not a matter of
-chance, but is the result of perhaps the most
-perfect traffic organization ever created, at the
-head of which is a man, quiet, forceful, able,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>with the ability of a great general—a master
-and at the same time, a friend of men,—himself
-one for whom in the judgment of his associates
-almost any higher railroad career is possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Thirty years ago Mr. Vreeland, then a lad
-thirteen years old, was, to use his own humorous,
-reminiscent phrase, “h’isting ice” on the
-Hudson River, one of a gang of eighteen or
-twenty men and boys filling the ice carts for
-retail city delivery. A picture just brought to
-light, shows him among the force lined up to be
-photographed, as a tall, loosely built, hatchet-faced
-lad in working garb, with a fragment of
-a smile on his face, as if he could appreciate
-the contrast of the boy of that day with the
-man of the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>How do these things happen? What was
-the divine spark in this boy’s brain and heart
-that should lift him out of the crowd of the
-commonplace to the position of responsibility
-and influence in the world which he now occupies?
-If my readers could have been present
-at the interview kindly granted by Mr. Vreeland
-to the writer, and could have heard him
-recalling his early life and its many struggles
-and disappointments with a smile that was
-often near a tear, they would have gone away
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>feeling that nothing is impossible to him who
-dares, and, above all else, who <i>works</i>, and they
-would have derived inspiration far greater than
-can possibly be given in these written words.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I first entered the railroad business in
-1875,” said Mr. Vreeland, “shoveling gravel
-on one of the Long Island Railroad Company’s
-night construction trains. Though this position
-was humble enough, it was a great thing
-to me then to feel myself a railroad man, with
-all that that term implied; and when, after a
-few months’ trial, I was given the job of inspecting
-ties and roadbed at a dollar a day, I
-felt that I was well on the road to the presidency.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One day the superintendent asked my boss
-if he could give him a reliable man to replace
-a switchman who had just made a blunder leading
-to a collision, and had been discharged.
-The reply was, ‘Well, I’ve got a man named
-Vreeland here, who will do exactly what you
-tell him to.’ They called me up, and, after a
-few short, sharp questions from the train-master,
-I went down to the dreary and desolate
-marsh near Bushwick, Long Island, and took
-charge of a switch. For a few days I had to
-camp out near that switch, in any way that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>might happen, but finally the officers made up
-their minds that they could afford me the luxury
-of a two-by-four flag-house with a stove in
-it, and I settled down for more railroading.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Bushwick station was not far away,
-and one of the company’s division headquarters
-was there. I soon made the acquaintance of
-all the officials around that station, and got into
-their good graces by offering to help them out
-in their clerical work at any and all times when
-I was off duty. It was a godsend to them,
-and exactly what I wanted, for I had determined
-to get into the inside of the railroad
-business from bottom to top. Many’s the time
-I have worked till eleven or twelve o’clock at
-night in that little station, figuring out train receipts
-and expenses, engine cost and duty, and
-freight and passenger statistics of all kinds;
-and, as a result of this work, I quickly acquired
-a grasp of railroad details in all stages, which
-few managers possess, for, in one way and another,
-I got into and through every branch of
-the business.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My Bushwick switch was a temporary one,
-put in for construction purposes only, and,
-after some months’ use, was discontinued, and
-I was discharged. This did not suit me at all,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>and I went to one of the officials of the road
-and told him that I wanted to remain with the
-Long Island Railroad Company in any capacity
-whatsoever, and would be obliged to him if
-he would give me a job. He said, at first, that
-he hadn’t a thing for me to do, but finally
-added, as if he was ashamed to suggest it, that,
-if I had a mind to go down on another division
-and sweep out and dust cars, I might do it. I
-instantly accepted, and thereby learned the details
-of another important railroad department.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pretty soon they made me brakeman on an
-early morning train to Hempstead, and then I
-found that I was worth to the world, after two
-years of railroad training, just forty dollars a
-month, <i>plus</i> a perquisite or two obtained from
-running a card-table department in the smoking-cars.
