| Book Excerpts:
Chapter 1: The Right To Be
Rich
WHATEVER may be said in praise
of poverty, the fact remains that it
is not possible to live a really
complete or successful life unless
one is rich. No man can rise to
his greatest possible height in
talent or soul development unless he
has plenty of money; for to unfold
the soul and to develop talent he
must have many things to use, and he
cannot have these things unless he
has money to buy them with.
A man develops in mind, soul, and
body by making use of things, and
society is so organized that man
must have money in order to become
the possessor of things;
therefore, the basis of all
advancement for man must be the
science of getting rich.
The object of all life is
development; and everything that
lives has an inalienable right to
all the development it is capable of
attaining. Man's right to life
means his right to have the free and
unrestricted use of all the things
which may be necessary to his
fullest mental, spiritual, and
physical unfoldment; or, in other
words, his right to be rich.
In this book, I shall not speak
of riches in a figurative way; to be
really rich does not mean to be
satisfied or contented with a
little. No man ought to be satisfied
with a little if he is capable of
using and enjoying more. The purpose
of Nature is the advancement and
unfoldment of life; and every man
should have all that can contribute
to the power; elegance, beauty, and
richness of life; to be content with
less is sinful.
The man who owns all he wants
for the living of all the life he is
capable of living is rich; and
no man who has not plenty of money
can have all he wants. Life has
advanced so far, and become so
complex, that even the most ordinary
man or woman requires a great amount
of wealth in order to live in a
manner that even approaches
completeness.
Every person naturally wants to
become all that they are capable of
becoming; this desire to realize
innate possibilities is inherent in
human nature; we cannot help wanting
to be all that we can be. Success
in life is becoming what you want to
be; you can become what you want
to be only by making use of things,
and you can have the free use of
things only as you become rich
enough to buy them. To understand
the science of getting rich is
therefore the most essential of all
knowledge.
There is nothing wrong in
wanting to get rich. The desire
for riches is really the desire for
a richer, fuller, and more abundant
life; and that desire is praise
worthy. The man who does not desire
to live more abundantly is abnormal,
and so the man who does not desire
to have money enough to buy all he
wants is abnormal.
There are three motives for
which we live; we live for the body,
we live for the mind, we live for
the soul. No one of these is
better or holier than the other; all
are alike desirable, and no one of
the three--body, mind, or soul--can
live fully if either of the others
is cut short of full life and
expression. It is not right or
noble to live only for the soul and
deny mind or body; and it is wrong
to live for the intellect and deny
body or soul.
We are all acquainted with the
loathsome consequences of living for
the body and denying both mind and
soul; and we see that real life
means the complete expression of all
that man can give forth through
body, mind, and soul. Whatever he
can say, no man can be really happy
or satisfied unless his body is
living fully in every function, and
unless the same is true of his mind
and his soul.
Wherever there is unexpressed
possibility, or function not
performed, there is unsatisfied
desire. Desire is possibility
seeking expression, or function
seeking performance. Man cannot
live fully in body without good
food, comfortable clothing, and warm
shelter; and without freedom from
excessive toil. Rest and recreation
are also necessary to his physical
life.
He cannot live fully in mind
without books and time to study
them, without opportunity for travel
and observation, or without
intellectual companionship.
To live fully in mind he must have
intellectual recreations, and must
surround himself with all the
objects of art and beauty he is
capable of using and appreciating.
To live fully in soul, man
must have love; and love is denied
expression by poverty.
A man's highest happiness is
found in the bestowal of benefits on
those he loves; love finds its
most natural and spontaneous
expression in giving. The man who
has nothing to give cannot fill his
place as a husband or father, as a
citizen, or as a man. It is in the
use of material things that a man
finds full life for his body,
develops his mind, and unfolds his
soul. It is therefore of supreme
importance to him that he should be
rich.
It is perfectly right that you
should desire to be rich; if you are
a normal man or woman you cannot
help doing so. It is perfectly right
that you should give your best
attention to the Science of Getting
Rich, for it is the noblest and most
necessary of all studies. If you
neglect this study, you are derelict
in your duty to yourself, to God and
humanity; for you can render to God
and humanity no greater service than
to make the most of yourself.
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