Self Help
Self HelpPREFACE.INTRODUCTIONCHAPTER I.Self-Help—National and Individual.CHAPTER II.Leaders of Industry—Inventors and Producers.CHAPTER III.He Great Potters—Palissy, Böttgher, Wedgwood.CHAPTER IV.Application and Perseverance.CHAPTER V.Helps and Opportunities—Scientific Pursuits.CHAPTER VI.Workers in Art.CHAPTER VII.Industry and the Peerage.CHAPTER VIII.Energy and Courage.CHAPTER IX.Men of Business.CHAPTER X.Money—Its Use and Abuse.CHAPTER XI.Self-Culture—Facilities and Difficulties.CHAPTER XII.Example—Models.CHAPTER XIII.Character—The True Gentleman.FOOTNOTESNotesCopyright
Self Help
Samuel Smiles
PREFACE.
This is a revised edition of a book which has already been
received with considerable favour at home and abroad. It has
been reprinted in various forms in America; translations have
appeared in Dutch and French, and others are about to appear in
German and Danish. The book has, doubtless, proved attractive
to readers in different countries by reason of the variety of
anecdotal illustrations of life and character which it contains,
and the interest which all more or less feel in the labours, the
trials, the struggles, and the achievements of others. No one
can be better aware than the author, of its fragmentary character,
arising from the manner in which it was for the most part
originally composed,—having been put together principally from
jottings made during many years,—intended as readings for young
men, and without any view to publication. The appearance of
this edition has furnished an opportunity for pruning the volume of
some superfluous matter, and introducing various new illustrations,
which will probably be found of general interest.In one respect the title of the book, which it is now too
late to alter, has proved unfortunate, as it has led some, who have
judged it merely by the title, to suppose that it consists of a
eulogy of selfishness: the very opposite of what it really is,—or
at least of what the author intended it to be. Although its
chief object unquestionably is to stimulate youths to apply
themselves diligently to right pursuits,—sparing neither labour,
pains, nor self-denial in prosecuting them,—and to rely upon their
own efforts in life, rather than depend upon the help or patronage
of others, it will also be found, from the examples given of
literary and scientific men, artists, inventors, educators,
philanthropists, missionaries, and martyrs, that the duty of
helping one’s self in the highest sense involves the helping of
one’s neighbours.It has also been objected to the book that too much notice is
taken in it of men who have succeeded in life by helping
themselves, and too little of the multitude of men who have
failed. “Why should not Failure,” it has been asked, “have
its Plutarch as well as Success?” There is, indeed, no reason
why Failure should not have its Plutarch, except that a record of
mere failure would probably be found excessively depressing as well
as uninstructive reading. It is, however, shown in the
following pages that Failure is the best discipline of the true
worker, by stimulating him to renewed efforts, evoking his best
powers, and carrying him onward in self-culture, self-control, and
growth in knowledge and wisdom. Viewed in this light,
Failure, conquered by Perseverance, is always full of interest and
instruction, and this we have endeavoured to illustrate by many
examples.As for Failureper se,
although it may be well to find consolations for it at the close of
life, there is reason to doubt whether it is an object that ought
to be set before youth at the beginning of it. Indeed,
“hownotto do it” is of all
things the easiest learnt: it needs neither teaching, effort,
self-denial, industry, patience, perseverance, nor judgment.
Besides, readers do not care to know about the general who lost his
battles, the engineer whose engines blew up, the architect who
designed only deformities, the painter who never got beyond daubs,
the schemer who did not invent his machine, the merchant who could
not keep out of the Gazette. It is true, the best of men may
fail, in the best of causes. But even these best of men did
not try to fail, or regard their failure as meritorious; on the
contrary, they tried to succeed, and looked upon failure as
misfortune. Failure in any good cause is, however,
honourable, whilst success in any bad cause is merely
infamous. At the same time success in the good cause is
unquestionably better than failure. But it is not the result
in any case that is to be regarded so much as the aim and the
effort, the patience, the courage, and the endeavour with which
desirable and worthy objects are pursued;—
“’Tis not in mortals to command success;We will do more—deserve it.”The object of the book briefly is, to re-inculcate these
old-fashioned but wholesome lessons—which perhaps cannot be too
often urged,—that youth must work in order to enjoy,—that nothing
creditable can be accomplished without application and
diligence,—that the student must not be daunted by difficulties,
but conquer them by patience and perseverance,—and that, above all,
he must seek elevation of character, without which capacity is
worthless and worldly success is naught. If the author has
not succeeded in illustrating these lessons, he can only say that
he has failed in his object.Among the new passages introduced in the present edition, may
be mentioned the following:—Illustrious Foreigners of humble origin
(pp. 10–12), French Generals and Marshals risen from the ranks
(14), De Tocqueville and Mutual Help (24), William Lee, M.A., and
the Stocking-loom (42), John Heathcoat, M.P., and the Bobbin-net
machine (47), Jacquard and his Loom (55), Vaucanson (58), Joshua
Heilmann and the Combing-machine (62), Bernard Palissy and his
struggles (69), Böttgher, discoverer of Hard Porcelain (80), Count
de Buffon as Student (104), Cuvier (128), Ambrose Paré (134), Claud
Lorraine (160), Jacques Callot (162), Benvenuto Cellini (164),
Nicholas Poussin (168), Ary Scheffer (171), the Strutts of Belper
(214), Francis Xavier (238), Napoleon as a man of business (276),
Intrepidity of Deal Boatmen (400), besides numerous other passages
which it is unnecessary to specify.
