EVERY MAN A KING - Orison Swett Marden - E-Book

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Orison Swett Marden

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Beschreibung

In "Every Man a King," Orison Swett Marden presents a visionary blueprint for personal success and self-empowerment, rooted in the principles of positive thinking and determination. Written in the early 20th century, this work epitomizes the ethos of the New Thought movement, where Marden'Äôs prose blends motivational rhetoric with practical advice. The book emphatically asserts that every individual possesses the potential for greatness, encouraging readers to cultivate their inner resources and pursue their personal aspirations diligently. Marden eloquently articulates his belief that a fulfilled life is accessible to all, thus challenging the socio-economic limitations of his time. Orison Swett Marden was a pioneer in the field of self-help and personal development, drawing from his own experiences of overcoming adversity. Orphaned at an early age, Marden's journey from hardship to success galvanized his philosophy that resilience and willpower are critical to achieving one'Äôs goals. His extensive writing career, culminating in numerous bestsellers, reflects both a deep understanding of human psychology and an unwavering optimism that resonates through his works. "Every Man a King" is an indispensable read for anyone seeking inspiration and guidance in their personal and professional life. Marden's timeless principles remain relevant today, providing readers with the motivational tools necessary to embrace their potential and enact positive change. This book is not just a guide; it is a manifesto for anyone ready to claim their kingdom. In this enriched edition, we have carefully created added value for your reading experience: - A succinct Introduction situates the work's timeless appeal and themes. - The Synopsis outlines the central plot, highlighting key developments without spoiling critical twists. - A detailed Historical Context immerses you in the era's events and influences that shaped the writing. - A thorough Analysis dissects symbols, motifs, and character arcs to unearth underlying meanings. - Reflection questions prompt you to engage personally with the work's messages, connecting them to modern life. - Hand‐picked Memorable Quotes shine a spotlight on moments of literary brilliance. - Interactive footnotes clarify unusual references, historical allusions, and archaic phrases for an effortless, more informed read.

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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2023

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Orison Swett Marden

EVERY MAN A KING

Enriched edition. How To Control Thought and Exercise the Power of Self-Faith Over Others
In this enriched edition, we have carefully created added value for your reading experience.
Introduction, Studies and Commentaries by Asher McKenzie
Edited and published by Good Press, 2023
EAN 8596547690412

Table of Contents

Introduction
Synopsis
Historical Context
EVERY MAN A KING
Analysis
Reflection
Memorable Quotes
Notes

Introduction

Table of Contents

The struggle to claim inner sovereignty while living amid external limits runs through Every Man a King as both a promise and a challenge.

Orison Swett Marden, widely associated with the American self-help and success tradition, presents this work as motivational nonfiction rather than narrative fiction, aiming to shape habits and attitudes through direct counsel. The book belongs to a strain of practical moral philosophy written for general readers, using everyday examples and emphatic assertions to argue that personal advancement is chiefly an inward achievement. While precise publication details are not provided here, its outlook aligns with Marden’s broader career as a popular writer of character-building literature in the United States.

Every Man a King sets out to persuade readers that dignity and power are not reserved for the socially prominent but can be cultivated by anyone willing to develop self-command. The premise is not a plot to be followed but an argument to be inhabited: the reader is invited to measure ordinary decisions against a larger ideal of self-respect and purpose. The experience is instructional and exhortative, moving through claims about what strengthens or weakens a life, and returning repeatedly to the idea that the most consequential victories occur within the self.

Marden’s voice is confident and urgent, written to be read as guidance rather than as detached analysis. The style favors clarity, repetition for emphasis, and a steady forward momentum that urges action. Instead of lingering in ambiguity, it pushes toward conclusions, inviting readers to adopt an aspirational standard and then to test themselves against it. The tone is earnest and morally serious, with an underlying optimism about human capacity for improvement. Readers should expect a rhetoric of encouragement coupled with admonitions against complacency, excuse-making, and surrender to discouragement.

