Henry Harrison Brown

THE ROAD TO SUCCESS COLLECTION


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       Henry Harrison Brown

      THE ROAD TO SUCCESS COLLECTION: Dollars Want Me, How To Control Fate Through Suggestion, Concentration, The Call Of The Twentieth Century & The New Emancipation

       Learn How to Control Your Will Power and Channel the Positive Affirmations in Your Personal & Professional Life

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       [email protected] 2017 OK Publishing ISBN 978-80-7583-295-5

       Dollars Want Me (Twin Editions)

       The Call of the Twentieth Century

       The New Emancipation

       Concentration: The Road To Success

       How to Control Fate Through Suggestion

      Dollars Want Me (Twin Editions)

       Table of Contents

       Dollars Want Me: First Edition

       Dollars Want Me: Thirtieth Edition

      Dollars Want Me: First Edition

       Table of Contents

       To the Reader.

       Opulence

       I Am Success

       Conscientiousness the First Need

       Time A Factor

       Supply

       Supplement

      To the Reader.

       Table of Contents

      This essay upon the Dollar appeared in NOW as one of a series of twelve lessons entitled, " Success and how I won it through Affirmation." It attracted much attention and drew out from its readers many letters. This appreciation has decided "NOW" Folk to reprint it in form for a wider circulation.

      This well conserves the purpose for which it was written. I wish to awaken my fellows to a sense of their present possessions and help them to a realization of the Principle which controls Life's expression so that, living being to them "A fine art,'' they will cease to look for happiness in some far-off heaven, but will enter into the enjoyment of the one they create here and now.

      It is believed that this little monograph is the first utterance of the thought that each individual has the ability to so radiate his mental forces that he can cause the Dollar to feel him, love him, seek him and thus draw, at will, all things needed for his unfoldment from the Universal Supply.

      It will help you to rise above the drudgery of enforced labor and enable you to enter upon the manifold expressions of life with the joy and spontaneity of childhood. This is the thought which comes to you with this, my Lesson of Success.

      Henry Harrison Brown.

      San Francisco, Cal., May 1, 1903.

      Opulence

       Table of Contents

      THE DOLLAR SIDE

      I Am Success

       Table of Contents

      You conquer fate by thought. If you think the fatal thought of men and institutions, you need never pull the trigger. The consequences of thinking inevitably follow.— Carlyle.

      Personal ideals, of necessity, must differ, yet, since money represents objective power, its consideration must enter as a factor into every ideal of success. Money represents Supply. It stands in our thought, for food, clothing and shelter; for books, pictures and companionship; for enjoyment, unfoldment and expression.

      The Dollar means opportunity for the realization of high ideals.

      Material Supply is a necessity of Life. The Dollar is the concrete representative of this necessity.

      The individual must be free and, until the necessities of life are assured, he is not free. Thus the Dollar stands for individual liberty.

      Personal liberty finds its basis in pecuniary independence. Financial independence and personal liberty bear very largely the relation of cause and effect. We can almost say that in the popular mind the Dollar confers liberty. In Soul Culture, a mental attitude of superiority to the Dollar results in personal liberty. There is no liberty to him who feels himself limited by the want of the Dollar. Debt is one of the most tyrannical of masters. Mackay well says: —

      "The debtor is ever a shame faced dog

       With his creditor's name on his collar."

      There can be no liberty to him who feels the slavery of debt.

      Into your ideal of Success, therefore, there must be firmly builded this ideal of pecuniary independence.

      This independence does not lie in freedom from debt, neither does it lie in large bank accounts nor the possession of property. Monetary success and personal liberty do not go hand in hand. Indeed the average man of wealth is the veriest slave, enslaved to the necessities that his monetary possessions involve, and a worse slave to his fears.

      SUCCESS LIES IN THE MENTAL ATTITUDE THAT ARISES FROM THAT SENSE OF PERSONAL POWER WHICH MEETS EVERY CONDITION WITHOUT ANXIETY. "Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof,' is the thought of the successful man while he enjoys present good.

      That cannot be called success which results in ill health and unhappiness, unrest or fear. Eliminate these from your ideal and you have, as a necessity concomitant of success, financial ease.

      In the old competitive thought, men sought business and wanted the dollar. Under the New Thought, it is: "Seek first the kingdom of Good and its right