INTRODUCTION
The origin of this book may be briefly told.Some fifteen years since, the author was requested to deliver
an address before the members of some evening classes, which had
been formed in a northern town for mutual improvement, under the
following circumstances:—Two or three young men of the humblest rank resolved to meet
in the winter evenings, for the purpose of improving themselves by
exchanging knowledge with each other. Their first meetings
were held in the room of a cottage in which one of the members
lived; and, as others shortly joined them, the place soon became
inconveniently filled. When summer set in, they adjourned to
the cottage garden outside; and the classes were then held in the
open air, round a little boarded hut used as a garden-house, in
which those who officiated as teachers set the sums, and gave forth
the lessons of the evening. When the weather was fine, the
youths might be seen, until a late hour, hanging round the door of
the hut like a cluster of bees; but sometimes a sudden shower of
rain would dash the sums from their slates, and disperse them for
the evening unsatisfied.Winter, with its cold nights, was drawing near, and what were
they to do for shelter? Their numbers had by this time so
increased, that no room of an ordinary cottage could accommodate
them. Though they were for the most part young men earning
comparatively small weekly wages, they resolved to incur the risk
of hiring a room; and, on making inquiry, they found a large dingy
apartment to let, which had been used as a temporary Cholera
Hospital. No tenant could be found for the place, which was
avoided as if the plague still clung to it. But the mutual
improvement youths, nothing daunted, hired the cholera room at so
much a week, lit it up, placed a few benches and a deal table in
it, and began their winter classes. The place soon presented
a busy and cheerful appearance in the evenings. The teaching
may have been, as no doubt it was, of a very rude and imperfect
sort; but it was done with a will. Those who knew a little
taught those who knew less—improving themselves while they improved
the others; and, at all events, setting before them a good working
example. Thus these youths—and there were also grown men
amongst them—proceeded to teach themselves and each other, reading
and writing, arithmetic and geography; and even mathematics,
chemistry, and some of the modern languages.About a hundred young men had thus come together, when,
growing ambitious, they desired to have lectures delivered to them;
and then it was that the author became acquainted with their
proceedings. A party of them waited on him, for the purpose
of inviting him to deliver an introductory address, or, as they
expressed it, “to talk to them a bit;” prefacing the request by a
modest statement of what they had done and what they were
doing. He could not fail to be touched by the admirable
self-helping spirit which they had displayed; and, though
entertaining but slight faith in popular lecturing, he felt that a
few words of encouragement, honestly and sincerely uttered, might
not be without some good effect. And in this spirit he
addressed them on more than one occasion, citing examples of what
other men had done, as illustrations of what each might, in a
greater or less degree, do for himself; and pointing out that their
happiness and well-being as individuals in after life, must
necessarily depend mainly upon themselves—upon their own diligent
self-culture, self-discipline, and self-control—and, above all, on
that honest and upright performance of individual duty, which is
the glory of manly character.There was nothing in the slightest degree new or original in
this counsel, which was as old as the Proverbs of Solomon, and
possibly quite as familiar. But old-fashioned though the
advice may have been, it was welcomed. The youths went
forward in their course; worked on with energy and resolution; and,
reaching manhood, they went forth in various directions into the
world, where many of them now occupy positions of trust and
usefulness. Several years after the incidents referred to,
the subject was unexpectedly recalled to the author’s recollection
by an evening visit from a young man—apparently fresh from the work
of a foundry—who explained that he was now an employer of labour
and a thriving man; and he was pleased to remember with gratitude
the words spoken in all honesty to him and to his fellow-pupils
years before, and even to attribute some measure of his success in
life to the endeavours which he had made to work up to their
spirit.The author’s personal interest having in this way been
attracted to the subject of Self-Help, he was accustomed to add to
the memoranda from which he had addressed these young men; and to
note down occasionally in his leisure evening moments, after the
hours of business, the results of such reading, observation, and
experience of life, as he conceived to bear upon it. One of
the most prominent illustrations cited in his earlier addresses,
was that of George Stephenson, the engineer; and the original
interest of the subject, as well as the special facilities and
opportunities which the author possessed for illustrating Mr.
Stephenson’s life and career, induced him to prosecute it at his
leisure, and eventually to publish his biography. The present
volume is written in a similar spirit, as it has been similar in
its origin. The illustrative sketches of character
introduced, are, however, necessarily less elaborately
treated—being busts rather than full-length portraits, and, in many
of the cases, only some striking feature has been noted; the lives
of individuals, as indeed of nations, often concentrating their
lustre and interest in a few passages. Such as the book is,
the author now leaves it in the hands of the reader; in the hope
that the lessons of industry, perseverance, and self-culture, which
it contains, will be found useful and instructive, as well as
generally interesting.
CHAPTER I.Self-Help—National and Individual.
“The worth of a State, in the long run, is the worth of the
individuals composing it.”—J. S. Mill.
“We put too much faith in systems, and look too little to
men.”—B. Disraeli.
“Heaven helps those who help themselves” is a well-tried
maxim, embodying in a small compass the results of vast human
experience. The spirit of self-help is the root of all
genuine growth in the individual; and, exhibited in the lives of
many, it constitutes the true source of national vigour and
strength. Help from without is often enfeebling in its
effects, but help from within invariably invigorates.
Whatever is doneformen or
classes, to a certain extent takes away the stimulus and necessity
of doing for themselves; and where men are subjected to
over guidance and over government, the inevitable
tendency is to render them comparatively helpless.Even the best institutions can give a man no active
help. Perhaps the most they can do is, to leave him free to
develop himself and improve his individual condition. But in
all times men have been prone to believe that their happiness and
well-being were to be secured by means of institutions rather than
by their own conduct. Hence the value of legislation as an
agent in human advancement has usually been much
over-estimated. To constitute the millionth part of a
Legislature, by voting for one or two men once in three or five
years, however conscientiously this duty may be performed, can
exercise but little active influence upon any man’s life and
character. Moreover, it is every day becoming more clearly
understood, that the function of Government is negative and
restrictive, rather than positive and active; being resolvable
principally into protection—protection of life, liberty, and
property. Laws, wisely administered, will secure men in the
enjoyment of the fruits of their labour, whether of mind or body,
at a comparatively small personal sacrifice; but no laws, however
stringent, can make the idle industrious, the thriftless provident,
or the drunken sober. Such reforms can only be effected by
means of individual action, economy, and self-denial; by better
habits, rather than by greater rights.The Government of a nation itself is usually found to be but
the reflex of the individuals composing it. The Government
that is ahead of the people will inevitably be dragged down to
their level, as the Government that is behind them will in the long
run be dragged up. In the order of nature, the collective
character of a nation will as surely find its befitting results in
its law and government, as water finds its own level. The
noble people will be nobly ruled, and the ignorant and corrupt
ignobly. Indeed all experience serves to prove that the worth
and strength of a State depend far less upon the form of its
institutions than upon the character of its men. For the
nation is only an aggregate of individual conditions, and
civilization itself is but a question of the personal improvement
of the men, women, and children of whom society is
composed.National progress is the sum of individual industry, energy,
and uprightness, as national decay is of individual idleness,
selfishness, and vice. What we are accustomed to decry as
great social evils, will, for the most part, be found to be but the
outgrowth of man’s own perverted life; and though we may endeavour
to cut them down and extirpate them by means of Law, they will only
spring up again with fresh luxuriance in some other form, unless
the conditions of personal life and character are radically
improved. If this view be correct, then it follows that the
highest patriotism and philanthropy consist, not so much in
altering laws and modifying institutions, as in helping and
stimulating men to elevate and improve themselves by their own free
and independent individual action.It may be of comparatively little consequence how a man is
governed from without, whilst everything depends upon how he
governs himself from within. The greatest slave is not he who
is ruled by a despot, great though that evil be, but he who is the
thrall of his own moral ignorance, selfishness, and vice.
