登陆注册
37599800000038

第38章 The Chances for Success (2)

Bok found it a uniform rule among his fellow-workers to do exactly the opposite to his own idea; there was an astonishing unanimity in working by the clock; where the hour of closing was five o'clock the preparations began five minutes before, with the hat and overcoat over the back of the chair ready for the stroke of the hour.This concert of action was curiously universal, no "overtime" was ever to be thought of, and, as occasionally happened when the work did go over the hour, it was not, to use the mildest term, done with care, neatness, or accuracy; it was, to use a current phrase, "slammed off." Every moment beyond five o'clock in which the worker was asked to do anything was by just so much an imposition on the part of the employer, and so far as it could be safely shown, this impression was gotten over to him.

There was an entire unwillingness to let business interfere with any anticipated pleasure or personal engagement.The office was all right between nine and five; one had to be there to earn a living; but after five, it was not to be thought of for one moment.The elevators which ran on the stroke of five were never large enough to hold the throng which besieged them.

The talk during lunch hour rarely, if ever, turned toward business, except as said before, when it dealt with underpaid services.In the spring and summer it was invariably of baseball, and scores of young men knew the batting averages of the different players and the standing of the clubs with far greater accuracy than they knew the standing or the discounts of the customers of their employers.In the winter the talk was all of dancing, boxing, or plays.

It soon became evident to Bok why scarcely five out of every hundred of the young men whom he knew made any business progress.They were not interested; it was a case of a day's work and a day's pay; it was not a question of how much one could do but how little one could get away with.The thought of how well one might do a given thing never seemed to occur to the average mind.

"Oh, what do you care?" was the favorite expression."The boss won't notice it if you break your back over his work; you won't get any more pay."And there the subject was dismissed, and thoroughly dismissed, too.

Eventually, then, Bok learned that the path that led to success was wide open: the competition was negligible.There was no jostling.In fact, travel on it was just a trifle lonely.One's fellow-travellers were excellent company, but they were few! It was one of Edward Bok's greatest surprises, but it was also one of his greatest stimulants.To go where others could not go, or were loath to go, where at least they were not, had a tang that savored of the freshest kind of adventure.And the way was so ******, so much ******r, in fact, than its avoidance, which called for so much argument, explanation, and discussion.One had merely to do all that one could do, a little more than one was asked or expected to do, and immediately one's head rose above the crowd and one was in an employer's eye--where it is always so satisfying for an employee to be! And as so few heads lifted themselves above the many, there was never any danger that they would not be seen.

Of course, Edward Bok had to prove to himself that his conception of conditions was right.He felt instinctively that it was, however, and with this stimulus he bucked the line hard.When others played, he worked, fully convinced that his play-time would come later.Where others shirked, he assumed.Where others lagged, he accelerated his pace.Where others were indifferent to things around them, he observed and put away the results for possible use later.He did not make of himself a pack-horse; what he undertook he did from interest in it, and that made it a pleasure to him when to others it was a burden.He instinctively reasoned it out that an unpleasant task is never accomplished by stepping aside from it, but that, unerringly, it will return later to be met and done.

Obstacles, to Edward Bok, soon became merely difficulties to be overcome, and he trusted to his instinct to show him the best way to overcome them.He soon learned that the hardest kind of work was back of every success; that nothing in the world of business just happened, but that everything was brought about, and only in one way--by a willingness of spirit and a determination to carry through.He soon exploded for himself the misleading and comfortable theory of luck: the only lucky people, he found, were those who worked hard.To them, luck came in the shape of what they had earned.There were exceptions here and there, as there are to every rule; but the majority of these, he soon found, were more in the seeming than in the reality.Generally speaking--and of course to this rule there are likewise exceptions, or as the Frenchman said, "All generalizations are false, including this one"--a man got in this world about what he worked for.

And that became, for himself, the rule of Edward Bok's life.

同类推荐
  • 道德真经新注

    道德真经新注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 五部六册

    五部六册

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 经络考

    经络考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 诫子拾遗

    诫子拾遗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 禾谱

    禾谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 神之眷族

    神之眷族

    一个神奇的世界,一块奇特的大陆,一个神秘的男人。三者交织会产生怎样的有趣故事,敬请观看
  • 这个道士不太冷

    这个道士不太冷

    一个自带特异体质的少女,因路见不平教训了几个恶作剧的顽童,从此与沉默寡言、却又拥有高强法力的道士解下不解之缘,踏上了四处漂泊、“惊喜”不断的降妖之旅。怀孕三年产下死去丈夫的痴情女子,莲藕化成的人类少年,被冤魂的报复缠扰的村落……一个黑暗世界的大门向少女敞开,随之而来的是越来越深的疑问:道士的真实身份究竟是什么?他为何在人类世界中漂泊徘徊?小桃的降妖之旅又将如何终结?
  • 金币在燃烧

    金币在燃烧

    救赎从花金币开始。天呐,竟然可以用金币买到神器!麦尔诺斯大陆即将掀起一场金币风暴,而莫里斯却因为收金币收到手软,差点猝死。
  • 再无岁月可回首

    再无岁月可回首

    这是一个关于抑郁症、治愈和被治愈的故事。穿插着很多小回忆。还有,作者自由发挥,随时改稿,以及……猜到结局算你赢。……估计写完会空虚很久……顺道推荐几本书:苏醒的秘密七星彩他知道风从哪个方向来七根凶简
  • 以夫为天

    以夫为天

    “车行水路情难进,休嗟行难又迷途,百练千磨心不变,终有还君明珠时……”求姻缘,中吉。风煜棠对于娘去月老庙里帮他求的这张姻缘签诗,他一点也不在意,对于要娶进门的女人,一样不在意。他要的妻子只要完全不符合娘喜欢的,那就是他要的。一不讲门当户对,二不求出身高贵的千金闺秀,三要能乖乖听他的话、这辈子别妄想爬到他头上就行。为了让娘彻底死心不再替他婚配,他花了三十两买了个女人,这女人才十七,瘦瘦干干的,还附带两个弟弟当小拖油瓶,他很快地娶进门,把一生都爱计较的娘气得七窍生烟……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 天之剑痕

    天之剑痕

    一个曾经只知道沉迷DNF的少年,一段段热血却又不堪回首的往事。假如时光倒流,你又能做些什么..。
  • 死神缔造

    死神缔造

    应无求在老婆被黑社会害死之后欲找黑社会老大报仇,却被黑社会毒打一顿,就在他重伤不治即将死去的时候,死神来到他的面前与他结下契约,从而开启一场死神的游戏。
  • 日光恋人:绯闻女王

    日光恋人:绯闻女王

    只是因为在舞台上多看了杜听云一眼,王原在家里三天三夜下不了床……
  • 青春是一幕留不住的风景

    青春是一幕留不住的风景

    人生中遇到的每一个人,都是一幕不可多得的风景;人生中错过的每一个人,都是一幕不再重来的风景;人生中珍惜的每一个人,都是一幕幕弥足珍贵的风景。
  • 白色绚彩世界

    白色绚彩世界

    主角居然从现代世界,穿越到魔法世界,怎么回事?