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Chapter 10 WHAT CAREER

Word Count: 4028    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

ut where thei

l not atte

horse will

ries a five

instinct

ditch too d

find the on

folly, com

he loudly c

inacy fix

s genius lea

nds his who

IF

h finds him in employment and happiness, whether it be to make b

t. Be what nature intended you for, and you will succeed; be anything e

o one thing, and some other men's fort to do another, while there is nume

, 'My jentle sir, go out, or I shall fall onto you putty hevy.' Sez he, 'Wade in, Old Wax Figgers,' whereupon I went for him, but he cawt me powerful on the hed and knockt

, my orgin grinder got sick with the fever and died. I never felt so ashamed in my life, and I thought I'd hist in a few swallers of suthin strengthnin. Konse

begun to kick and squeal and rair up. Konsequents was, I was kicked vilently in the stummuck and back, and presently, I found myself in the kanawl with the other hosses, kikin an

Fort, for ef you do you'll find yourself splas

ppeared day after day in a Western p

ction to teach ornamental painting and penmanship, geometry, trigonometry, and many other sciences. Has had some experience as a lay preacher. Would have no objection to form a small class of yo

peared this additi

t less than the usual rates." This secured a situat

in your character. If you have found your place, your o

erience and tastes. You will then not only have a congenial vocation, but also w

to perform unwelcome tasks; but, like a volcano, the inner fire will burst the crusts which confine it and will pour forth its pent-up genius in eloquence, in song, in art, or in

chimney-sweeps, let us say with Matthew Arnold, than a s

unnatural loads in college who should be on the farm or before the mast. Artists are spreading "daubs" on canvas who should be whitewashing board fences. Behind counters stand clerks who hate the yard-stick and neglect their work to dream of other occupations. A good shoemaker writes a few verses for the village paper, his friends call him a poet, and the last, with which he is familiar, is abandoned for the pen, which he uses awkwardly. Other shoemakers are cobbling in Con

vinity that s

them how

he that hath a calling hath a place of profit and honor. A p

el that he is a man and must fill a man's shoes, do a man's work, bear a man's part in life, and show himself a man in that part. No man feels himself a man who is not doing a man's business. A man without employment is not a man. He does not prove by his works that he is a man. A hundr

ess is the second. Under ordinary circumstances, and with practical c

energetic, more thorough, more polite than your predecessor or fellow workmen. Study your business, devise new modes of operation, be able to give your employer points. The art lies not i

t the disproportion between your faculties and your task. If you put you

ne choice; but as one rises higher in the scale of civilization and creeps nearer to the great centers of activity, the difficulty of a correct decision increases with its importance. In proportion as one is hard pressed in competition is it of

out of a human body, or a human brain, and he is a wise man

. "Let him ask no other blessedness. He has a work-a

n any career. Each faculty must be educated, and any deficiency in its training will appear in whatever you do. The hand must be educated to be graceful, steady, and strong. The eye must be educated to be alert, discriminating, and microscopic. The heart must be educated to be tender, sympathetic, and true. The memory must be drilled for years in accuracy, retention, and

igned for the army, the pulpit, or the bar. Nature has destined us to the offices of human life antecedent to our destination concerning society. To live is the profession I would teach him. When I have d

d common sense, cut but a small figure. The incapables and the impracticables, though loaded with diplomas and degrees, are

been more extensively cultivated than in our day. It is a curious fact that reason will, on pressure, overcome a man's instinct of right. An eminent scientist has said that a man could soon reason himself out of the instinct of decency if he would only take pains and work hard enough.

his own peculiar part in life. A very few-geniuses, we call the

from a stool in the nursery. Goethe wrote tragedies at twelve, and Grotius published an able philosophical work before he was fifteen. Pope "lisped in numbers." Chatterton wrote good poems at eleven, and Cowley published a volume of poetry in his sixteenth year. Thomas Lawrence and B

common, and, except in rare cases, we must discover the bias in our natures, and not wait for

h," said a Bishop to a young

lves what we are not that has strewn history with s

are so enthusiastic in it that you take it to bed with you. You may be forced to drudge at uncongenial toil for a time, but emancipate yourself as soon

of methods. Extend it by enterprise and industry. Study it as you would a profession. Learn everything that is to be known about it. Concentrate your faculties upon it, f

ch concerns your business. Master every detail. This was the secret of A. T. Stewart'

of married life, so love for an occupation is the only thing which will carry one safely and surely through the troubles