Nations who are thus enslaved at heart cannot be freed by any mere
changes of masters or of institutions; and so long as the fatal
delusion prevails, that liberty solely depends upon and consists in
government, so long will such changes, no matter at what cost they
may be effected, have as little practical and lasting result as the
shifting of the figures in a phantasmagoria. The solid
foundations of liberty must rest upon individual character; which
is also the only sure guarantee for social security and national
progress. John Stuart Mill truly observes that “even
despotism does not produce its worst effects so long as
individuality exists under it; and whatever crushes
individualityisdespotism, by
whatever name it be called.”Old fallacies as to human progress are constantly turning
up. Some call for Cæsars, others for Nationalities, and
others for Acts of Parliament. We are to wait for Cæsars, and
when they are found, “happy the people who recognise and follow
them.”[4] This doctrine
shortly means, everythingforthe people, nothingbythem,—a doctrine which, if taken as a guide, must, by
destroying the free conscience of a community, speedily prepare the
way for any form of despotism. Cæsarism is human idolatry in
its worst form—a worship of mere power, as degrading in its effects
as the worship of mere wealth would be. A far healthier
doctrine to inculcate among the nations would be that of Self-Help;
and so soon as it is thoroughly understood and carried into action,
Cæsarism will be no more. The two principles are directly
antagonistic; and what Victor Hugo said of the Pen and the Sword
alike applies to them, “Ceci tuera cela.” [This will kill
that.]The power of Nationalities and Acts of Parliament is also a
prevalent superstition. What William Dargan, one of Ireland’s
truest patriots, said at the closing of the first Dublin Industrial
Exhibition, may well be quoted now. “To tell the truth,” he
said, “I never heard the word independence mentioned that my own
country and my own fellow townsmen did not occur to my mind.
I have heard a great deal about the independence that we were to
get from this, that, and the other place, and of the great
expectations we were to have from persons from other countries
coming amongst us. Whilst I value as much as any man the
great advantages that must result to us from that intercourse, I
have always been deeply impressed with the feeling that our
industrial independence is dependent upon ourselves. I
believe that with simple industry and careful exactness in the
utilization of our energies, we never had a fairer chance nor a
brighter prospect than the present. We have made a step, but
perseverance is the great agent of success; and if we but go on
zealously, I believe in my conscience that in a short period we
shall arrive at a position of equal comfort, of equal happiness,
and of equal independence, with that of any other
people.”All nations have been made what they are by the thinking and
the working of many generations of men. Patient and
persevering labourers in all ranks and conditions of life,
cultivators of the soil and explorers of the mine, inventors and
discoverers, manufacturers, mechanics and artisans, poets,
philosophers, and politicians, all have contributed towards the
grand result, one generation building upon another’s labours, and
carrying them forward to still higher stages. This constant
succession of noble workers—the artisans of civilisation—has served
to create order out of chaos in industry, science, and art; and the
living race has thus, in the course of nature, become the inheritor
of the rich estate provided by the skill and industry of our
forefathers, which is placed in our hands to cultivate, and to hand
down, not only unimpaired but improved, to our
successors.The spirit of self-help, as exhibited in the energetic action
of individuals, has in all times been a marked feature in the
English character, and furnishes the true measure of our power as a
nation. Rising above the heads of the mass, there were always
to be found a series of individuals distinguished beyond others,
who commanded the public homage. But our progress has also
been owing to multitudes of smaller and less known men.
Though only the generals’ names may be remembered in the history of
any great campaign, it has been in a great measure through the
individual valour and heroism of the privates that victories have
been won. And life, too, is “a soldiers’ battle,”—men in the
ranks having in all times been amongst the greatest of
workers. Many are the lives of men unwritten, which have
nevertheless as powerfully influenced civilisation and progress as
the more fortunate Great whose names are recorded in
biography. Even the humblest person, who sets before his
fellows an example of industry, sobriety, and upright honesty of
purpose in life, has a present as well as a future influence upon
the well-being of his country; for his life and character pass
unconsciously into the lives of others, and propagate good example
for all time to come.Daily experience shows that it is energetic individualism
which produces the most powerful effects upon the life and action
of others, and really constitutes the best practical
education. Schools, academies, and colleges, give but the
merest beginnings of culture in comparison with it. Far more
influential is the life-education daily given in our homes, in the
streets, behind counters, in workshops, at the loom and the plough,
in counting-houses and manufactories, and in the busy haunts of
men. This is that finishing instruction as members of
society, which Schiller designated “the education of the human
race,” consisting in action, conduct, self-culture,
self-control,—all that tends to discipline a man truly, and fit him
for the proper performance of the duties and business of life,—a
kind of education not to be learnt from books, or acquired by any
amount of mere literary training. With his usual weight of
words Bacon observes, that “Studies teach not their own use; but
that is a wisdom without them, and above them, won by observation;”
a remark that holds true of actual life, as well as of the
cultivation of the intellect itself. For all experience
serves to illustrate and enforce the lesson, that a man perfects
himself by work more than by reading,—that it is life rather than
literature, action rather than study, and character rather than
biography, which tend perpetually to renovate mankind.Biographies of great, but especially of good men, are
nevertheless most instructive and useful, as helps, guides, and
incentives to others. Some of the best are almost equivalent
to gospels—teaching high living, high thinking, and energetic
action for their own and the world’s good. The valuable
examples which they furnish of the power of self-help, of patient
purpose, resolute working, and steadfast integrity, issuing in the
formation of truly noble and manly character, exhibit in language
not to be misunderstood, what it is in the power of each to
accomplish for himself; and eloquently illustrate the efficacy of
self-respect and self-reliance in enabling men of even the humblest
rank to work out for themselves an honourable competency and a
solid reputation.Great men of science, literature, and art—apostles of great
thoughts and lords of the great heart—have belonged to no exclusive
class nor rank in life. They have come alike from colleges,
workshops, and farmhouses,—from the huts of poor men and the
mansions of the rich. Some of God’s greatest apostles have
come from “the ranks.” The poorest have sometimes taken the
highest places; nor have difficulties apparently the most
insuperable proved obstacles in their way. Those very
difficulties, in many instances, would ever seem to have been their
best helpers, by evoking their powers of labour and endurance, and
stimulating into life faculties which might otherwise have lain
dormant. The instances of obstacles thus surmounted, and of
triumphs thus achieved, are indeed so numerous, as almost to
justify the proverb that “with Will one can do anything.”
Take, for instance, the remarkable fact, that from the barber’s
shop came Jeremy Taylor, the most poetical of divines; Sir Richard
Arkwright, the inventor of the spinning-jenny and founder of the
cotton manufacture; Lord Tenterden, one of the most distinguished
of Lord Chief Justices; and Turner, the greatest among landscape
painters.No one knows to a certainty what Shakespeare was; but it is
unquestionable that he sprang from a humble rank. His father
was a butcher and grazier; and Shakespeare himself is supposed to
have been in early life a woolcomber; whilst others aver that he
was an usher in a school and afterwards a scrivener’s clerk.
