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Orison Swett Marden's

The Miracle of Right Thought

Book page numbers, along with the number to the left of the .htm extension match the page numbers of the original books to ensure easy use in citations for research papers and books


The Divinity of Desire - Success and Happiness Are for You - Working for One Thing and Expecting Something Else - Expect Great Things of Yourself - Self-Encouragement by Self-Suggestion - The Crime of the "Blues" - Change the Thought, Change the Man - The Paralysis of Fear - One With the Divine - Getting in Tune - The Great Within - A New Way of Bringing Up Children - Training for Longevity - As a Man Thinketh - Mental Self-Thought Poisoning - Contents -


period, and certainly the Creator's grandest work should not begin to reach decrepitude at only twice the years that it takes to mature. We should retain our vigor, our maximum of power, at least four times as long as it takes us to come to full maturity.

A man ought to be in the prime of his power and in the very zenith of his vigor at seventy- five.

Sir Herman Webber, the distinguished English physician, says that most people might easily live to be one hundred years of age.

The great accumulation of experience, of knowledge, of wisdom, gathered during the fruitful years of youth and middle age ought to enable a man who has lived normally to accomplish more in a single year in the seventies than in a half-dozen years in the twenties of life.

"I never could understand," says the poet Stedman, "why men consider seventy years a proper term of life. Five hundred years of earth are none too many — could we retain vigor and health. Wouldn't you like to be fifty years a traveler, fifty an inventor, fifty years a statesman — to practice painting, sculpture, — and all the time a fisher, sailor, poet, author, a man of the world? I should;

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