Self-Help (book)

Self-Help

Samuel Smiles by Sir George Reid
Author Samuel Smiles
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Publisher John Murray
Publication date
1859
Preceded by The Life of George Stephenson
Followed by Brief Biographies

Self-Help; with Illustrations of Character and Conduct was a book published in 1859 by Samuel Smiles. The second edition of 1866 added Perseverance to the subtitle. It has been called "the bible of mid-Victorian liberalism".[1]

Contents of the second edition

Preface
Introduction to the First Edition
Descriptive Contents
I. Self-HelpNational and Individual
II. Leaders of IndustryInventors and Producers
III. Three Great PottersPalissy, Böttgher, Wedgwood
IV. Application and Perseverance
V. Helps and OpportunitiesScientific Pursuits
VI. Workers in Art
VII. Industry and the Peerage
VIII. Energy and Courage
IX. Men of Business
X. MoneyIts Use and Abuse
XI. Self-CultureFacilities and Difficulties
XII. ExampleModels
XIII. Characterthe True Gentleman

Reception

Self-Help sold 20,000 copies within one year of its publication. By the time of Smiles' death in 1904 it had sold over a quarter of a million.[2] Self-Help "elevated [Smiles] to celebrity status: almost overnight, he became a leading pundit and much-consulted guru".[3]

When an English visitor to the Khedive's palace in Egypt asked where the mottoes on the palace's walls originated, he was given the reply: "They are principally from Smeelis, you ought to know Smeelis! They are from his Self-Help!"[4]

The socialist Robert Tressell, in his novel The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, said Self-Help was a book "suitable for perusal by persons suffering from almost complete obliteration of the mental faculties".[5]

The founder of Toyota Industries Co., Ltd., Sakichi Toyoda was significantly influenced by his reading of Self-Help. A copy Self-Help is under a glass display at the museum that exists on Sakichi Toyoda's birth site.[6]

Robert Blatchford, a socialist activist, said it was "one of the most delightful and invigorating books it has been my happy fortune to meet with" and argued it should be taught in schools. However he also noted that socialists would not feel comfortable with Smiles' individualism but also noted that Smiles denounced "the worship of power, wealth, success, and keeping up appearances".[7] A labour leader advised Blatchford to stay away from it: "It's a brutal book; it ought to be burnt by the common hangman. Smiles was the arch-Philistine, and his book the apotheosis of respectability, gigmanity, and selfish grab".[8] However Jonathan Rose has argued that most pre-1914 labour leaders who commented on Self-Help praised it and it was not until after the Great War that criticisms of Smiles in worker's memoirs appeared.[9] The Labour Party MPs William Johnson and Thomas Summerbell admired Smiles' work and the Communist miners leader A. J. Cook "started out with Self-Help".[10]

Notes

  1. M. J. Cohen and John Major (eds.), History in Quotations (London: Cassell, 2004), p. 611.
  2. Peter W. Sinnema, 'Introduction', in Samuel Smiles, Self-Help (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. vii.
  3. Sinnema, p. vii.
  4. Sinnema, p. xxiv.
  5. Robert Tressell, The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists (Penguin, 2004), pp. 572-73.
  6. Jeffrey K Liker, The Toyota Way (McGraw Hill, 2004), pp. 17.
  7. Jonathan Rose, The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes (Yale Nota Bene, 2002), pp. 68-9.
  8. Rose, p. 68.
  9. Rose, pp. 68-9.
  10. Rose, p. 69.

Further reading

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