He truly seems to have been “not one, but all mankind’s
epitome.” For such is the accuracy of his sea phrases that a
naval writer alleges that he must have been a sailor; whilst a
clergyman infers, from internal evidence in his writings, that he
was probably a parson’s clerk; and a distinguished judge of
horse-flesh insists that he must have been a horse-dealer.
Shakespeare was certainly an actor, and in the course of his life
“played many parts,” gathering his wonderful stores of knowledge
from a wide field of experience and observation. In any
event, he must have been a close student and a hard worker; and to
this day his writings continue to exercise a powerful influence on
the formation of English character.The common class of day labourers has given us Brindley the
engineer, Cook the navigator, and Burns the poet. Masons and
bricklayers can boast of Ben Jonson, who worked at the building of
Lincoln’s Inn, with a trowel in his hand and a book in his pocket,
Edwards and Telford the engineers, Hugh Miller the geologist, and
Allan Cunningham the writer and sculptor; whilst among
distinguished carpenters we find the names of Inigo Jones the
architect, Harrison the chronometer-maker, John Hunter the
physiologist, Romney and Opie the painters, Professor Lee the
Orientalist, and John Gibson the sculptor.From the weaver class have sprung Simson the mathematician,
Bacon the sculptor, the two Milners, Adam Walker, John Foster,
Wilson the ornithologist, Dr. Livingstone the missionary traveller,
and Tannahill the poet. Shoemakers have given us Sir
Cloudesley Shovel the great Admiral, Sturgeon the electrician,
Samuel Drew the essayist, Gifford the editor of the ‘Quarterly
Review,’ Bloomfield the poet, and William Carey the missionary;
whilst Morrison, another laborious missionary, was a maker of
shoe-lasts. Within the last few years, a profound naturalist
has been discovered in the person of a shoemaker at Banff, named
Thomas Edwards, who, while maintaining himself by his trade, has
devoted his leisure to the study of natural science in all its
branches, his researches in connexion with the smaller crustaceæ
having been rewarded by the discovery of a new species, to which
the name of “Praniza Edwardsii” has been given by
naturalists.Nor have tailors been undistinguished. John Stow, the
historian, worked at the trade during some part of his life.
Jackson, the painter, made clothes until he reached manhood.
The brave Sir John Hawkswood, who so greatly distinguished himself
at Poictiers, and was knighted by Edward III. for his valour, was
in early life apprenticed to a London tailor. Admiral Hobson,
who broke the boom at Vigo in 1702, belonged to the same
calling. He was working as a tailor’s apprentice near
Bonchurch, in the Isle of Wight, when the news flew through the
village that a squadron of men-of-war was sailing off the
island. He sprang from the shopboard, and ran down with his
comrades to the beach, to gaze upon the glorious sight. The
boy was suddenly inflamed with the ambition to be a sailor; and
springing into a boat, he rowed off to the squadron, gained the
admiral’s ship, and was accepted as a volunteer. Years after,
he returned to his native village full of honours, and dined off
bacon and eggs in the cottage where he had worked as an
apprentice. But the greatest tailor of all is unquestionably
Andrew Johnson, the present President of the United States—a man of
extraordinary force of character and vigour of intellect. In
his great speech at Washington, when describing himself as having
begun his political career as an alderman, and run through all the
branches of the legislature, a voice in the crowd cried, “From a
tailor up.” It was characteristic of Johnson to take the
intended sarcasm in good part, and even to turn it to
account. “Some gentleman says I have been a tailor.
That does not disconcert me in the least; for when I was a tailor I
had the reputation of being a good one, and making close fits; I
was always punctual with my customers, and always did good
work.”Cardinal Wolsey, De Foe, Akenside, and Kirke White were the
sons of butchers; Bunyan was a tinker, and Joseph Lancaster a
basket-maker. Among the great names identified with the
invention of the steam-engine are those of Newcomen, Watt, and
Stephenson; the first a blacksmith, the second a maker of
mathematical instruments, and the third an engine-fireman.
Huntingdon the preacher was originally a coalheaver, and Bewick,
the father of wood-engraving, a coalminer. Dodsley was a
footman, and Holcroft a groom. Baffin the navigator began his
seafaring career as a man before the mast, and Sir Cloudesley
Shovel as a cabin-boy. Herschel played the oboe in a military
band. Chantrey was a journeyman carver, Etty a journeyman
printer, and Sir Thomas Lawrence the son of a tavern-keeper.
Michael Faraday, the son of a blacksmith, was in early life
apprenticed to a bookbinder, and worked at that trade until he
reached his twenty-second year: he now occupies the very first rank
as a philosopher, excelling even his master, Sir Humphry Davy, in
the art of lucidly expounding the most difficult and abstruse
points in natural science.Among those who have given the greatest impulse to the
sublime science of astronomy, we find Copernicus, the son of a
Polish baker; Kepler, the son of a German public-house keeper, and
himself the “garçon de cabaret;” d’Alembert, a foundling picked up
one winter’s night on the steps of the church of St. Jean le Rond
at Paris, and brought up by the wife of a glazier; and Newton and
Laplace, the one the son of a small freeholder near Grantham, the
other the son of a poor peasant of Beaumont-en-Auge, near
Honfleur. Notwithstanding their comparatively adverse
circumstances in early life, these distinguished men achieved a
solid and enduring reputation by the exercise of their genius,
which all the wealth in the world could not have purchased.
The very possession of wealth might indeed have proved an obstacle
greater even than the humble means to which they were born.
The father of Lagrange, the astronomer and mathematician, held the
office of Treasurer of War at Turin; but having ruined himself by
speculations, his family were reduced to comparative poverty.
