Success 
 
Project Gutenberg's Success (Second Edition), by Max Aitken 
Beaverbrook This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost 
and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it 
away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License 
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Title: Success (Second Edition) 
Author: Max Aitken Beaverbrook 
Release Date: March 4, 2005 [EBook #15248] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SUCCESS 
(SECOND EDITION) *** 
 
Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Jared Buck and the PG Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net). 
 
SUCCESS 
BY LORD BEAVERBROOK 
 
SECOND EDITION 
LONDON STANLEY PAUL & CO 31 ESSEX STREET, STRAND, 
W.C.2 
_First published in November 1921_; _Reprinted November 1921_ 
 
PUBLISHERS' NOTE
The contents of this volume originally appeared as weekly articles by 
Lord Beaverbrook in the Sunday Express. They aroused so much 
interest, and so many applications were received for copies of the 
various articles, that it was decided to have them collected and printed 
in volume form. 
He who buys Success, reads and digests its precepts, will find this 
inspiring volume a sure will-tonic. It will nerve him to be up and doing. 
It will put such spring and go into him that he will make a determined 
start on that road which, pursued with perseverance, leads onwards and 
upwards to the desired goal--SUCCESS. 
 
PREFACE 
The articles embodied in this small book were written during the 
pressure of many other affairs and without any idea that they would be 
published as a consistent whole. It is, therefore, certain that the critic 
will find in them instances of a repetition of the central idea. This fact 
is really a proof of a unity of conception which justifies their 
publication in a collected form. I set out to ask the question, "What is 
success in the affairs of the world--how is it attained, and how can it be 
enjoyed?" I have tried with all sincerity to answer the question out of 
my own experience. In so doing I have strayed down many avenues of 
inquiry, but all of them lead back to the central conception of success 
as some kind of temple which satisfies the mind of the ordinary 
practical man. 
Other fields of mental satisfaction have been left entirely outside as not 
germane to the inquiry. 
I address myself to the young men of the new age. Those who have 
youth also possess opportunity. There is in the British Empire to-day no 
bar to success which resolution cannot break. The young clerk has the 
key of success in his pocket, if he has the courage and the ability to turn 
the lock which leads to the Temple of Success. The wide world of 
business and finance is open to him. Any public dinner or meeting 
contains hundreds of men who can succeed if they will only observe 
the rules which govern achievement. 
A career to-day is open to talent, for there is no heredity in finance, 
commerce, or industry. The Succession and Death Duties are wiping 
out those reserves by which old-fashioned banks and businesses warded
off from themselves for two or three generations the result of hereditary 
incompetence. Ability is bound to be recognised from whatever source 
it springs. The struggle in finance and commerce is too intense and the 
battle too world-wide to prevent individual efficiency playing a bigger 
and a better rôle. 
If I have given encouragement to a single young man to set his feet on 
the path which leads upwards to success, and warned him of a few of 
the perils which will beset him on the road, I shall feel perfectly 
satisfied that this book has not been written in vain. 
BEAVERBROOK. 
 
CONTENTS 
I. SUCCESS 
II. HAPPINESS: THREE SECRETS 
III. LUCK 
IV. MODERATION 
V. MONEY 
VI. EDUCATION 
VII. ARROGANCE 
VIII. COURAGE 
IX. PANIC 
X. DEPRESSION 
XI. FAILURE 
XII. CONSISTENCY 
XIII. PREJUDICE 
XIV. CALM 
 
I 
SUCCESS 
Success--that is the royal road we all want to tread, for the echo off its 
flagstones sounds pleasantly in the mind. It gives to man all that the 
natural man desires: the opportunity of exercising his activities to the 
full; the sense of power; the feeling that life is a slave, not a master; the 
knowledge that some great industry has quickened into life under the 
impulse of a single brain. 
To each his own particular branch of this difficult art. The artist knows
one joy, the soldier another; what delights the business man leaves the 
politician cold. But however much each section of society abuses the 
ambitions or the morals of the other, all worship equally at the same 
shrine. No man really wants to spend his whole life as a reporter, a 
clerk, a subaltern, a private    
    
		
	
	
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