Pushing to the Front

Orison Swett Marden
Pushing to the Front, by Orison
Swett Marden

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Title: Pushing to the Front
Author: Orison Swett Marden
Release Date: May 4, 2007 [EBook #21291]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUSHING
TO THE FRONT ***

Produced by Al Haines

[Frontispiece: Orison Swett Marden]

Pushing to the Front

BY
ORISON SWETT MARDEN

"The world makes way for the determined man."

PUBLISHED BY
The Success Company's
Branch Offices
PETERSBURG, N.Y. ---- TOLEDO ---- DANVILLE
OKLAHOMA CITY ---- SAN JOSE

COPYRIGHT, 1911,
By ORISON SWETT MARDEN.

FOREWORD
This revised and greatly enlarged edition of "Pushing to the Front" is
the outgrowth of an almost world-wide demand for an extension of the
idea which made the original small volume such an ambition-arousing,
energizing, inspiring force.
It is doubtful whether any other book, outside of the Bible, has been the
turning-point in more lives.
It has sent thousands of youths, with renewed determination, back to
school or college, back to all sorts of vocations which they had
abandoned in moments of discouragement. It has kept scores of

business men from failure after they had given up all hope.
It has helped multitudes of poor boys and girls to pay their way through
college who had never thought a liberal education possible.
The author has received thousands of letters from people in nearly all
parts of the world telling how the book has aroused their ambition,
changed their ideals and aims, and has spurred them to the successful
undertaking of what they before had thought impossible.
The book has been translated into many foreign languages. In Japan
and several other countries it is used extensively in the public schools.
Distinguished educators in many parts of the world have recommended
its use in schools as a civilization-builder.
Crowned heads, presidents of republics, distinguished members of the
British and other parliaments, members of the United States Supreme
Court, noted authors, scholars, and eminent people in many parts of the
world, have eulogized this book and have thanked the author for giving
it to the world.
This volume is full of the most fascinating romances of achievement
under difficulties, of obscure beginnings and triumphant endings, of
stirring stories of struggles and triumphs. It gives inspiring stories of
men and women who have brought great things to pass. It gives
numerous examples of the triumph of mediocrity, showing how those
of ordinary ability have succeeded by the use of ordinary means. It
shows how invalids and cripples even have triumphed by perseverance
and will over seemingly insuperable difficulties.
The book tells how men and women have seized common occasions
and made them great; it tells of those of average ability who have
succeeded by the use of ordinary means, by dint of indomitable will
and inflexible purpose. It tells how poverty and hardship have rocked
the cradle of the giants of the race. The book points out that most
people do not utilize a large part of their effort because their mental
attitude does not correspond with their endeavor, so that although
working for one thing, they are really expecting something else; and it

is what we expect that we tend to get.
No man can become prosperous while he really expects or half expects
to remain poor, for holding the poverty thought, keeping in touch with
poverty-producing conditions, discourages prosperity.
Before a man can lift himself he must lift his thoughts. When we shall
have learned to master our thought habits, to keep our minds open to
the great divine inflow of life force, we shall have learned the truths of
human endowment, human possibility.
The book points out the fact that what is called success may be failure;
that when men love money so much that they sacrifice their friendships,
their families, their home life, sacrifice position, honor, health,
everything for the dollar, their life is a failure, although they may have
accumulated money. It shows how men have become rich at the price
of their ideals, their character, at the cost of everything noblest, best,
and truest in life. It preaches the larger doctrine of equality; the equality
of will and purpose which paves a clear path even to the Presidential
chair for a Lincoln or a Garfield, for any one who will pay the price of
study and struggle. Men who feel themselves badly handicapped,
crippled by their lack of early education, will find in these pages
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