To this circumstance Lagrange was in after life accustomed partly
to attribute his own fame and happiness. “Had I been rich,”
said he, “I should probably not have become a
mathematician.”The sons of clergymen and ministers of religion generally,
have particularly distinguished themselves in our country’s
history. Amongst them we find the names of Drake and Nelson,
celebrated in naval heroism; of Wollaston, Young, Playfair, and
Bell, in science; of Wren, Reynolds, Wilson, and Wilkie, in art; of
Thurlow and Campbell, in law; and of Addison, Thomson, Goldsmith,
Coleridge, and Tennyson, in literature. Lord Hardinge,
Colonel Edwardes, and Major Hodson, so honourably known in Indian
warfare, were also the sons of clergymen. Indeed, the empire
of England in India was won and held chiefly by men of the middle
class—such as Clive, Warren Hastings, and their successors—men for
the most part bred in factories and trained to habits of
business.Among the sons of attorneys we find Edmund Burke, Smeaton the
engineer, Scott and Wordsworth, and Lords Somers, Hardwick, and
Dunning. Sir William Blackstone was the posthumous son of a
silk-mercer. Lord Gifford’s father was a grocer at Dover;
Lord Denman’s a physician; judge Talfourd’s a country brewer; and
Lord Chief Baron Pollock’s a celebrated saddler at Charing
Cross. Layard, the discoverer of the monuments of Nineveh,
was an articled clerk in a London solicitor’s office; and Sir
William Armstrong, the inventor of hydraulic machinery and of the
Armstrong ordnance, was also trained to the law and practised for
some time as an attorney. Milton was the son of a London
scrivener, and Pope and Southey were the sons of
linendrapers. Professor Wilson was the son of a Paisley
manufacturer, and Lord Macaulay of an African merchant. Keats
was a druggist, and Sir Humphry Davy a country apothecary’s
apprentice. Speaking of himself, Davy once said, “What I am I
have made myself: I say this without vanity, and in pure simplicity
of heart.” Richard Owen, the Newton of Natural History, began
life as a midshipman, and did not enter upon the line of scientific
research in which he has since become so distinguished, until
comparatively late in life. He laid the foundations of his
great knowledge while occupied in cataloguing the magnificent
museum accumulated by the industry of John Hunter, a work which
occupied him at the College of Surgeons during a period of about
ten years.Foreign not less than English biography abounds in
illustrations of men who have glorified the lot of poverty by their
labours and their genius. In Art we find Claude, the son of a
pastrycook; Geefs, of a baker; Leopold Robert, of a watchmaker; and
Haydn, of a wheelwright; whilst Daguerre was a scene-painter at the
Opera. The father of Gregory VII. was a carpenter; of Sextus
V., a shepherd; and of Adrian VI., a poor bargeman. When a
boy, Adrian, unable to pay for a light by which to study, was
accustomed to prepare his lessons by the light of the lamps in the
streets and the church porches, exhibiting a degree of patience and
industry which were the certain forerunners of his future
distinction. Of like humble origin were Hauy, the
mineralogist, who was the son of a weaver of Saint-Just;
Hautefeuille, the mechanician, of a baker at Orleans; Joseph
Fourier, the mathematician, of a tailor at Auxerre; Durand, the
architect, of a Paris shoemaker; and Gesner, the naturalist, of a
skinner or worker in hides, at Zurich. This last began his
career under all the disadvantages attendant on poverty, sickness,
and domestic calamity; none of which, however, were sufficient to
damp his courage or hinder his progress. His life was indeed
an eminent illustration of the truth of the saying, that those who
have most to do and are willing to work, will find the most
time. Pierre Ramus was another man of like character.
He was the son of poor parents in Picardy, and when a boy was
employed to tend sheep. But not liking the occupation he ran
away to Paris. After encountering much misery, he succeeded
in entering the College of Navarre as a servant. The
situation, however, opened for him the road to learning, and he
shortly became one of the most distinguished men of his
time.The chemist Vauquelin was the son of a peasant of
Saint-André-d’Herbetot, in the Calvados. When a boy at
school, though poorly clad, he was full of bright intelligence; and
the master, who taught him to read and write, when praising him for
his diligence, used to say, “Go on, my boy; work, study, Colin, and
one day you will go as well dressed as the parish
churchwarden!” A country apothecary who visited the school,
admired the robust boy’s arms, and offered to take him into his
laboratory to pound his drugs, to which Vauquelin assented, in the
hope of being able to continue his lessons. But the
apothecary would not permit him to spend any part of his time in
learning; and on ascertaining this, the youth immediately
determined to quit his service. He therefore left Saint-André
and took the road for Paris with his havresac on his back.
Arrived there, he searched for a place as apothecary’s boy, but
could not find one. Worn out by fatigue and destitution,
Vauquelin fell ill, and in that state was taken to the hospital,
where he thought he should die. But better things were in
store for the poor boy. He recovered, and again proceeded in
his search of employment, which he at length found with an
apothecary. Shortly after, he became known to Fourcroy the
eminent chemist, who was so pleased with the youth that he made him
his private secretary; and many years after, on the death of that
great philosopher, Vauquelin succeeded him as Professor of
Chemistry. Finally, in 1829, the electors of the district of
Calvados appointed him their representative in the Chamber of
Deputies, and he re-entered in triumph the village which he had
left so many years before, so poor and so obscure.England has no parallel instances to show, of promotions from
the ranks of the army to the highest military offices; which have
been so common in France since the first Revolution. “La
carrière ouverte aux talents” has there received many striking
illustrations, which would doubtless be matched among ourselves
were the road to promotion as open. Hoche, Humbert, and
Pichegru, began their respective careers as private soldiers.
