Before a man can lift himself he must lift his thoughts. When we shall have learned to master our thought habits, to keep our minds open to the great divine inflow of life force, we shall have learned the truths of human endowment, human possibility.

The book points out the fact that what is called success may be failure; that when men love money so much that they sacrifice their friendships, their families, their home life, sacrifice position, honor, health, everything for the dollar, their life is a failure, although they may have accumulated money. It shows how men have become rich at the price of their ideals, their character, at the cost of everything noblest, best, and truest in life. It preaches the larger doctrine of equality; the equality of will and purpose which paves a clear path even to the Presidential chair for a Lincoln or a Garfield, for any one who will pay the price of study and struggle. Men who feel themselves badly handicapped, crippled by their lack of early education, will find in these pages great encouragement to broaden their horizon, and will get a practical, helpful, sensible education in their odd moments and half-holidays.

Dr. Marden, in "Pushing to the Front," shows that the average of the leaders are not above the average of ability. They are ordinary people, but of extraordinary persistence and perseverance. It is a storehouse of noble incentive, a treasury of precious sayings. There is inspiration and encouragement and helpfulness on every page. It teaches the doctrine that no limits can be placed on one's career if he has once learned the alphabet and has push; that there are no barriers that can say to aspiring talent, "Thus far, and no farther." Encouragement is its keynote; it aims to arouse to honorable exertion those who are drifting without aim, to awaken dormant ambitions in those who have grown discouraged in the struggle for success.

THE PUBLISHERS.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER
I. [THE MAN AND THE OPPORTUNITY]
II. [WANTED—A MAN]
III. [BOYS WITH NO CHANCE]
IV. [THE COUNTRY BOY]
V. [OPPORTUNITIES WHERE YOU ARE]
VI. [POSSIBILITIES IN SPARE MOMENTS]
VII. [HOW POOR BOYS AND GIRLS GO TO COLLEGE]
VIII. [YOUR OPPORTUNITY CONFRONTS YOU—WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH IT?]
IX. [ROUND BOYS IN SQUARE HOLES]
X. [WHAT CAREER?]
XI. [CHOOSING A VOCATION]
XII. [CONCENTRATED ENERGY]
XIII. [THE TRIUMPHS OF ENTHUSIASM]
XIV. ["ON TIME," OR, THE TRIUMPH OF PROMPTNESS]
XV. [WHAT A GOOD APPEARANCE WILL DO]
XVI. [PERSONALITY AS A SUCCESS ASSET]
XVII. [If YOU CAN TALK WELL]
XVIII. [A FORTUNE IN GOOD MANNERS]
XIX. [SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS AND TIMIDITY FOES TO SUCCESS]
XX. [TACT OR COMMON SENSE]
XXI. [ENAMORED OF ACCURACY]
XXII. [DO IT TO A FINISH]
XXIII. [THE REWARD OF PERSISTENCE]
XXIV. [NERVE—GRIP, PLUCK]
XXV. [CLEAR GRIT]
XXVI. [SUCCESS UNDER DIFFICULTIES]
XXVII. [USES OF OBSTACLES]
XXVIII. [DECISION]
XXIX. [OBSERVATION AS A SUCCESS FACTOR]
XXX. [SELF-HELP]
XXXI. [THE SELF-IMPROVEMENT HABIT]
XXXII. [RAISING OF VALUES]
XXXIII. [PUBLIC SPEAKING]
XXXIV. [THE TRIUMPHS OF THE COMMON VIRTUES]
XXXV. [GETTING AROUSED]
XXXVI. [THE MAN WITH AN IDEA]
XXXVII. [DARE]
XXXVIII. [THE WILL AND THE WAY]
XXXIX. [ONE UNWAVERING AIM]
XL. [WORK AND WAIT]
XLI. [THE MIGHT OF LITTLE THINGS]
XLII. [THE SALARY YOU DO NOT FIND IN YOUR PAY ENVELOPE]
XLIII. [EXPECT GREAT THINGS OF YOURSELF]
XLIV. [THE NEXT TIME YOU THINK YOU ARE A FAILURE]
XLV. [STAND FOR SOMETHING]
XLVI. [NATURE'S LITTLE BILL]
XLVII. [HABIT—THE SERVANT,—THE MASTER]
XLVIII. [THE CIGARETTE]
XLIX. [THE POWER OF PURITY]
L. [THE HABIT OF HAPPINESS]
LI. [PUT BEAUTY INTO YOUR LIFE]
LII. [EDUCATION BY ABSORPTION]
LIII. [THE POWER OF SUGGESTION]
LIV. [THE CURSE OF WORRY]
LV. [TAKE A PLEASANT THOUGHT TO BED WITH YOU]
LVI. [THE CONQUEST OF POVERTY]
LVII. [A NEW WAY OF BRINGING UP CHILDREN]
LVIII. [THE HOME AS A SCHOOL OF GOOD MANNERS]
LIX. [MOTHER]
LX. [WHY SO MANY MARRIED WOMEN DETERIORATE]
LXI. [THRIFT]
LXII. [A COLLEGE EDUCATION AT HOME]
LXIII. [DISCRIMINATION IN READING]
LXIV. [READING A SPUR TO AMBITION]
LXV. [WHY SOME SUCCEED AND OTHERS FAIL]
LXVI. [RICH WITHOUT MONEY]

ILLUSTRATIONS

[ Orison Swett Marden . . . . . . . . . . Frontispiece ]

[ House in which Abraham Lincoln was born ]

[ Ulysses S. Grant ]