-I remembered that I paid eighteen
-dollars of my munificent salary for board and
-lodging, sent twenty dollars home for the support
-of my mother and sister, and had two dollars
-a month and the aforesaid perquisites left
-for ‘luxuries.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was about this time, thus early in my
-career, that I first came to be known as ‘President
-Vreeland.’ An old codger upon the railroad,
-in talking to me one day, said, in a bantering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>way: ‘Well, I suppose you think your
-fortune is made, now you have become a brakeman,
-but let me tell you what will happen.
-You will be a brakeman about four or five
-years, and then they will make you a conductor,
-at about one hundred dollars a month, and
-there you’ll stick all your life, if you don’t get
-discharged.’ I responded, rather angrily, ‘Do
-you suppose I am going to be satisfied with remaining
-a conductor? I mean to be president
-of a railroad.’ ‘Ho, ho, ho!’ laughed the
-man. He told the story around, and many a
-time thereafter the boys slyly placed the word
-‘President’ before my name on official instructions
-and packages sent to me.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A conductor on one of the regular trains
-quarreled one morning with the superintendent
-and was discharged. I was sent for and told
-to take out that train. This was jumping me
-over the heads of many of the older brakemen,
-and, as a consequence, all the brakemen on that
-train quit. Others were secured, however, and
-I ran the train regularly for a good many
-months.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then came an accident one day, for which
-the engineer and I were jointly responsible.
-We admitted our responsibility, and were discharged.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>I went again to the superintendent,
-however, and, upon a strong plea to be retained
-in the service, he sent me back to the ranks
-among the brakemen. I had no complaint to
-make, but accepted the consequence of my
-mistake.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Soon after this, the control of the road
-passed into other hands. Many were discharged,
-and I was daily expecting my own
-‘blue envelope.’ One day, I was detailed to
-act as brakeman on a special which was to convey
-the president and directors of the road,
-with invited guests, on a trip over the lines.
-By that time I had learned the Long Island
-Railroad in all its branches pretty well; and,
-in the course of the trip, was called upon to
-answer a great many questions. The next day
-I received word that the superintendent wanted
-to see me. My heart sank within me, for summonses
-of this kind were ominous in those
-days, but I duly presented myself at the office
-and was asked, ‘Are you the good-looking
-brakeman who was on the special yesterday
-who shows his teeth when he smiles?’ I modestly
-replied that I was certainly on the special
-yesterday, and I may possibly have partly confirmed
-the rest of the identification by a smile,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>for the superintendent, without further questioning,
-said: ‘The president wants to see you,
-up stairs.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I went up, and in due time was shown into
-the presence of the great man, who eyed me
-closely for a minute or two, and then asked me
-abruptly what I was doing. I told him I was
-braking Number Seventeen. He said: ‘Take
-this letter to your superintendent. It contains
-a request that he relieve you from duty, and
-put somebody else in your place. After he has
-done so, come back here.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All this I did, and, on my return to the
-president, he said, ‘Take this letter at once to
-Admiral Peyron, of the French fleet (then lying
-in the harbor on a visit of courtesy to this
-country), and this to General Hancock, on
-Governor’s Island. They contain invitations
-to each to dine with me to-morrow night at
-my home in Garden City with their staffs. Get
-their answers, and, if they say yes, return at
-once to New York, charter a steamer, call for
-them to-morrow afternoon, land them at Long
-Island City, arrange for a special train from
-Long Island City to Garden City, take them
-there, and return them after the banquet. I
-leave everything in your hands. Good day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>“I suppose this might be considered a rather
-large job for a common brakeman, but I managed
-to get through with it without disgracing
-myself, and apparently to the satisfaction of all
-concerned. For some time thereafter, I was
-the president’s special emissary on similar matters
-connected with the general conduct of the
-business, and while I did not, perhaps, learn so
-very much about railroading proper, I was put
-in positions where I learned to take responsibility
-and came to have confidence in myself.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The control of the Long Island Railroad
-again changed hands, and I was again ‘let out,’
-this time for good, so far as that particular
-road was concerned,—except that, within the
-last two or three years, I have renewed my acquaintance
-with it through being commissioned
-by a banking syndicate in New York City to
-make an expert examination of its plant and
-equipment as a preliminary to reorganization.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This was in 1881, or about that time, and
-I soon secured a position as conductor on the
-New York and Northern Railroad, a little line
-running from One Hundred and Fifty-fifth
-Street, New York City, to Yonkers. Not to
-go into tedious detail regarding my experience
-there, I may say in brief that in course of time
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>I practically ‘ran the road.’ After some years,
-it changed hands (a thing which railways, particularly
-small ones, often do, and always to the
-great discomposure of the employees), and the
-new owners, including William C. Whitney,
-Daniel S. Lamont, Captain R. Somers Hayes
-and others, went over the road one day on a
-special train to visit the property. As I have
-said, I was then practically running the road,
-owing to the fact that the man who held the
-position of general manager was not a railroad
-man and relied upon me to handle all details,
-but my actual position was only that of train-master.
