I came across this essay and got a copy of the original
text. I reformatted the first chapter
for the day’s post. From time to time I will
do the same for the remaining chapters.
It is a bit of a chore but the material is well worth it.
Beyond all that, the material is an excellent backdoor
history of the rise of capitalism to the middle of the nineteenth century and
as this is largely lost to all but specialists; it is an excellent way in. I have read similar material from the eras
afterward and this fills in the blank spaces.
I do recommend getting a copy and taking a run at it or read
the chapters as I get around to posting them on this blog.
Dusting Off a Man and His Classic
Ideas and Consequences | Lawrence
W. Reed
In 1870 the sultan of Turkey
gave a book by a Scotsman to his entire entourage of top-ranking
officials. The Khedive of Egypt
had the same work inscribed and painted on the wall of the Royal harem. Two
years later the Meiji dynasty ordered the book to be issued throughout Tokyo ’s school system.
Eventually every prefecture in Japan
followed suit. General George Custer described the volume as his favorite text.
Many people kept it next to their Bibles.
What was this book, and who was its author? It was called, simply, Self-Help,
and its author was a man named Samuel Smiles.
When he died at the age of 86 in 1904, only Queen Victoria’s funeral
cortege three years earlier was said to have surpassed in recent memory that of
Samuel Smiles. He was loved not only for his book but also for a wealth of
other works that celebrated the virtues of independence, thrift, civility, character,
and hard work.
Robert L. Bradley, in his 2009 book Capitalism at Work: Business,
Government and Energy, calls Smiles “the father of the self-improvement
movement.” Bradley notes:
Motivational self-help books were not new, but Smiles’ 400-page opus
was systematic, combining age-tested wisdom with knowledge of the industrial
present, and profusely illustrated with stories of individuals-made-good in
industry, engineering, the arts, and music. Samuel Smiles, a medical doctor
turned newspaper editor/political reformer turned businessman/moralist, would
become the Adam Smith of applied commercial capitalism.
The cover of the 2002 Oxford
University Press edition
of Self-Help declares that the book “is the precursor of today’s
motivational and self-help literature” and that it “awakens readers to their
own potential and instills the desire to succeed.” In his lifetime the author
inspired riots in Belgrade , carnivals in Milan , and plaudits from
leaders the world over. But sadly, just a century since Smiles died, he is
largely unremembered in his native Scotland . Needless to say, decades
of the British welfare state have not been kind to a man who preached personal
independence and entrepreneurial capitalism.
Dipping into the pages of Self-Help is a curious experience.
You travel back in time to Smiles’s mid-nineteenth-century experiences and
perceptions. To Smiles, the son of a poor farmer, human nature was both
timeless and locationless. It is as good, he felt, for a Japanese man of
commerce to exhibit the plain virtues of honesty, punctuality, diligence, and
energy as it is for a Swede or an American.
Self-Help, which appeared in 1859, had the most humble of origins. It
began as a series of evening lectures to apprentice engineers in Leeds . A kind of Victorian Dale Carnegie, Smiles thumped
his message home in a way that moved and inspired almost everybody of his time.
Live and trade with integrity and you lift all you meet, not just yourself, he
argued. Character, the sum of one’s choices and actions, is of paramount
importance; indeed Smiles called it “the crown and glory of life” and the very
thing on which “the strength, the industry, and the civilization of nations”
depend.
To Smiles the road to riches was not paved with overreaching ambition,
disregard for others, or cutting corners when it came to matters of truth. It
didn’t mean securing favors from government at the expense of the competition.
Welfare and Poverty
The welfare state was anathema to Smiles. He felt it was a woefully
ineffective substitute for personal charity. “The value of legislation as an
agent in human advancement has usually been much over-estimated,” he wrote. “No
laws, however stringent, can make the idle industrious, the thriftless
provident, or the drunken sober.” What he said about poverty legislation a
century and a half ago would be a fitting description of the results of the
welfare programs of today:
We have tried to grapple with the evils of [misery] by legislation, but
it seems to mock us. Those who sink into poverty are fed, but they remain
paupers. Those who feed them feel no compassion; and those who are fed return
no gratitude. There is no bond of sympathy between the givers and the
receivers.
The books of Samuel Smiles are full of inspiring stories of
nineteenth-century entrepreneurs who often rejected the easy path of
unprincipled compromise and the fast buck, and instead treated others according
to the Golden Rule and went to their graves with their character and integrity
intact.
In painstaking detail he explained why keeping high our standards
of speech and conduct was not just worthwhile but also an indispensable
ingredient of freedom and progress. Life to him was not an ego trip. It
was not about calling attention to oneself but rather about being the best one
can be in all endeavors. The fame and fortune that might follow were secondary
and imposed additional responsibilities to foster virtue in others.
The final chapter of Self-Help is titled “Character—The True
Gentleman.” It’s full of examples that illustrate Smiles’s belief that nothing
is worth sacrificing one’s character. From proper manners to truthfulness to
self-respect, Smiles laid forth the attributes that, if pursued widely and
personally one individual at a time, would surely produce a far better world.
Here’s a passage most readers will especially appreciate:
There are many tests by which a gentleman may be known, but there is
one that never fails—How does he exercise power over those subordinate to him?
How does he conduct himself toward women and children? How does the officer
treat his men, the employer his servants, the master his pupils, and man in
every station those who are weaker than himself? The discretion, forbearance
and kindliness, with which power in such cases is used, may indeed be regarded
as the crucial test of gentlemanly character.
Samuel Smiles—both the man and his message—epitomized the best of the
capitalist spirit of the nineteenth century. This fact largely explains why
he went from a well-known and respected figure by 1890 to a forgotten man by
World War I. The rise of statist ideas at the turn of the century and the
subsequent decline of individualism meant that a champion of such antiquated
notions as self-help and responsibility had to be tossed into the closet.
Smiles’s message cries out for a new hearing in our times. Scandalous
headlines and television spectacles that depict degraded standards suggest we
would all benefit by dusting off the work of Samuel Smiles and learning again
what we should never have forgotten.
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