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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 -


mean, to dwell upon and harbor in the mind things foul, demoralizing, and debauching : impurity, hatred, revenge, discord, jealousy, and all the human passions to which St. Paul refers!

Dwelling upon the criminal thought produces the criminal. Dwelling upon the impurity suggestion makes the debauchee. St. Paul knew that it was the things that we dwell upon, contemplate, think about habitually, concentrate the mind upon, that determine the quality of the life. There never was better advice given by any human being than this of St. Paul's.

I can not get away from myself, no matter where I go. I am always environed by myself, horizoned by my mentality, encircled by my ideal, constantly influenced by my self-suggestion.

If my thought is narrow, I must live in a narrow world. If my thinking has been sordid, cold, and unsympathetic, I can not enjoy the broader and larger world others live in, for I have incapacitated myself to see it or to appreciate it. If I am mean, contemptible, and despicable in my conduct, then I am shut in by an ever-narrowing horizon, limited by the smallness and meanness of my thoughts.

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