1– Joseph Addison, 3 Elements of Happiness

2– Douglas Bader, Handicaps

3– Charles A. Beard, Man's Purpose

4– John Bogle , Investing

5– Bertolt Brecht, Initiative

6– Robert Browning , Making the Effort

7– Giordano Bruno, Conviction

8– Edmund Burke, Doing the Right Thing

9– Albert Camus, Hope

10– Thomas Carlyle, Making a Difference

11– Dale Carnegie, Showing Appreciation

12– Winston Churchill, Courage and Listening

13– Marcus Tullius Cicero, Suspicions

14– Arthur Compton, Advantages of Modern Life

15– Kevin Costner, Staying True to Yourself

16– Bette Davis, Creativity and Money

17– Jefferson Davis, Subservience and Pride

18– Charles Dickens, The Ends Don't Justify the Means

19– George Eliot, Regrets

20– Ralph Waldo Emerson, Actions Speak Louder Than Words

21– Epictetus, Becoming Your Best Self

22– Malcolm Forbes, Character

23– Harrison Ford, Success and Individuality

24– Benjamin Franklin, Self-esteem vs. Popularity

25– Thomas Fuller, Hope

26– Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Happiness and Harmony

27– Romain Gary, Humor and Dignity

28– Douglas Haig, No Surrender

29– Ernest Hemingway, Pressure

30– Victor Hugo, Obscure Struggles

31– Zora Neale Hurston, Making the Effort

32– Washington Irving, Women and Adversity

33– William James, Attitude

34– Thomas Jefferson, Style Vs Principle

35– Helen Keller, Changing the World

36– Robert F. Kennedy, Effort

37– Martin Luther King, Jr., Pride in Work

38– Charles Kingsley, Value of Work

39– Abraham Lincoln, Daily Life

40– Vince Lombardi, Resilience

41– George Leigh Mallory, Challenge

42– Abraham Maslow, Fulfillment Through Work

43– David McKay, Challenge

44– Friedrich Nietzsche, Self-Respect

45– Louis Nizer, Religion

46– Thomas Paine, Profiting from Adversity

47– Louis Pasteur, Ideals

48– Alexander Pope, Admitting Mistakes

49– Christopher Reeve, Dreams

50– Eleanor Roosevelt, Confronting Fear

51– Franklin D. Roosevelt, Happiness and Achievement

52– Theodore Roosevelt, No Excuses

53– E. Merrill Root, Work and Happiness

54– John Ruskin, Learning from Others

55– George Santayana, Lovers and Philosophers

56– William Shakespeare, Be Yourself

57– George Bernard Shaw, Creating Opportunity

58– John Steinbeck, Leadership

59– Robert Louis Stevenson, Potential

60– Thomas Szasz, Finding Yourself

61– Leo Tolstoy, What is Art?

62– Anthony Trollope, Against the Odds

63– Wang Yang-ming, Mistakes

64– Booker T. Washington, Rising Above Hatred

65– Hugh White, Focus on the Future

 
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Creating Opportunity
George Bernard Shaw

 
     
 
  “The people who get on in this world are the people who get up and look for the circumstances they want, and, if they can't find them, make them.”
   
  George Bernard Shaw (1856 - 1950), Irish Playwright
 
     
     
  Although Shaw’s writing included novels, essays, and pamphlets, he is best known for his more than 50 plays, including “Arms and the Man” (1894), “Candida” (1897), “Man and Superman” (1905), “Pygmalion” (1913, later the basis for “My Fair Lady”), “Back to Methuselah” (1921) and “Saint Joan” (1923). Shaw was an active socialist and member of the Fabian Society; many of his plays have political themes lurking beneath the humor. He helped found both the Labour Party and the London School of Economics. In 1925 he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature “for his work which is marked both by idealism and humanity, its stimulating satire often being infused with a singular poetic beauty.”

Born in Dublin, Shaw was the youngest of three children. Both his parents were impoverished members of the aristocracy. His father, an alcoholic, worked in the wholesale corn trade: his mother was a professional singer. Shaw was a vegetarian who neither smoked nor drank alcohol. He decided to become a writer at age 20; his career began with five unsuccessful novels and was initially a complete failure. During this period he was supported by his mother’s meager income. He tried to improve himself through self-education and by public speaking at Speakers Corner in Hyde Park. In 1885 he began to find steady work writing reviews of art, books, and music, but he really came into his own when he focused on theatre criticism for the Saturday Review beginning in 1895. In 1898 he married a wealthy fellow Fabian; they remained married, despite his many affairs, until her death in 1943.