Page 64 - Think & Grow Rich 1937 Edition
P. 64
64 THINK AND GROW RICH
244 For out of the world we find,
245 Success begins with a fellow's will-
246 It's all in the state of mind.
247 "If you think you are outclassed, you are,
248 You've got to think high to rise,
249 You've got to be sure of yourself before
250 You can ever win a prize.
251 "Life's battles don't always go
252 To the stronger or faster man,
253 But soon or late the man who wins
254 Is the man WHO THINKS HE CAN!"
255 Observe the words which have been emphasized, and you will catch the deep
256 meaning which the poet had in mind.
257 Somewhere in your make-up (perhaps in the cells of your brain) there lies
258 sleeping, the seed of achievement which, if aroused and put into action, would
259 carry you to heights, such as you may never have hoped to attain.
260 Just as a master musician may cause the most beautiful strains of music to pour
261 forth from the strings of a violin, so may you arouse the genius which lies asleep
262 in your brain, and cause it to drive you upward to whatever goal you may wish to
263 achieve.
264 Abraham Lincoln was a failure at everything he tried, until he was well past the
265 age of forty. He was a Mr. Nobody from Nowhere, until a great experience came
266 into his life, aroused the sleeping genius within his heart and brain, and gave the
267 world one of its really great men. That "experience" was mixed with the
268 emotions of sorrow and LOVE. It came to him through Anne Rutledge, the only
269 woman whom he ever truly loved.
244 For out of the world we find,
245 Success begins with a fellow's will-
246 It's all in the state of mind.
247 "If you think you are outclassed, you are,
248 You've got to think high to rise,
249 You've got to be sure of yourself before
250 You can ever win a prize.
251 "Life's battles don't always go
252 To the stronger or faster man,
253 But soon or late the man who wins
254 Is the man WHO THINKS HE CAN!"
255 Observe the words which have been emphasized, and you will catch the deep
256 meaning which the poet had in mind.
257 Somewhere in your make-up (perhaps in the cells of your brain) there lies
258 sleeping, the seed of achievement which, if aroused and put into action, would
259 carry you to heights, such as you may never have hoped to attain.
260 Just as a master musician may cause the most beautiful strains of music to pour
261 forth from the strings of a violin, so may you arouse the genius which lies asleep
262 in your brain, and cause it to drive you upward to whatever goal you may wish to
263 achieve.
264 Abraham Lincoln was a failure at everything he tried, until he was well past the
265 age of forty. He was a Mr. Nobody from Nowhere, until a great experience came
266 into his life, aroused the sleeping genius within his heart and brain, and gave the
267 world one of its really great men. That "experience" was mixed with the
268 emotions of sorrow and LOVE. It came to him through Anne Rutledge, the only
269 woman whom he ever truly loved.