-I accompanied the party, and knowing
-the road thoroughly, not only physically
-but also statistically, was able to answer all the
-questions which they raised. This was the
-first time I had met Mr. Whitney, and I judge
-that I made a somewhat favorable impression
-upon him, for not long after I was created general
-manager of the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A few months later, I received this telegram:—</p>
-
-<p class='c023'>‘<span class='sc'>H. H. Vreeland.</span></p>
-<p class='c024'>‘Meet me at Broadway and Seventh Avenue office at
-two o’clock to-day.</p>
-<div class='c025'><span class='sc'>William C. Whitney.</span>’</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I had to take a special engine to do this,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>but arrived at two o’clock at the office of the
-Houston Street, West Street and Pavonia
-Ferry Railroad Company, which I then knew,
-in an indistinct sort of way, owned a small
-horse railway in the heart of New York. After
-finding that Mr. Whitney was out at lunch, I
-kicked my heels for a few minutes outside the
-gate, and then inquired of a man who was
-seated inside in an exceedingly comfortable
-chair, when Mr. Whitney and his party were
-expected, saying, also, that my name was Vreeland,
-and I had an appointment at two. He
-replied: ‘Oh, are you Mr. Vreeland? Well,
-here is a letter for you. Mr. Whitney expected
-to be here at two o’clock, but is a little late.’ I
-took my letter and sat down again outside,
-thinking that it might possibly contain an appointment
-for another hour. It was, however,
-an appointment of quite a different character.
-It read as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c023'>‘<span class='sc'>Mr. H. H. Vreeland.</span></p>
-<p class='c024'>‘<span class='sc'>Dear Sir:</span>—At a meeting of the stockholders of the
-Houston Street, West Street and Pavonia Ferry Railroad
-Company, held this day, you were unanimously
-elected a director of the company.</p>
-
-<p class='c024'>‘At a subsequent meeting of the directors, you were
-unanimously elected president and general manager, your
-duties to commence immediately.</p>
-<p class='c026'>‘Yours truly,</p>
-<p class='c027'><span class='sc'>C. E. Warren</span>, Secretary.’</p>
-
-<p class='c016'><span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>“By the time I had recovered from my surprise
-at learning that I was no longer a steam-railroad,
-but a street-railroad man, Mr. Whitney
-and other directors came in, and, after
-spending about five minutes in introductions,
-they took up their hats and left, saying, simply,
-‘Well, Vreeland, you are president; now run
-the road.’ I then set out to learn what kind
-of a toy railway it was that had come into my
-charge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Here Mr. Vreeland’s narrative stops, for the
-rest of the history is well known to the people
-of New York, and to experts in street railroading
-throughout the country. The “Whitney
-syndicate,” so called, was then in possession of
-a few only out of some twenty or more street
-railway properties in New York City, the
-Broadway line, however, being one of these,
-and by far the most valuable. With the immense
-financial resources of Messrs. Whitney,
-Widener, Elkins, and their associates, nearly
-all the other properties were added to the original
-ones owned by the syndicate, and with the
-magnificent organizing and executive ability of
-Mr. Vreeland, there has been built up in New
-York a street railway system which, while including
-less than two hundred and fifty miles
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>of track, is actually carrying more than one-half
-as many passengers each year as are being
-carried by all the steam railroads of the United
-States together.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Vreeland’s first work on coming to New
-York was, naturally, to familiarize himself
-with the transportation conditions in New
-York City, and to learn how to handle the peculiarly
-complex problems involved in street
-railroading. He first had to gain, also, the
-confidence of his men, but this is never hard
-for anyone who is sincerely solicitous for their
-welfare, and in such sympathy with their work
-and hardships as a man like himself must have
-been, with his own past history in mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With his hand firmly on the tiller, and with
-his scheme of organization perfected, he was
-soon able to take up the larger questions of administration.
