V.
The
Thought-Factor
in
Achievement
All
that
a
man
achieves
and
all
that
he
fails
to
achieve
is
the
direct
result
of
his
own
thoughts.
In
a
justly
ordered
universe,
where
loss
of
equipoise
would
mean
total
destruction,
individual
responsibility
must
be
absolute.
A
man's
weakness
and
strength,
purity
and
impurity,
are
his
own,
and
not
another
man's.
They
are
brought
about
by
himself,
and
not
by
another;
and
they
can
only
be
altered
by
himself,
never
by
another.
His
condition
is
also
his
own,
and
not
another
man's.
His
suffering
and
his
happiness
are
evolved
from
within.
As
he
thinks,
so
he
is;
as
he
continues
to
think,
so
he
remains.
A
strong
man
cannot
help
a
weaker
unless
the
weaker
is
willing
to
be
helped,
and
even
then
the
weak
man
must
become
strong
of
himself.
He
must,
by
his
own
efforts,
develop
the
strength
which
he
admires
in
another.
None
but
himself
can
alter
his
condition.
It
has
been
usual
for
men
to
think
and
to
say,
"Many
men
are
slaves
because
one
is
an
oppressor;
let
us
hate
the
oppressor."
Now,
however,
there
is
among
an
increasing
few
a
tendency
to
reverse
this
judgment,
and
to
say,
"One
man
is
an
oppressor
because
many
are
slaves;
let
us
despise
the
slaves."
The
truth
is
that
oppressor
and
slave
are
cooperators
in
ignorance,
and,
while
seeming
to
afflict
each
other,
are
in
reality
afflicting
themselves.
A
perfect
Knowledge
perceives
the
action
of
law
in
the
weakness
of
the
oppressed
and
the
misapplied
power
of
the
oppressor.
A
perfect
Love,
seeing
the
suffering
which
both
states
entail,
condemns
neither.
A
perfect
Compassion
embraces
both
oppressor
and
oppressed.
He
who
has
conquered
weakness,
and
has
put
away
all
selfish
thoughts,
belongs
neither
to
oppressor
nor
oppressed.
He
is
free.
A
man
can
only
rise,
conquer,
and
achieve
by
lifting
up
his
thoughts.
He
can
only
remain
weak,
and
abject,
and
miserable
by
refusing
to
lift
up
his
thoughts.
Before
a
man
can
achieve
anything,
even
in
worldly
things,
he
must
lift
his
thoughts
above
slavish
animal
indulgence.
He
may
not,
in
order
to
succeed,
give
up
all
animality
and
selfishness,
by
any
means;
but
a
portion
of
it
must,
at
least,
be
sacrificed.
A
man
whose
first
thought
is
bestial
indulgence
could
neither
think
clearly
nor
plan
methodically.
He
could
not
find
and
develop
his
latent
resources,
and
would
fail
in
any
undertaking.
Not
having
commenced
manfully
to
control
his
thoughts,
he
is
not
in
a
position
to
control
affairs
and
to
adopt
serious
responsibilities.
He
is
not
fit
to
act
independently
and
stand
alone,
but
he
is
limited
only
by
the
thoughts
which
he
chooses.
There
can
be
no
progress,
no
achievement
without
sacrifice.
A
man's
worldly
success
will
be
in
the
measure
that
he
sacrifices
his
confused
animal
thoughts,
and
fixes
his
mind
on
the
development
of
his
plans,
and
the
strengthening
of
his
resolution
and
self
reliance.
And
the
higher
he
lifts
his
thoughts,
the
more
manly,
upright,
and
righteous
he
becomes,
the
greater
will
be
his
success,
the
more
blessed
an
enduring
will
be
his
achievements.
The
universe
does
not
favor
the
greedy,
the
dishonest,
the
vicious,
although
on
the
mere
surface
it
may
sometimes
appear
to
do
so;
it
helps
the
honest,
the
magnanimous,
the
virtuous.
All
the
great
Teachers
of
the
ages
have
declared
this
in
varying
forms,
and
to
prove
and
know
it
a
man
has
but
to
persist
in
making
himself
more
and
more
virtuous
by
lifting
up
his
thoughts.
Intellectual
achievements
are
the
result
of
thought
consecrated
to
the
search
for
knowledge,
or
for
the
beautiful
and
true
in
life
and
nature.
Such
achievements
may
be
sometimes
connected
with
vanity
and
ambition
but
they
are
not
the
outcome
of
those
characteristics.
They
are
the
natural
outgrowth
of
long
an
arduous
effort,
and
of
pure
and
unselfish
thoughts.
Spiritual
achievements
are
the
consummation
of
holy
aspirations.
He
who
lives
constantly
in
the
conception
of
noble
and
lofty
thoughts,
who
dwells
upon
all
that
is
pure
and
unselfish,
will,
as
surely
as
the
sun
reaches
its
zenith
and
the
moon
its
full,
become
wise
and
noble
in
character,
and
rise
into
a
position
of
influence
and
blessedness.
Achievement,
of
whatever
kind,
is
the
crown
of
effort,
the
diadem
of
thought.
By
the
aid
of
self-control,
resolution,
purity,
righteousness,
and
well-directed
thought
a
man
ascends.
By
the
aid
of
animality,
indolence,
impurity,
corruption,
and
confusion
of
thought
a
man
descends.
A
man
may
rise
to
high
success
in
the
world,
and
even
to
lofty
altitudes
in
the
spiritual
realm,
and
again
descend
into
weakness
and
wretchedness
by
allowing
arrogant,
selfish,
and
corrupt
thoughts
to
take
possession
of
him.
Victories
attained
by
right
thought
can
only
be
maintained
by
watchfulness.
Many
give
way
when
success
is
assured,
and
rapidly
fall
back
into
failure.
All
achievements,
whether
in
the
business,
intellectual,
or
spiritual
world,
are
the
result
of
definitely
directed
thought,
are
governed
by
the
same
law
and
are
of
the
same
method;
the
only
difference
lies
in
the
object
of
attainment.
He
who
would
accomplish
little
must
sacrifice
little.
He
who
would
achieve
much
must
sacrifice
much.
He
who
would
attain
highly
must
sacrifice
greatly.
on
to
Chapter
VI:
Visions
and
Ideals...
For
more
on
James
Allen
and
to
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the
free
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visit
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