Summits of Success: How They Have Been ReachedJ.B. Lippincott, 1902 - 434 páginas |
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Página 6
... inventions , which one after another had been harnessed to the new motive power , the steam- engine - from the famous contrivances in spinning and weaving invented by Arkwright , Crompton , and Hargreaves 6 Summits of Success.
... inventions , which one after another had been harnessed to the new motive power , the steam- engine - from the famous contrivances in spinning and weaving invented by Arkwright , Crompton , and Hargreaves 6 Summits of Success.
Página 17
... adventurer for gain . When he set out on his famous voyage around the world , it was one of his avowed objects to wrest from Philip II . a portion of the wealth of his Portuguese subjects in Asia , and 17 с Bygone Days.
... adventurer for gain . When he set out on his famous voyage around the world , it was one of his avowed objects to wrest from Philip II . a portion of the wealth of his Portuguese subjects in Asia , and 17 с Bygone Days.
Página 18
... famous society of Merchant Adventurers , and commerce generally was prosecuted under conditions of more or less risk . Among the most valiant of the climbers of the picturesque past , when ruffles and laces , patches and powder were in ...
... famous society of Merchant Adventurers , and commerce generally was prosecuted under conditions of more or less risk . Among the most valiant of the climbers of the picturesque past , when ruffles and laces , patches and powder were in ...
Página 19
... famous line became extinct . Contemporary with the de ' Medicis , but employing their abilities in another country and in a different form , was the Bavarian family of the Fuggers , de- scended from John Fugger , a poor weaver of Augs ...
... famous line became extinct . Contemporary with the de ' Medicis , but employing their abilities in another country and in a different form , was the Bavarian family of the Fuggers , de- scended from John Fugger , a poor weaver of Augs ...
Página 20
... famous Bavarians . Another climber of bygone days whose splendid service to this country we are apt to lose sight of , was Sir Thomas Smythe , who , rising from an obscure position , became a London merchant of eminence , and as first ...
... famous Bavarians . Another climber of bygone days whose splendid service to this country we are apt to lose sight of , was Sir Thomas Smythe , who , rising from an obscure position , became a London merchant of eminence , and as first ...
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Términos y frases comunes
able achieve afterwards American Andrew Carnegie banker Barney Barnato became began Bessbrook born Bradford brewery built called capital career century character coal colliery Company connection cotton drink eminence engineering England enterprise established failure fame famous father favour firm force fortune founder friends genius George George Hudson gold hard Henry honour industry invention inventor iron John John Cassell John Horrocks labour Lancashire later lived London Lord Masham machine manufacture matter ment miles mind money-making never obtained partner patent position possessed profit prosperity railway realized rich Richard Cadbury shipbuilding ships shopkeeping Sir Henry Holland soon South Wales steam steamers steamship story Summits of Success things Thomas Thomas Fowell Buxton tion Titus Salt to-day Todmorden took trade undertaking Vanderbilt W. E. Forster wealth William worth young
Pasajes populares
Página 165 - Glory is the reward of science, and those who deserve it scorn all meaner views. I speak not of the scribblers for bread, who tease the press with their wretched productions. Fourteen years is too long a privilege for their perishable trash. It was not for gain that Bacon, Newton, Milton, and Locke instructed and delighted the world ; it would be unworthy such men to traffic with a dirty bookseller.
Página 255 - You can fool some of the people all of the time, and all of the people some of the time, but you can't fool all of the people all of the time.
Página 241 - I gan me drawn, Where much people I saw for to stand ; One offered me velvet, silk, and lawn, Another he taketh me by the hand, "Here is Paris thread, the finest in the land!
Página 39 - You have said several times that you feel pity for me; but it is I who pity you, who have said ' I am compelled.' That is not speaking like a king. These girls and I, who have part in the kingdom of heaven, we will teach you to talk royally. The Guisarts, all your people, and yourself, cannot compel a Potter to bow down to images of clay.
Página 86 - ... while my boat was in progress, I have often loitered unknown near the idle groups of strangers, gathering in little circles, and heard various inquiries as to the object of this new vehicle. The language was uniformly that of scorn, or sneer, or ridicule.
Página 38 - ... second composition. I suffered an anguish that I cannot speak, for I was quite exhausted and dried up by the heat of the furnace ; it was more than a month since my shirt had been dry upon me. Further to console me, I was the object of mockery ; and...
Página 74 - No longer entirely dependent upon my parents, but at last admitted to the family partnership as a contributing member and able to help them! I think this makes a man out of a boy sooner than almost anything else, and a real man, too, if there be any germ of true manhood in him. It is everything to feel that you are useful.
Página 165 - When the bookseller offered Milton five pounds for his Paradise Lost, he did not reject it, and commit his poem to the flames ; nor did he accept the miserable pittance as the reward of his labor. He knew that the real price of his work was immortality, and that posterity would pay it.
Página 38 - ... great mortification, namely, -that the wood having failed me, I was forced to burn the palings which maintained the boundaries of my garden; which being burnt also, I was forced to burn the tables and the flooring of my house, to cause the melting of the second composition.
Página 82 - ... in; A Voyage that wou'd have been as much ridicul'd as Don Quixot's Adventure upon the Windmill: Bless us! that Folks should go Three thousand Miles to Angle in the open Sea for Pieces of Eight!