Hoche, while in the King’s army, was accustomed to embroider
waistcoats to enable him to earn money wherewith to purchase books
on military science. Humbert was a scapegrace when a youth;
at sixteen he ran away from home, and was by turns servant to a
tradesman at Nancy, a workman at Lyons, and a hawker of rabbit
skins. In 1792, he enlisted as a volunteer; and in a year he
was general of brigade. Kleber, Lefèvre, Suchet, Victor,
Lannes, Soult, Massena, St. Cyr, D’Erlon, Murat, Augereau,
Bessières, and Ney, all rose from the ranks. In some cases
promotion was rapid, in others it was slow. Saint Cyr, the
son of a tanner of Toul, began life as an actor, after which he
enlisted in the Chasseurs, and was promoted to a captaincy within a
year. Victor, Duc de Belluno, enlisted in the Artillery in
1781: during the events preceding the Revolution he was discharged;
but immediately on the outbreak of war he re-enlisted, and in the
course of a few months his intrepidity and ability secured his
promotion as Adjutant-Major and chief of battalion. Murat,
“le beau sabreur,” was the son of a village innkeeper in Perigord,
where he looked after the horses. He first enlisted in a
regiment of Chasseurs, from which he was dismissed for
insubordination: but again enlisting, he shortly rose to the rank
of Colonel. Ney enlisted at eighteen in a hussar regiment,
and gradually advanced step by step: Kleber soon discovered his
merits, surnaming him “The Indefatigable,” and promoted him to be
Adjutant-General when only twenty-five. On the other hand,
Soult[15]was six years from
the date of his enlistment before he reached the rank of
sergeant. But Soult’s advancement was rapid compared with
that of Massena, who served for fourteen years before he was made
sergeant; and though he afterwards rose successively, step by step,
to the grades of Colonel, General of Division, and Marshal, he
declared that the post of sergeant was the step which of all others
had cost him the most labour to win. Similar promotions from
the ranks, in the French army, have continued down to our own
day. Changarnier entered the King’s bodyguard as a private in
1815. Marshal Bugeaud served four years in the ranks, after
which he was made an officer. Marshal Randon, the present
French Minister of War, began his military career as a drummer boy;
and in the portrait of him in the gallery at Versailles, his hand
rests upon a drum-head, the picture being thus painted at his own
request. Instances such as these inspire French soldiers with
enthusiasm for their service, as each private feels that he may
possibly carry the baton of a marshal in his knapsack.The instances of men, in this and other countries, who, by
dint of persevering application and energy, have raised themselves
from the humblest ranks of industry to eminent positions of
usefulness and influence in society, are indeed so numerous that
they have long ceased to be regarded as exceptional. Looking
at some of the more remarkable, it might almost be said that early
encounter with difficulty and adverse circumstances was the
necessary and indispensable condition of success. The British
House of Commons has always contained a considerable number of such
self-raised men—fitting representatives of the industrial character
of the people; and it is to the credit of our Legislature that they
have been welcomed and honoured there. When the late Joseph
Brotherton, member for Salford, in the course of the discussion on
the Ten Hours Bill, detailed with true pathos the hardships and
fatigues to which he had been subjected when working as a factory
boy in a cotton mill, and described the resolution which he had
then formed, that if ever it was in his power he would endeavour to
ameliorate the condition of that class, Sir James Graham rose
immediately after him, and declared, amidst the cheers of the
House, that he did not before know that Mr. Brotherton’s origin had
been so humble, but that it rendered him more proud than he had
ever before been of the House of Commons, to think that a person
risen from that condition should be able to sit side by side, on
equal terms, with the hereditary gentry of the land.The late Mr. Fox, member for Oldham, was accustomed to
introduce his recollections of past times with the words, “when I
was working as a weaver boy at Norwich;” and there are other
members of parliament, still living, whose origin has been equally
humble. Mr. Lindsay, the well-known ship owner, until
recently member for Sunderland, once told the simple story of his
life to the electors of Weymouth, in answer to an attack made upon
him by his political opponents. He had been left an orphan at
fourteen, and when he left Glasgow for Liverpool to push his way in
the world, not being able to pay the usual fare, the captain of the
steamer agreed to take his labour in exchange, and the boy worked
his passage by trimming the coals in the coal hole. At
Liverpool he remained for seven weeks before he could obtain
employment, during which time he lived in sheds and fared hardly;
until at last he found shelter on board a West Indiaman. He
entered as a boy, and before he was nineteen, by steady good
conduct he had risen to the command of a ship. At
twenty-three he retired from the sea, and settled on shore, after
which his progress was rapid “he had prospered,” he said, “by
steady industry, by constant work, and by ever keeping in view the
great principle of doing to others as you would be done
by.”The career of Mr. William Jackson, of Birkenhead, the present
member for North Derbyshire, bears considerable resemblance to that
of Mr. Lindsay. His father, a surgeon at Lancaster, died,
leaving a family of eleven children, of whom William Jackson was
the seventh son. The elder boys had been well educated while
the father lived, but at his death the younger members had to shift
for themselves. William, when under twelve years old, was
taken from school, and put to hard work at a ship’s side from six
in the morning till nine at night. His master falling ill,
the boy was taken into the counting-house, where he had more
leisure. This gave him an opportunity of reading, and having
obtained access to a set of the ‘Encyclopædia Britannica,’ he read
the volumes through from A to Z, partly by day, but chiefly at
night. He afterwards put himself to a trade, was diligent,
and succeeded in it. Now he has ships sailing on almost every
sea, and holds commercial relations with nearly every country on
the globe.Among like men of the same class may be ranked the late
Richard Cobden, whose start in life was equally humble. The
son of a small farmer at Midhurst in Sussex, he was sent at an
early age to London and employed as a boy in a warehouse in the
City. He was diligent, well conducted, and eager for
information. His master, a man of the old school, warned him
against too much reading; but the boy went on in his own course,
storing his mind with the wealth found in books. He was
promoted from one position of trust to another—became a traveller
for his house—secured a large connection, and eventually started in
business as a calico printer at Manchester. Taking an
interest in public questions, more especially in popular education,
his attention was gradually drawn to the subject of the Corn Laws,
to the repeal of which he may be said to have devoted his fortune
and his life. It may be mentioned as a curious fact that the
first speech he delivered in public was a total failure. But
he had great perseverance, application, and energy; and with
persistency and practice, he became at length one of the most
persuasive and effective of public speakers, extorting the
disinterested eulogy of even Sir Robert Peel himself. M.
Drouyn de Lhuys, the French Ambassador, has eloquently said of Mr.
Cobden, that he was “a living proof of what merit, perseverance,
and labour can accomplish; one of the most complete examples of
those men who, sprung from the humblest ranks of society, raise
themselves to the highest rank in public estimation by the effect
of their own worth and of their personal services; finally, one of
the rarest examples of the solid qualities inherent in the English
character.”In all these cases, strenuous individual application was the
price paid for distinction; excellence of any sort being invariably
placed beyond the reach of indolence. It is the diligent hand
and head alone that maketh rich—in self-culture, growth in wisdom,
and in business. Even when men are born to wealth and high
social position, any solid reputation which they may individually
achieve can only be attained by energetic application; for though
an inheritance of acres may be bequeathed, an inheritance of
knowledge and wisdom cannot. The wealthy man may pay others
for doing his work for him, but it is impossible to get his
thinking done for him by another, or to purchase any kind of
self-culture. Indeed, the doctrine that excellence in any
pursuit is only to be achieved by laborious application, holds as
