Robert Rowe, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
Mastery of Self for Wealth Power Success
by Frank Channing Haddock, M. S., Ph. D.
This book brings to a close that portion of MASTERY OF SELF, whichdeals with the art of Success-Magnetism.
Acquiring magnetism is a constructive effort. It is a buildingprocess. You are rearing a structure. You rise, from thefoundation, through successive stories to the culminating peak.The most pleasing, notable structures men build from granite andsteel and wood, tower like a Woolworth Building or a RheimsCathedral—higher and higher, until they finally reach a gold-tipped crown or spire, high in the sunlit sky.
And so, in rearing your invisible shrine of personal Success-magnetism, we now come to the topmost peak of the structure. Thisbook gives you the crowning inspirations, tipped and topped withthe final "Golden Laws of Magnetism in all Applied Life."
Master these lessons in the magnetism of success, and you will goforth upon the highways and by-ways of life, endowed with a kinglyconfidence in your ability to win a measure of success achieved byfew.
But remember—(should discouragement seek to dog your steps)—every great structure requires the process of time. "The gianttrees of California were once puny saplings. The slow lapse oftime has drawn nature into their mighty hearts." Just as surely asthe absorption of natural forces built the giant redwoods, just assurely can you draw upon nature for GIANT POWERS.
The Fire.
In ancient myth, Prometheus
Filched fire from the altars of the gods
To warm the world,
Incurring Jove's dread wrath
And endless torment.
Lo, mind,—inflamed by the vision:
Of victim and the torturing bird,
Of black vindictiveness and suffering Will,
Rived forever, yet for aye supreme,—
Heroizes the deed and soul
And wreaks on canvas and in drama high
Its passionate admiration.
Now, too, in palace and hut confronted,
In battleship and iron steed defying space,
In flaring furnace of the smelted ore,
In haunts of coal and steam below the whirling wheels,
Life laughs and sings and thunders
An oratorio merging all the powers of harmony,
And hails the high-born Thief,
As giver of ethereal fire.
The atomic thrill waits also the clear call
To lift dull bodies till the joy of flesh
Becomes a common luxury;—
To vibrate rhythmically swift
Through all the responsive cells of thought
Till a man might solemnly hold
All things are possible on the bursting earth;—
To energize the mystic self
With consciousness of life deific
Till the whole world, jubilant, should flame
With its glory, actual, concrete, the one sure Truth
Of a rock-girt globe, or a sun-filled space.
—THE AUTHOR.
THE TWENTY-SEVENTH LESSON—The Four Pyramids.
This equation's writ
In every scene:
The end shall fit—
As extremes to mean—
Whatever's forerunner to it.
—THE AUTHOR.
PRINCIPLE—The best use of self demands that it be understood.
Our ideal specimen of human nature is the whole man at his best.
The etheric l