At the center of the book is a conception of kingship that is chiefly ethical: self-mastery, integrity, and the refusal to be ruled by fear, laziness, or resentment. Themes of personal responsibility, disciplined effort, and the shaping power of thought and habit recur as Marden stresses that character is built through repeated choices. The work also emphasizes the value of work well done, the importance of persistent striving, and the belief that setbacks can be converted into strength when met with resolve. Throughout, the “kingdom” is depicted as the self, governed by principles rather than by impulse.

For contemporary readers, the book’s continuing relevance lies less in any period-specific advice than in its insistence on agency amid uncertainty. In an age saturated with metrics of status and visibility, Marden’s claim that real authority begins with self-respect offers a counterweight to external validation. The emphasis on habits, attention, and perseverance resonates with modern conversations about resilience and personal development, even when readers may wish to question or recalibrate the book’s assumptions. Approached critically, it can function as a historical artifact of self-help and as a practical provocation to examine one’s own standards.

This introduction invites readers to treat Every Man a King as a compact manual for moral ambition rather than a promise of effortless triumph. Its arguments are designed to be applied, not merely admired, and its success depends on the reader’s willingness to translate ideals into daily conduct. Without revealing any later turns in emphasis, it is enough to note that the book persistently presses one claim: that a person can live with greater freedom by choosing discipline, courage, and principled action. Read with attention, it offers both a mirror and a spur, asking what kind of ruler one is within one’s own life.

Synopsis

Table of Contents

Orison Swett Marden’s EVERY MAN A KING presents a motivational argument about personal sovereignty: the idea that character, self-control, and purpose can make an individual “kingly” regardless of rank or wealth. Written in the author’s familiar self-help mode, the book addresses readers as practical moral agents who can shape their fortunes through disciplined habits. It frames success as an outgrowth of inner government rather than external favors, and it treats everyday life as a proving ground where choices accumulate into destiny. The opening establishes confidence, initiative, and integrity as central themes.

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Marden advances the claim that genuine mastery begins with ruling oneself. He emphasizes habits of thought, the management of impulses, and the cultivation of steady will as foundational to any outward achievement. Instead of presenting a single dramatic storyline, the work proceeds through connected lessons and illustrative reflections designed to reinforce a coherent ethic of self-direction. Readers are encouraged to replace passivity with intentional action, to view obstacles as tests of mettle, and to resist the tendency to excuse failure by blaming circumstances. The argument’s early movement links self-command with dignity and usefulness.

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A sustained portion of the book stresses the moral dimension of success: ambition must be guided by principles, and competence must be joined to trustworthiness. Marden treats character as an asset more durable than money or position, suggesting that reputations are built through repeated small decisions and the consistent honoring of responsibilities. He examines how discouragement, laziness, and fear can erode one’s sense of agency, and he proposes countervailing practices—clear aims, persistent effort, and constructive thinking—that restore momentum. The conflict is chiefly internal: between higher intentions and lower surrender.

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The discussion broadens to the shaping power of ideals and aspiration. Marden argues that people tend to grow toward the standards they accept, so the selection of worthy models and goals is not decorative but decisive. He urges readers to approach work and study as arenas for self-development, where diligence and skill create both opportunity and self-respect. The book also cautions against shortcuts that promise quick gain at the cost of long-term stability, portraying such choices as a surrender of personal “kingship.” The narrative flow continues by connecting daily conduct with future latitude and freedom.

Historical Context

Table of Contents

Orison Swett Marden wrote during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when the United States experienced rapid industrialization, urban growth, and expanding national markets. Large corporations, railroads, and mass-circulation newspapers shaped public life, while debates over wealth, poverty, and “self-made” success were prominent. Marden’s book belongs to an American tradition of moral instruction and practical uplift literature aimed at clerks, workers, and aspiring professionals. Its outlook reflects a period when individual character was widely presented as a key to advancement, even as economic change made opportunity uneven across regions and classes.