true in the case of the man of wealth as in that of Drew and
Gifford, whose only school was a cobbler’s stall, or Hugh Miller,
whose only college was a Cromarty stone quarry.Riches and ease, it is perfectly clear, are not necessary for
man’s highest culture, else had not the world been so largely
indebted in all times to those who have sprung from the humbler
ranks. An easy and luxurious existence does not train men to
effort or encounter with difficulty; nor does it awaken that
consciousness of power which is so necessary for energetic and
effective action in life. Indeed, so far from poverty being a
misfortune, it may, by vigorous self-help, be converted even into a
blessing; rousing a man to that struggle with the world in which,
though some may purchase ease by degradation, the right-minded and
true-hearted find strength, confidence, and triumph. Bacon
says, “Men seem neither to understand their riches nor their
strength: of the former they believe greater things than they
should; of the latter much less. Self-reliance and
self-denial will teach a man to drink out of his own cistern, and
eat his own sweet bread, and to learn and labour truly to get his
living, and carefully to expend the good things committed to his
trust.”Riches are so great a temptation to ease and self-indulgence,
to which men are by nature prone, that the glory is all the greater
of those who, born to ample fortunes, nevertheless take an active
part in the work of their generation—who “scorn delights and live
laborious days.” It is to the honour of the wealthier ranks
in this country that they are not idlers; for they do their fair
share of the work of the state, and usually take more than their
fair share of its dangers. It was a fine thing said of a
subaltern officer in the Peninsular campaigns, observed trudging
alone through mud and mire by the side of his regiment, “There goes
15,000l.a year!” and in our
own day, the bleak slopes of Sebastopol and the burning soil of
India have borne witness to the like noble self-denial and devotion
on the part of our gentler classes; many a gallant and noble
fellow, of rank and estate, having risked his life, or lost it, in
one or other of those fields of action, in the service of his
country.Nor have the wealthier classes been undistinguished in the
more peaceful pursuits of philosophy and science. Take, for
instance, the great names of Bacon, the father of modern
philosophy, and of Worcester, Boyle, Cavendish, Talbot, and Rosse,
in science. The last named may be regarded as the great
mechanic of the peerage; a man who, if he had not been born a peer,
would probably have taken the highest rank as an inventor. So
thorough is his knowledge of smith-work that he is said to have
been pressed on one occasion to accept the foremanship of a large
workshop, by a manufacturer to whom his rank was unknown. The
great Rosse telescope, of his own fabrication, is certainly the
most extraordinary instrument of the kind that has yet been
constructed.But it is principally in the departments of politics and
literature that we find the most energetic labourers amongst our
higher classes. Success in these lines of action, as in all
others, can only be achieved through industry, practice, and study;
and the great Minister, or parliamentary leader, must necessarily
be amongst the very hardest of workers. Such was Palmerston;
and such are Derby and Russell, Disraeli and Gladstone. These
men have had the benefit of no Ten Hours Bill, but have often,
during the busy season of Parliament, worked “double shift,” almost
day and night. One of the most illustrious of such workers in
modern times was unquestionably the late Sir Robert Peel. He
possessed in an extraordinary degree the power of continuous
intellectual labour, nor did he spare himself. His career,
indeed, presented a remarkable example of how much a man of
comparatively moderate powers can accomplish by means of assiduous
application and indefatigable industry. During the forty
years that he held a seat in Parliament, his labours were
prodigious. He was a most conscientious man, and whatever he
undertook to do, he did thoroughly. All his speeches bear
evidence of his careful study of everything that had been spoken or
written on the subject under consideration. He was elaborate
almost to excess; and spared no pains to adapt himself to the
various capacities of his audience. Withal, he possessed much
practical sagacity, great strength of purpose, and power to direct
the issues of action with steady hand and eye. In one respect
he surpassed most men: his principles broadened and enlarged with
time; and age, instead of contracting, only served to mellow and
ripen his nature. To the last he continued open to the
reception of new views, and, though many thought him cautious to
excess, he did not allow himself to fall into that indiscriminating
admiration of the past, which is the palsy of many minds similarly
educated, and renders the old age of many nothing but a
pity.The indefatigable industry of Lord Brougham has become almost
proverbial. His public labours have extended over a period of
upwards of sixty years, during which he has ranged over many
fields—of law, literature, politics, and science,—and achieved
distinction in them all. How he contrived it, has been to
many a mystery. Once, when Sir Samuel Romilly was requested
to undertake some new work, he excused himself by saying that he
had no time; “but,” he added, “go with it to that fellow Brougham,
he seems to have time for everything.” The secret of it was,
that he never left a minute unemployed; withal he possessed a
constitution of iron. When arrived at an age at which most
men would have retired from the world to enjoy their hard-earned
leisure, perhaps to doze away their time in an easy chair, Lord
Brougham commenced and prosecuted a series of elaborate
investigations as to the laws of Light, and he submitted the
results to the most scientific audiences that Paris and London
could muster. About the same time, he was passing through the
press his admirable sketches of the ‘Men of Science and Literature
of the Reign of George III.,’ and taking his full share of the law
business and the political discussions in the House of Lords.
Sydney Smith once recommended him to confine himself to only the
transaction of so much business as three strong men could get
through. But such was Brougham’s love of work—long become a
habit—that no amount of application seems to have been too great
for him; and such was his love of excellence, that it has been said
of him that if his station in life had been only that of a
shoe-black, he would never have rested satisfied until he had
become the best shoe-black in England.Another hard-working man of the same class is Sir E. Bulwer
Lytton. Few writers have done more, or achieved higher
distinction in various walks—as a novelist, poet, dramatist,
historian, essayist, orator, and politician. He has worked
his way step by step, disdainful of ease, and animated throughout
by the ardent desire to excel. On the score of mere industry,
there are few living English writers who have written so much, and
none that have produced so much of high quality. The industry
of Bulwer is entitled to all the greater praise that it has been
entirely self-imposed. To hunt, and shoot, and live at
ease,—to frequent the clubs and enjoy the opera, with the variety
of London visiting and sight-seeing during the “season,” and then
off to the country mansion, with its well-stocked preserves, and
its thousand delightful out-door pleasures,—to travel abroad, to
Paris, Vienna, or Rome,—all this is excessively attractive to a
lover of pleasure and a man of fortune, and by no means calculated
to make him voluntarily undertake continuous labour of any
kind. Yet these pleasures, all within his reach, Bulwer must,
as compared with men born to similar estate, have denied himself in
assuming the position and pursuing the career of a literary
man. Like Byron, his first effort was poetical (‘Weeds and
Wild Flowers’), and a failure. His second was a novel
(‘Falkland’), and it proved a failure too. A man of weaker
nerve would have dropped authorship; but Bulwer had pluck and
perseverance; and he worked on, determined to succeed. He was
incessantly industrious, read extensively, and from failure went
courageously onwards to success. ‘Pelham’ followed ‘Falkland’
within a year, and the remainder of Bulwer’s literary life, now
extending over a period of thirty years, has been a succession of
triumphs.Mr. Disraeli affords a similar instance of the power of
industry and application in working out an eminent public
career. His first achievements were, like Bulwer’s, in
literature; and he reached success only through a succession of
failures. His ‘Wondrous Tale of Alroy’ and ‘Revolutionary
Epic’ were laughed at, and regarded as indications of literary
lunacy. But he worked on in other directions, and his
‘Coningsby,’ ‘Sybil,’ and ‘Tancred,’ proved the sterling stuff of
