Samuel Smiles (23 December 1812 – 16 April 1904), was a Scottish author and government reformer, who campaigned on a Chartist platform. But he concluded that more progress would come from new attitudes than from new laws. His masterpiece, Self-Help (1859), promoted thrift and claimed that poverty was caused largely by irresponsible habits, while also attacking materialism and laissez-faire government. It has been called "the bible of mid-Victorian liberalism", and it raised Smiles to celebrity status almost overnight.
Thriftiness (managing resources wisely) never goes out of style. Thrift is not just about saving money, but about gaining independence and being prepared for life’s uncertainties. I appreciated the connection of thrift to personal responsibility and long-term well-being.
This is the second time I read this book and again I enjoyed reading it. I took many notes from this book. I'll give some of the passages that I found very interesting ( I have many more):
"He that would thrive must first ask his wife"
"It is said, that "When poverty comes in at the door, loves flies out at the window"
"Man's life revolves round woman. She is the sun of his social system. She is the queen of domestic life. The comfort of every home mainly depends upon her,—upon her character, her temper, her power of organization, and her business management. A man may be economical; but unless there be economy at home, his frugality will be comparatively useless. "A man cannot thrive," the proverb says, "unless his wife let him."
"Society at present suffers far more from waste of money than from want of money"
"What a serious responsibility does the man incur who marries! Not many seriously think, of this responsibility"
"The man who improves himself, improves the world"
"Social advancement is the consequence of individual advancement. The whole cannot be pure, unless the individuals composing it are pure. Society at large is but the reflex of individual conditions"
"We often hear the cry raised, "Will nobody help us?" It is a spiritless, hopeless cry. It is sometimes a cry of revolting meanness, especially when it issues from those who with a little self-denial, sobriety, and thrift, might easily help themselves. Many people have yet to learn, that virtue, knowledge, freedom, and prosperity must spring from themselves"
"The northern nations of Europe owe a portion of their prosperity to the rigour of their climate. Cold makes them save during summer, to provide food, coal, and clothing during winter. It encourages house-building and housekeeping. Hence Germany is more industrious than Sicily; Holland and Belgium than Andalusia; North America and Canada than Mexico"
"slavery also existed in the family. The wife was the slave of her husband as much as the slave whom he bought in the public market."
"Give the people knowledge,—give them better education,—and thus, crime will be abated,—drunkenness, improvidence, lawlessness, and all the powers of evil, will, to a certain extent, disappear"
"Complaints about the inequality of conditions are as old as the world. In the "Economy" of Xenophon, Socrates asks, "How is it that some men live in abundance, and have something to spare, whilst others can scarcely obtain the necessaries of life, and at the same time run into debt?" "The reason is," replied Isomachus, "because the former occupy themselves with their business, whilst the latter neglect it."
"All life is a struggle. Amongst workmen, competition is a struggle to advance towards higher wages. Amongst masters, to make the highest profits. Amongst writers, preachers, and politicians, it is a straggle to succeed,—to gain glory, reputation, or income"
"It matters not at what class you begin, or however low in the social scale, you will find that every man has somebody beneath him"
"Give a man money without working for it, and he will soon claim it as a right" "he soon enough finds out that the clever hands of a woman are worth far more than her bright glances"
"The most worthless unit in a family is an ill-managing wife, or an indolent woman of any sort"
"The world need not be "a vale of tears," unless we ourselves will it to be so"
"The husband who has been working all day, expects to have something as a compensation for his toil. The least that his wife can do for him, is to make his house snug, clean, and tidy, against his home-coming at eve"
"Comfort, it must be admitted, is in a great measure relative. What is comfort to one man, would be misery to another"
"The Art of Living may be displayed in many ways. It may be summed up in the words,—Make the best of everything"
Would have been so much better if it wasn’t so repetitive. Not the best example of this type of work if you are interested in this subject from this era. But if you want to get into character for a lower class servant role in an upcoming play you are acting in this will help you to prepare your glazed look for your scenes with the philanthropist philosopher who visits your boss and rambles on for hours on end.