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The book’s themes align with the Progressive Era (roughly 1890s–1920s), marked by reform campaigns addressing corruption, workplace conditions, public health, and education. Reformers promoted efficiency, civic responsibility, and personal improvement alongside regulatory efforts such as antitrust actions. Settlement houses, the Social Gospel movement, and new professional fields like social work reflected a belief that society could be improved through both institutional change and disciplined individuals. Marden’s emphasis on self-control, initiative, and integrity fits this broader culture of reform-minded optimism, even when the era’s problems—tenement crowding, child labor, and industrial accidents—exposed the limits of personal effort alone.

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Marden’s career was tied to the expanding publishing and lecture circuits that spread motivational and ethical advice. He founded Success magazine in 1897, benefiting from cheaper printing, national advertising, and wider literacy. Chautauqua and similar platforms popularized talks on citizenship, business conduct, and self-culture, reinforcing the idea that reading and disciplined habits could change one’s prospects. Such institutions shaped the book’s accessible, prescriptive style and its appeal to a broad middle-class and working-class readership seeking guidance amid competitive labor markets and frequent economic uncertainty.

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Economic volatility strongly informed the audience for Marden’s message. The Panic of 1893 triggered severe unemployment and business failures, and later downturns, including the Panic of 1907, reinforced anxieties about security and mobility. At the same time, new managerial hierarchies and corporate employment created pathways for advancement that rewarded punctuality, reliability, and conformity to workplace norms. Marden’s insistence on perseverance and “making the most” of circumstances mirrors a national conversation about how to maintain dignity and ambition when markets and employers could abruptly disrupt livelihoods.

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EVERY MAN A KING

Main Table of Contents
Chapter I. Steering Thought Prevents Life Wrecks
Chapter II. How Mind Rules The Body
Chapter III. Thought Causes Health And Disease
Chapter IV. Our Worst Enemy Is Fear
Chapter V. Overcoming Fear
Chapter VI. Killing Emotions
Chapter VII. Mastering Our Moods
Chapter VIII. Unprofitable Pessimism
Chapter IX. The Power Of Cheerful Thinking
Chapter X. Negative Creeds Paralyze
Chapter XI. Affirmation Creates Power
Chapter XII. Thoughts Radiate As Influence
Chapter XIII. How Thinking Brings Success
Chapter XIV. Power Of Self-Faith Over Others
Chapter XV. Building Character
Chapter XVI. Strengthening Deficient Faculties
Chapter XVII. Gain Beauty By Holding The Beauty Thought
Chapter XVIII. The Power Of Imagination
Chapter XIX. Don't Let The Years Count
Chapter XX. How To Control Thought
Chapter XXI. The Coming Man Will Realize His Divinity

Chapter I. Steering Thought Prevents Life Wrecks

Table of Contents

We build our future,thought by thought[1q],

Or good or bad, and know it not—

Yet so the universe is wrought.

Thought is another name jor fate,

Choose,then, thy destiny,and wait—

For love brings love,and hate brings hate.

—Ella Wheeler Wilcox[1].

A CERTAIN man of no great learning, so runs an old legend, fell heir to a ship. He knew nothing of the sea, nothing of navigation or engineering, but the notion seized him to take a voyage and command his own ship. The ship was gotten under way, the self-appointed captain allowing the crew to go ahead with their usual duties, as the multiplicity of operations confused the amateur navigator. Once headed out to sea, however, the work grew simpler, and the captain had time to observe what was going on. As he strolled on the forward deck, he saw a man turning a big wheel, now this way, now that.

“What in the world is that man doing?” he asked.

“That’s the helmsman. He is steering the ship.”

“Well, I don’t see any use in his fiddling away there all the time. There’s nothing but water ahead, and I guess the sails can push her forward. When there’s land in sight, or a ship coming head on, there’ll be time enough to do steering. Put up all the sails and let her go.”

The order was obeyed, and the few survivors of the wreck that followed had cause to remember the fool captain who thought a ship steered herself.

You say no such man ever existed, and you are right. That isn’t admitting that no such foolishness exists, however. You wouldn’t be so foolish, would you?