which he was made. As an orator too, his first appearance in
the House of Commons was a failure. It was spoken of as “more
screaming than an Adelphi farce.” Though composed in a grand
and ambitious strain, every sentence was hailed with “loud
laughter.” ‘Hamlet’ played as a comedy were nothing to
it. But he concluded with a sentence which embodied a
prophecy. Writhing under the laughter with which his studied
eloquence had been received, he exclaimed, “I have begun several
times many things, and have succeeded in them at last. I
shall sit down now, but the time will come when you will hear
me.” The time did come; and how Disraeli succeeded in at
length commanding the attention of the first assembly of gentlemen
in the world, affords a striking illustration of what energy and
determination will do; for Disraeli earned his position by dint of
patient industry. He did not, as many young men do, having
once failed, retire dejected, to mope and whine in a corner, but
diligently set himself to work. He carefully unlearnt his
faults, studied the character of his audience, practised sedulously
the art of speech, and industriously filled his mind with the
elements of parliamentary knowledge. He worked patiently for
success; and it came, but slowly: then the House laughed with him,
instead of at him. The recollection of his early failure was
effaced, and by general consent he was at length admitted to be one
of the most finished and effective of parliamentary
speakers.Although much may be accomplished by means of individual
industry and energy, as these and other instances set forth in the
following pages serve to illustrate, it must at the same time be
acknowledged that the help which we derive from others in the
journey of life is of very great importance. The poet
Wordsworth has well said that “these two things, contradictory
though they may seem, must go together—manly dependence and manly
independence, manly reliance and manly self-reliance.” From
infancy to old age, all are more or less indebted to others for
nurture and culture; and the best and strongest are usually found
the readiest to acknowledge such help. Take, for example, the
career of the late Alexis de Tocqueville, a man doubly well-born,
for his father was a distinguished peer of France, and his mother a
grand-daughter of Malesherbes. Through powerful family
influence, he was appointed Judge Auditor at Versailles when only
twenty-one; but probably feeling that he had not fairly won the
position by merit, he determined to give it up and owe his future
advancement in life to himself alone. “A foolish resolution,”
some will say; but De Tocqueville bravely acted it out. He
resigned his appointment, and made arrangements to leave France for
the purpose of travelling through the United States, the results of
which were published in his great book on ‘Democracy in
America.’ His friend and travelling companion, Gustave de
Beaumont, has described his indefatigable industry during this
journey. “His nature,” he says, “was wholly averse to
idleness, and whether he was travelling or resting, his mind was
always at work. . . . With Alexis, the most agreeable conversation
was that which was the most useful. The worst day was the
lost day, or the day ill spent; the least loss of time annoyed
him.” Tocqueville himself wrote to a friend—“There is no time
of life at which one can wholly cease from action, for effort
without one’s self, and still more effort within, is equally
necessary, if not more so, when we grow old, as it is in
youth. I compare man in this world to a traveller journeying
without ceasing towards a colder and colder region; the higher he
goes, the faster he ought to walk. The great malady of the
soul is cold. And in resisting this formidable evil, one
needs not only to be sustained by the action of a mind employed,
but also by contact with one’s fellows in the business of
life.”[25]Notwithstanding de Tocqueville’s decided views as to the
necessity of exercising individual energy and self-dependence, no
one could be more ready than he was to recognise the value of that
help and support for which all men are indebted to others in a
greater or less degree. Thus, he often acknowledged, with
gratitude, his obligations to his friends De Kergorlay and
Stofells,—to the former for intellectual assistance, and to the
latter for moral support and sympathy. To De Kergorlay he
wrote—“Thine is the only soul in which I have confidence, and whose
influence exercises a genuine effect upon my own. Many others
have influence upon the details of my actions, but no one has so
much influence as thou on the origination of fundamental ideas, and
of those principles which are the rule of conduct.” De
Tocqueville was not less ready to confess the great obligations
which he owed to his wife, Marie, for the preservation of that
temper and frame of mind which enabled him to prosecute his studies
with success. He believed that a noble-minded woman
insensibly elevated the character of her husband, while one of a
grovelling nature as certainly tended to degrade it.[26]In fine, human character is moulded by a thousand subtle
influences; by example and precept; by life and literature; by
friends and neighbours; by the world we live in as well as by the
spirits of our forefathers, whose legacy of good words and deeds we
inherit. But great, unquestionably, though these influences
are acknowledged to be, it is nevertheless equally clear that men
must necessarily be the active agents of their own well-being and
well-doing; and that, however much the wise and the good may owe to
others, they themselves must in the very nature of things be their
own best helpers.
CHAPTER II.Leaders of Industry—Inventors and Producers.
“Le travail et la Science sont désormais les maîtres du
monde.”—De Salvandy.
“Deduct all that men of the humbler classes have done for
England in the way of inventions only, and see where she would have
been but for them.”—Arthur
Helps.
One of the most strongly-marked features of the English
people is their spirit of industry, standing out prominent and
distinct in their past history, and as strikingly characteristic of
them now as at any former period. It is this spirit,
displayed by the commons of England, which has laid the foundations
and built up the industrial greatness of the empire. This
vigorous growth of the nation has been mainly the result of the
free energy of individuals, and it has been contingent upon the
number of hands and minds from time to time actively employed
within it, whether as cultivators of the soil, producers of
articles of utility, contrivers of tools and machines, writers of
books, or creators of works of art. And while this spirit of
active industry has been the vital principle of the nation, it has
also been its saving and remedial one, counteracting from time to
time the effects of errors in our laws and imperfections in our
constitution.
The career of industry which the nation has pursued, has also
proved its best education. As steady application to work is
the healthiest training for every individual, so is it the best
discipline of a state. Honourable industry travels the same
road with duty; and Providence has closely linked both with
happiness. The gods, says the poet, have placed labour and
toil on the way leading to the Elysian fields. Certain it is
that no bread eaten by man is so sweet as that earned by his own
labour, whether bodily or mental. By labour the earth has
been subdued, and man redeemed from barbarism; nor has a single
step in civilization been made without it. Labour is not only
a necessity and a duty, but a blessing: only the idler feels it to
be a curse. The duty of work is written on the thews and
muscles of the limbs, the mechanism of the hand, the nerves and
lobes of the brain—the sum of whose healthy action is satisfaction
and enjoyment. In the school of labour is taught the best
practical wisdom; nor is a life of manual employment, as we shall
hereafter find, incompatible with high mental culture.
Hugh Miller, than whom none knew better the strength and the
weakness belonging to the lot of labour, stated the result of his
experience to be, that Work, even the hardest, is full of pleasure
and materials for self-improvement. He held honest labour to
be the best of teachers, and that the school of toil is the noblest
of schools—save only the Christian one,—that it is a school in
which the ability of being useful is imparted, the spirit of
independence learnt, and the habit of persevering effort
acquired. He was even of opinion that the training of the
mechanic,—by the exercise which it gives to his observant
faculties, from his daily dealing with things actual and practical,
and the close experience of life which he acquires,—better fits him
for picking his way along the journey of life, and is more
favourable to his growth as a Man, emphatically speaking, than the
training afforded by any other condition.