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The Great God Success 
 
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Title: The Great God Success
Author: John Graham (David Graham Phillips) 
Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7989] [Yes, we are more than one 
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on June 10, 2003] 
Edition: 10 
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
GREAT GOD SUCCESS *** 
 
Produced by Eric Eldred, William Craig, Charles Franks and the Online 
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The Great God Success 
A NOVEL 
By JOHN GRAHAM (DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS) 
 
THE GREGG PRESS / RIDGEWOOD, N.J. 
CONTENTS. 
CHAPTER 
I. 
THE CANDIDATE FROM YALE 
II. THE CITY EDITOR RECONSIDERS
III. A PARK ROW CELEBRITY 
IV. IN THE EDGE OF BOHEMIA 
V. ALICE 
VI. IN A BOHEMIAN QUICKSAND 
VII. A LITTLE CANDLE GOES OUT 
VIII. A STRUGGLE FOR SELF-CONTROL 
IX. AMBITION AWAKENS 
X. THE ETERNAL MASCULINE 
XI. TRESPASSING 
XII. MAKING THE MOST OF A MONTH 
XIII. RECKONING WITH DANVERS 
XIV. THE NEWS-RECORD GETS A NEW EDITOR 
XV. YELLOW JOURNALISM 
XVI. MR. STOKELY IS TACTLESS 
XVII. A WOMAN AND A WARNING 
XVIII. HOWARD EXPLAINS HIS MACHINE 
XIX. "I MUST BE RICH." 
XX. ILLUSION 
XXI. WAVERING 
XXII. THE SHENSTONE EPISODE
XXIII. EXPANDING AND CONTRACTING 
XXIV. "MR. VALIANT-FOR-TRUTH." 
XXV. THE PROMISED LAND 
XXVI. IN POSSESSION 
XXVII. THE HARVEST 
XXVIII. SUCCESS 
 
THE GREAT GOD SUCCESS 
 
I. 
THE CANDIDATE FROM YALE. 
"O your college paper, I suppose?" 
"No, I never wrote even a letter to the editor." 
"Took prizes for essays?" 
"No, I never wrote if I could help it." 
"But you like to write?" 
"I'd like to learn to write." 
"You say you are two months out of college--what college?" 
"Yale." 
"Hum--I thought Yale men went into something commercial; law or 
banking or railroads. 'Leave hope of fortune behind, ye who enter here'
is over the door of this profession." 
"I haven't the money-making instinct." 
"We pay fifteen dollars a week at the start." 
"Couldn't you make it twenty?" 
The Managing Editor of the _News-Record_ turned slowly in his chair 
until his broad chest was full-front toward the young candidate for the 
staff. He lowered his florid face slowly until his double chin swelled 
out over his low "stick-up" collar. Then he gradually raised his eyelids 
until his amused blue eyes were looking over the tops of his glasses, 
straight into Howard's eyes. 
"Why?" he asked. "Why should we?" 
Howard's grey eyes showed embarrassment and he flushed to the line 
of his black hair which was so smoothly parted in the middle. 
"Well--you see--the fact is--I need twenty a week. My expenses are 
arranged on that scale. I'm not clever at money matters. I'm afraid I'd 
get in a mess with only fifteen." 
"My dear young man," said Mr. King, "I started here at fifteen dollars a 
week. And I had a wife; and the first baby was coming." 
"Yes, but your wife was an energetic woman. She stood right beside 
you and worked too. Now I have only myself." 
Mr. King raised his eyebrows and became a rosier red. He was 
evidently preparing to rebuke this audacious intrusion into his private 
affairs by a stranger whose card had been handed to him not ten 
minutes before. But Howard's tone and manner were simple and sincere. 
And they happened to bring into Mr. King's mind a rush of memories 
of his youth and his wife. She had married him on faith. They had come 
to New York fifteen years before, he to get a place as reporter on the 
_News-Record_, she to start a boarding-house; he doubting and 
trembling, she with courage and confidence for two. He leaned back in
his chair, closed his eyes and opened the book of memory at the place 
where the leaves most    
    
		
	
	
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