-To Mr. Vreeland is due the
-credit of initiating and rapidly extending a general
-free transfer system in New York, by
-which the public is able to ride from almost
-any part of the largest city in the country to
-any other part, for a single five-cent fare,
-whereas, before the consolidation, two, three,
-and sometimes four fares would have to be
-paid for the same ride.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>It was upon Mr. Vreeland’s recommendation,
-also, backed by that of F. S. Pearson, the
-well-known consulting engineer of the Whitney
-syndicate, that the latter determined to
-adopt the underground conduit electric system
-in the reconstruction of the lines. At that time
-this decision involved the greatest financial and
-technical courage, since there was but one other
-road of this kind in existence, and that a small
-tramway in an Austrian city, while previous
-American experience with this system had been
-uniformly unsuccessful.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Not only in street railroading proper, but
-also in steam railroading, automobile work and
-the electric lighting field, Mr. Vreeland possesses
-the absolute confidence of his associates,
-who rely implicitly upon his judgment, intelligence
-and business acumen. The recent gift,
-already referred to, is one only of several which
-he has received from men who feel that they
-have made millions through his ability. Although
-he is not to-day a wealthy man, as men
-are counted wealthy in New York City, he is
-certainly well along on the road to millionaire-dom.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Best of all, however, and what has probably
-satisfied him most in his life, has been the host
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>of genuine friendships which he has made, and
-the strong hold which he has upon the workingman.
-A strike of the employees of the
-Metropolitan Street Railway Company is absolutely
-impossible so long as he remains at the
-head of the company’s affairs, for the men
-know well that there will be in that position a
-man who is always fair, and even generous
-with them, bearing in mind ever his duty to
-his stockholders; and they know, too, that no
-injustice will be committed by any of the department
-heads. Any one of his four or five
-thousand employees can meet him personally
-on a question of grievance, and is sure of being
-treated as a reasonable fellow man. Time and
-again have labor leaders sought to form an organization
-of the Metropolitan employees, and
-as often the men have said in reply, “Not while
-Vreeland is here,—we know he will treat us
-fairly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In a recent address Mr. Vreeland said:—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No artificial condition can ever, in my
-judgment, keep down a man who has health,
-capacity and honesty. You can temporarily
-interfere with him or make the road to the object
-of his ambition more difficult, but you cannot
-stop him. That tyranny is forever dead,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>and since its death there has come a great enlightenment
-to the possessors of power and
-wealth. Instead of preventing a man from rising,
-there is not a concern the wide world over
-that is not to-day eagerly seeking for capable
-people. The great hunger of the time is for
-good men, strong men, men capable of assuming
-responsibility; and there is sharp competition
-for those who are available.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>
- <h2 class='c007'>XXII</h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c013'>How James Whitcomb Riley Came to be Master of the Hoosier Dialect</p>
-<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>IT is doubtful if there is in the literary world,
-to-day, a personage whose boyhood and
-young manhood can approach in romance
-and unusual circumstances that of the
-author of “The Old Swimmin’ Hole.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All tradition was against his accomplishing
-anything in the world. How, indeed, said the
-good folks of the little town of Greenfield, Indiana,
-could anything be expected of a boy who
-cared nothing for school, and deserted it at the
-first opportunity, to take up a wandering life.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>THROWN ON HIS OWN RESOURCES</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>The boy’s father wanted the boy to follow in
-his footsteps, in the legal profession, and he
-held out alluring hopes of the possibility of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>scaling even greater heights than any to which
-he had yet attained. Better still,—from the
-standpoint of the restless James,—he took the
-youngster with him as he made his circuit from
-court to court.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>These excursions, for they were indeed such
-to the boy, sowed deep in his heart the seed of
-a determination to become a nomad; and it
-was not long until he started out as a strolling
-sign-painter, determined upon the realization
-of his ideals.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Oftentimes business was worse than dull,
-and, on one occasion, hunger drove him for recourse
-to his wits, and lo, he blossomed forth
-as a “blind sign-painter,” led from place to
-place by a little boy, and showered with sympathy
-and trade in such abundance that he
-could hardly bear the thought of the relinquishment
-of a pretense so ingenious and successful,