, no prudent man is willing to risk his life or his fortune to a young lawyer, who has not only no experience, but is generally too conceited to know the risks he incurs for his client, who al

call, that is his love for it, and his fidelity to it, are the imperious factors of his career. If a man enters a profession simply because his grandfather made a great name in it, or his mother wants him to, with no love or adaptability for it, it were far better for hi

lapsed since the ambitious woman who ventured to study or write would keep a bit of embroidery at hand to throw over her book or manuscript when callers entered. Dr. Gregory said to his daughters: "If you happen to have any learning, k

d are opening countless opportunities for our girls outside of marriage. Formerly only a boy could choose a career; now his sister can do the same. This freedom is

nd endanger their health with high heels and corsets; girls who will wear what is pretty and becoming and snap their fingers at the dictates of fashion when fashion is horrid and silly. And we want good girls,-girls who are sweet, right straight out from the heart to the lips; innocent and pure and simple girls, with less knowledge of sin and duplicity and evil-doing at twenty than the pert little schoolgirl of ten has all too often. And we want careful girls and prudent girls, who think enough of the generous father who toils to maintain them in comfort, and of the gentle mother who denies herself much that they may have so many pretty things, to count the cost and draw the line between the essentials and non

about a wom

h it had

place in ear

a task to ma

t a blessi

a whisper,

life, or dea

eather's wei

a woma

There is at this moment for you an utterance brave and grand as that of the colossal chisel of

first, by getting a position; second, keeping his mouth shut; third, observing; fourth, being faithf

creet advertising," are given as the four steps to succe

eat school of life, the great man developer, the character-builder; that which should broaden, deepen, heighten, and round out into symmetry, harmony, and beauty all the God-given faculties within us! How we

lad to

to make the w

o discover

art, the work th

ING

I do to be fo

duty

any who yet slee

ever,

erchance, that t

ou know

in heaven their

their

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Contents

Chapter 1 THE MAN AND THE OPPORTUNITY Chapter 2 WANTED-A MAN Chapter 3 BOYS WITH NO CHANCE Chapter 4 THE COUNTRY BOY Chapter 5 OPPORTUNITIES WHERE YOU ARE Chapter 6 POSSIBILITIES IN SPARE MOMENTS Chapter 7 HOW POOR BOYS AND GIRLS GO TO COLLEGE Chapter 8 YOUR OPPORTUNITY CONFRONTS YOU-WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH IT Chapter 9 ROUND BOYS IN SQUARE HOLES Chapter 10 WHAT CAREER Chapter 11 CHOOSING A VOCATION
Chapter 12 CONCENTRATED ENERGY
Chapter 13 THE TRIUMPHS OF ENTHUSIASM.
Chapter 14 ON TIME, OR THE TRIUMPH OF PROMPTNESS
Chapter 15 WHAT A GOOD APPEARANCE WILL DO
Chapter 16 PERSONALITY AS A SUCCESS ASSET
Chapter 17 IF YOU CAN TALK WELL
Chapter 18 A FORTUNE IN GOOD MANNERS
Chapter 19 SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS AND TIMIDITY FOES TO SUCCESS
Chapter 20 TACT OR COMMON SENSE
Chapter 21 ENAMORED OF ACCURACY
Chapter 22 DO IT TO A FINISH
Chapter 23 THE REWARD OF PERSISTENCE
Chapter 24 NERVE-GRIP, PLUCK
Chapter 25 CLEAR GRIT
Chapter 26 SUCCESS UNDER DIFFICULTIES
Chapter 27 USES OF OBSTACLES
Chapter 28 DECISION
Chapter 29 OBSERVATION AS A SUCCESS FACTOR
Chapter 30 SELF-HELP
Chapter 31 THE SELF-IMPROVEMENT HABIT
Chapter 32 RAISING OF VALUES
Chapter 33 SELF-IMPROVEMENT THROUGH PUBLIC SPEAKING
Chapter 34 THE TRIUMPHS OF THE COMMON VIRTUES
Chapter 35 GETTING AROUSED
Chapter 36 THE MAN WITH AN IDEA
Chapter 37 DARE
Chapter 38 THE WILL AND THE WAY
Chapter 39 ONE UNWAVERING AIM
Chapter 40 WORK AND WAIT
Chapter 41 THE MIGHT OF LITTLE THINGS
Chapter 42 THE SALARY YOU DO NOT FIND IN YOUR PAY ENVELOPE
Chapter 43 EXPECT GREAT THINGS OF YOURSELF
Chapter 44 THE NEXT TIME YOU THINK YOU ARE A FAILURE
Chapter 45 STAND FOR SOMETHING
Chapter 46 NATURE'S LITTLE BILL
Chapter 47 HABIT-THE SERVANT,-THE MASTER
Chapter 48 THE CIGARETTE
Chapter 49 THE POWER OF PURITY
Chapter 50 THE HABIT OF HAPPINESS
Chapter 51 PUT BEAUTY INTO YOUR LIFE
Chapter 52 EDUCATION BY ABSORPTION
Chapter 53 THE POWER OF SUGGESTION
Chapter 54 THE CURSE OF WORRY
Chapter 55 TAKE A PLEASANT THOUGHT TO BED WITH YOU
Chapter 56 THE CONQUEST OF POVERTY
Chapter 57 A NEW WAY OF BRINGING UP CHILDREN
Chapter 58 THE HOME AS A SCHOOL OF GOOD MANNERS
Chapter 59 MOTHER
Chapter 60 WHY SO MANY MARRIED WOMEN DETERIORATE
Chapter 61 THRIFT
Chapter 62 A COLLEGE EDUCATION AT HOME
Chapter 63 DISCRIMINATION IN READING
Chapter 64 READING A SPUR TO AMBITION
Chapter 65 WHY SOME SUCCEED AND OTHERS FAIL
Chapter 66 RICH WITHOUT MONEY
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