Self-Help : With Illustrations Of Conduct and Perseverance [Sep 05, 2016] Smiles, Samuel

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Self-Help : With Illustrations Of Conduct and Perseverance [Sep 05, 2016] Smiles, Samuel بقلم Samuel Smiles ... "The poor man with rich spirit is in all ways superior to the rich man with a poor spirit." From promoting thrift while criticizing materialism to asserting the importance of character, morality, hard work, and perseverance in achieving success, Samuel Smile's Self-Help instils in its readers, a desire to succeed. A precursor of self-help literature, it identifies the capacity for self-improvement, especially in the working class, and draws upon the success stories of the inspiring and self-made millionaires. Self-Help has been called 'the bible of mid-Victorian liberalism.' This masterpiece became an instant bestseller, and continues to inspire and ignite its readers. Author Description: Samuel Smiles was Born in Haddington, East Lothian, Scotland on December 1812. He was one of the eleven surviving children. In 1829, he went to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh where he developed an interest in politics. In December 1843, Smiles married Sarah Ann Holmes Dixon, with whom he had five children. In 1857, he published The Life of George Stephenson, a biography of the inventor and founder of the railways, George Stephenson. Self-Help; with illustrations of Character and Conduct was published in 1859. Perseverance was added to the subtitle in the second edition of 1866. The outcome of a series of lectures on self-improvement, which smiles had given in Leeds. Reflecting the spirit of its age, it identified the capacity for self-improvement in the working classes and drawing upon the success stories of the self-made millionaires, instilled in them a desire to succeed. This masterpiece has been called 'the bible of mid-Victorian liberalism.' It has been widely translated and continues to remain a bestseller.

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Samuel Smiles Samuel Smiles

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

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