-entered on at first as a joke.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then came another epoch. The young man
-fell in with a patent-medicine man, with whom
-he joined fortunes, and here the young Indianian,
-who had been scribbling more or less
-poetry, found a new use for his talent; for his
-duties in the partnership were to beguile the
-people with joke and song, while his co-worker
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>plied the sales of his cure-all. There were many
-times when, but for his fancy, the young poet
-might have seen his audience dwindle rapidly
-away. It was while thus engaged, that he had
-the opportunities which enabled him to master
-thoroughly the Hoosier dialect.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When the glamor of the patent-medicine
-career had faded somewhat, the nomadic Riley
-joined a band of strolling Thespians, and, in
-this brief portion of his life, after the wont of
-players of his class, played many parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At length, he began to give a little more attention
-to his literary work; and, later, obtained
-a place on an Indianapolis paper, where
-he published his first poems, and they won their
-author almost instant success.</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>WHY HE LONGED TO BE A BAKER</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>When I drew Mr. Riley out to talk still further
-of those interesting days, and the strange
-experiences which came to him therein, the conversation
-finally turned on the subject of his
-youthful ambition.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think my earliest remembered one,” he
-said, “was an insatiate longing to become a
-baker. I don’t know what prompted it, unless
-it were the visions of the mountains of alluring
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>‘goodies,’ which, as they are ranged in the windows
-of the pastry shops, appear doubly tempting
-to the youth whose mother not only counsels
-moderation, but enforces it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Next, I imagined that I would like to become
-a showman of some sort.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then, my shifting fancy conjured up visions
-of how grand it would be to work as a
-painter, and decorate houses and fences in
-glowing colors.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Finally, as I grew a little older, there returned
-my old longing to become an actor.
-When, however, my dreams were realized, and
-I became a member of a traveling theatrical
-company, I found that the life was full of hardships,
-with very little chance of rising in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I never had any literary ambition whatever,
-so far as I can remember. I wrote, primarily,
-simply because I desired to have something to
-read, and could not find selections that exactly
-suited me. Gradually I found a demand for
-my little efforts springing up; and so my
-brother, who could write legibly transcribed
-them.”</p>
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>
- <h3 class='c015'>PERSISTENCE</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>At this point I asked Mr. Riley his idea of
-the prime requisites for success in the field of
-letters.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The most essential factor,” he replied “is
-persistence,—the determination never to allow
-your energy or enthusiasm to be dampened by
-the discouragement that must inevitably come.
-I believe that he is richer for the battle with the
-world, in any vocation, who has great determination
-and little talent, rather than his seemingly
-more fortunate brother with great talent,
-perhaps, but little determination. As for the
-field of literature, I cannot but express my conviction
-that meteoric flights, such as have been
-taken, of recent years, by some young writers
-with whose names almost everybody is familiar,
-cannot fail to be detrimental, unless the man to
-whom success comes thus early and suddenly is
-an exceptionally evenly-balanced and sensible
-person.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Many persons have spoken to me about
-Kipling’s work, and remarked how wonderful
-a thing is the fact that such achievements could
-have been possible for a man comparatively so
-young. I say, not at all. What do we find
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>when we investigate? Simply that Kipling began
-working on a newspaper when he was only
-thirteen years of age, and he has been toiling
-ever since. So you see, even that case confirms
-my theory that every man must be ‘tried
-in the fire,’ as it were.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He may begin early or late—and in some
-cases the fight is longer than in others—but of
-one thing I feel sure, that there is no short-cut
-to permanent, self-satisfying success in literature,
-or anything else.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>TWENTY YEARS OF REJECTED MANUSCRIPTS</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Mr. Riley,” I asked, “would you mind
-saying something about the obstacles over
-which you climbed to success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am afraid it would not be a very pleasant
-story,” he replied. “A friend came to me
-once, completely heartbroken, saying that his
-manuscripts were constantly returned, and that
-he was the most miserable wretch alive. I
-asked him how long he had been trying?
