Chapter
6
DEPEND
UPON YOUR OWN PERSONAL EXERTIONS
The
eye of the employer is often worth more than the hands
of a dozen employees. In the nature of things, an agent
cannot be so faithful to his employer as to himself.
Many who are employers will call to mind instances where
the best employees have overlooked important points
which could not have escaped their own observation as a
proprietor. No man has a right to expect to succeed in
life unless he understands his business, and nobody can
understand his business thoroughly unless he learns it
by personal application and experience. A man may be a
manufacturer; he has got to learn the many details of
his business personally; he will learn something every
day, and he will find he will make mistakes nearly every
day. And these very mistakes are helps to him in the way
of experiences if he but heeds them. He will be like the
Yankee tin-peddler, who, having been cheated as to
quality in the purchase of his merchandise, said: "All
right, there's a little information to be gained every
day; I will never be cheated in that way again." Thus a
man buys his experience, and it is the best kind if not
purchased at too dear a rate. 1
I
hold that every man should, like Cuvier, the French
naturalist, thoroughly know his business. So proficient
was he in the study of natural history, that you might
bring to him the bone, or even a section of a bone of an
animal which he had never seen described, and, reasoning
from analogy, he would be able to draw a picture of the
object from which the bone had been taken. On one
occasion his students attempted to deceive him. They
rolled one of their number in a cow skin and put him
under the professor's table as a new specimen. When the
philosopher came into the room, some of the students
asked him what animal it was. Suddenly the animal said
"I am the devil and I am going to eat you." It was but
natural that Cuvier should desire to classify this
creature, and examining it intently, he said:
"Divided
hoof; graminivorous! it cannot be done."
He
knew that an animal with a split hoof must live upon
grass and grain, or other kind of vegetation, and would
not be inclined to eat flesh, dead or alive, so he
considered himself perfectly safe. The possession of a
perfect knowledge of your business is an absolute
necessity in order to insure success.
Among
the maxims of the elder Rothschild was one, an apparent
paradox: "Be cautions and bold." This seems to he a
contradiction in terms, but it is not, and there is
great wisdom in the maxim. It is, in fact, a condensed
statement of what I have already said. It is to say,
"you must exercise your caution in laying your plans,
but be bold in carrying them out." A man who is all
caution, will never dare to take hold and be successful;
and a man who is all boldness, is merely reckless, and
must eventually fail. A man may go on "'change" and make
fifty or one hundred thousand dollars in speculating in
stocks, at a single operation. But if he has simple
boldness without caution, it is mere chance, and what he
gains to-day he will lose to-morrow. You must have both
the caution and the boldness, to insure success.
The
Rothschilds have another maxim: "Never have anything to
do with an unlucky man or place." That is to say, never
have anything to do with a man or place which never
succeeds, because, although a man may appear to be
honest and intelligent, yet if he tries this or that
thing and always fails, it is on account of some fault
or infirmity that you may not be able to discover but
nevertheless which must exist.
There
is no such thing in the world as luck. There never was a
man who could go out in the morning and find a purse
full of gold in the street to-day, and another
to-morrow, and so on, day after day. He may do so once
in his life; but so far as mere luck is concerned, he is
as liable to lose it as to find it. "Like causes produce
like effects." If a man adopts the proper methods to be
successful, "luck" will not prevent him. If he does not
succeed, there are reasons for it, although, perhaps, he
may not be able to see them.