-‘Three years,’ he said. ‘My dear man,’ I answered,
-laughing, ‘go on, keep on trying till
-you have spent as many years at it as I did.’
-‘As many as you did!’ he exclaimed. ‘Yes,
-as long as I did.’ ‘What, you struggled for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>years!’ ‘Yes, sir; through years, through
-sleepless nights, through almost hopeless days.
-For twenty years I tried to get into one magazine;
-back came my manuscripts eternally. I
-kept on. In the twentieth year, that magazine
-accepted one of my articles.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was not a believer in the theory that one
-man does a thing much easier than any other
-man. Continuous, unflagging effort, persistence
-and determination will win. Let not the
-man be discouraged who has these.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What would you advise one to do with his
-constantly rejected manuscript?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Put it away awhile; then remodel it.
-Young writers make the mistake I made.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What mistake?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hurrying a manuscript off before it was
-dry from my pen, as if the world were just
-waiting for that article and must have it. Now
-it can hardly be drawn from me with a pair of
-tweezers. Yes, lay it aside awhile. Reread.
-There is a rotten spot somewhere. Perhaps
-it is full of hackneyed phrases, or lacks in
-sparkle and originality. Search, examine, rewrite,
-simplify. Make it lucid. <i>I am glad,
-now, that my manuscripts did come back.</i> Presently
-I would discover this defect, then that.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>Perhaps three or four sleepless nights would
-show my failure to be in an unsymmetrical arrangement
-of the verses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“See these books?” he said, rapping upon
-the book case with the back of his hand.
-“Classics! but of what do they tell? Of the
-things of their own day. Let us write the
-things of our day. Literary fields exhausted!
-Nonsense. If we write well enough, ours will
-be the classics of to-morrow. Our young
-Americans have, right at hand, the richest material
-any country ever offered. Let them be
-brave and work in earnest.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>A COLLEGE EDUCATION</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Answering other questions, the poet said:—“A
-college education for the aspirant for literary
-success is, of course, an advantage, provided
-he does not let education foster a false
-culture that will lead him away from the ideals
-he ought to cling to.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is another thing that the young man
-in any artistic pursuit must have a care for;
-and that is, to be practical. This is a practical
-world, and it is always ready to take advantage
-of this sort of people: so that one must try to
-cultivate a practical business sense as well as an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>artistic sense. We have only a few men like
-Rudyard Kipling and F. Hopkinson Smith, who
-seem to combine these diverse elements of character
-in just the right proportions; but I believe
-that it is unfortunate for the happiness
-and peace of mind of our authors, and artists,
-and musicians, that we have not more of them.”</p>
-<h3 class='c015'>RILEY’S POPULARITY</h3>
-
-<p class='c016'>Riley’s poetry is popular because it goes right
-to the feelings of the people. He could not
-have written as he does, but for the schooling
-of that wandering life, which gave him an insight
-into the struggle for existence among the
-great unnumbered multitude of his fellow-men.
-He learned in his travels and journeys, in his
-hard experience as a strolling sign-painter and
-patent-medicine peddler the freemasonry of
-poverty. His poems are natural; they are those
-of a man who feels as he writes. As Thoreau
-painted nature in the woods, and streams, and
-lakes, so Riley depicts the incidents of everyday
-life, and brightens each familiar lineament
-with that touch that makes all the world akin.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xxlarge'>SUCCESS BOOKS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By DR. ORISON SWETT MARDEN</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c028' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>STEPPING STONES</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>12mo. Red Cloth. Decorative Cover. Illustrated. Price, $1.25</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Dr. Marden’s new volume of essays, “Stepping Stones,” has the attractive
-qualities made familiar to a large audience of readers by his earlier books.
-At the same time it is entirely new in contents and most helpful and entertaining
-in character. It contains talks to young people of both sexes full of
-practical value, happy sketches of great characters, salient suggestions on
-deportment and conduct, and shrewd advice of all kinds touching everyday
-living. The author’s wide knowledge of history and literature is used to
-give the essays atmosphere and quality, and no success book of the series is
-more engaging and wholesome than “Stepping Stones.”</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>HOW THEY SUCCEEDED</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><i>Life Stories of Successful Men told by Themselves</i></div>
- <div class='c000'>12mo. Red Cloth. Decorative Cover. Illustrated. Price, $1.50</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>The author in this book has set down the story of successful men and
-women told by themselves, either in a series of interviews or by semi-autobiographical
-sketches. They make a most entertaining and inspiring
-series of life stories, full of incentive to ambitious youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><i>The Boston Transcript says</i>: “To the young man who is determined to
-succeed in life, no matter in what direction his aim may lie, this volume will
-be a direct source of inspiration. It shows that the people ‘who have got
-there’ have invariably done so through pluck, perseverance, and principle,
-and not through ‘pull’ or social position. It emphasizes the fact that success
-depends wholly and entirely upon the person himself.”</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>WINNING OUT</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><i>A Book about Success</i></div>
- <div class='c000'>12mo. Red Cloth. Decorative Cover. Gilt Top. Illustrated. Price, $1.00</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c011'>Dr. Marden has made for himself a wide reputation by his earlier volumes,
-“Architects of Fate” and “Pushing to the Front.” But “Winning Out,”
-while constructed along somewhat the same lines, is his first book designed
-especially for young readers. Its theme is “Character Building by Habit
-Forming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><i>The Louisville Courier-Journal says</i>: “Pleasant teaching Dr. Marden’s
-anecdotes make. They are of men and things that have actually been
-and happened. The moral is often an epigram, always apropos. Through
-the pages of the small volume pass a procession of figures that have aspired,
-struggled, and achieved. Such work is good for the world, good for the
-youth in it, and for more experienced and serious middle age.”</p>
-
-</div>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span></div>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>Defending The Bank</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By EDWARD S. VAN ZILE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Author of “With Sword and Crucifix,” etc. Four
-illustrations by I. B. Hazelton. 12mo. Pictorial
-cover in color. Price, $1.25.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Defending the Bank,” by Edward S. Van Zile, is a
-most amusing and interesting detective story for boys
-and girls, in which a couple of bright boys and girls appoint
-themselves amateur detectives and are able to run
-down a couple of bank robbers who are planning to rob
-the bank of which the father of one of the boys is president.
-This is at once an exciting and wholesome tale,
-of which the scene is laid in Troy, N.Y., the former
-home of the author. It will be widely welcomed.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class='box1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>The Mutineers</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By EUSTACE L. WILLIAMS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c029'>Author of “The Substitute Quarterback.” 12mo.
-Four illustrations by I. B. Hazelton. Pictorial
-cover in color. Price, $1.25.</p>
-<p class='c011'>“The Mutineers” is a rattling boys’ story by Mr.
-Eustace L. Williams of the Louisville <i>Courier-Journal</i>.
-It gives a picture of life in a large boarding-school, where
-a certain set of boys control the athletics, and shows
-how their unjust power was broken by the hero of the
-tale, who forms a rival baseball nine and manages to defeat
-his opponents, thus bringing a better state of things
-in the school socially and as to sports. The story is full
-of lively action, and deals with baseball and general
-athletic interests in a large school in a manner which
-shows that the author is thoroughly acquainted with
-and sympathetic to his subject.</p>
-<hr class='c030' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c031'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>Lothrop Publishing Company, Boston</span></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
- <hr class='pb c004' />
-</div>
-<p class='c032'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c004'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Note:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c032'>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
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