DON'T MISTAKE YOUR VOCATION
The safest plan, and the one most sure of
success for the young man starting in life, is to select the
vocation which is most congenial to his tastes. Parents and
guardians are often quite too negligent in regard to this. It very
common for a father to say, for example: "I have five boys. I will
make Billy a clergyman; John a lawyer; Tom a doctor, and Dick a
farmer." He then goes into town and looks about to see what he will
do with Sammy. He returns home and says "Sammy, I see watch-making
is a nice genteel business; I think I will make you a goldsmith."
He does this, regardless of Sam's natural inclinations, or genius.
We are all, no doubt, born for a wise purpose. There is as
much diversity in our brains as in our countenances. Some are born
natural mechanics, while some have great aversion to machinery. Let
a dozen boys of ten years get together, and you will soon observe
two or three are "whittling" out some ingenious device; working
with locks or complicated machinery. When they were but five years
old, their father could find no toy to please them like a puzzle.
They are natural mechanics; but the other eight or nine boys have
different aptitudes. I belong to the latter class; I never had the
slightest love for mechanism; on the contrary, I have a sort of
abhorrence for complicated machinery. I never had ingenuity enough
to whittle a cider tap so it would not leak. I never could make a
pen that I could write with, or understand the principle of a steam
engine. If a man was to take such a boy as I was, and attempt to
make a watchmaker of him, the boy might, after an apprenticeship of
five or seven years, be able to take apart and put together a
watch; but all through life he would be working up hill and seizing
every excuse for leaving his work and idling away his time.
Watchmaking is repulsive to him.
Unless a man enters upon the vocation intended for him by
nature, and best suited to his peculiar genius, he cannot succeed.
I am glad to believe that the majority of persons do find their
right vocation. Yet we see many who have mistaken their calling,
from the blacksmith up (or down) to the clergyman. You will see,
for instance, that extraordinary linguist the "learned blacksmith,"
who ought to have been a teacher of languages; and you may have
seen lawyers, doctors and clergymen who were better fitted by
nature for the anvil or the lapstone.
SELECT THE RIGHT LOCATION
After securing the right vocation, you must be
careful to select the proper location. You may have been cut out
for a hotel keeper, and they say it requires a genius to "know how
to keep a hotel." You might conduct a hotel like clock-work, and
provide satisfactorily for five hundred guests every day; yet, if
you should locate your house in a small village where there is no
railroad communication or public travel, the location would be your
ruin. It is equally important that you do not commence business
where there are already enough to meet all demands in the same
occupation. I remember a case which illustrates this subject. When
I was in London in 1858, I was passing down Holborn with an English
friend and came to the "penny shows." They had immense cartoons
outside, portraying the wonderful curiosities to be seen "all for a
penny." Being a little in the "show line" myself, I said "let us go
in here." We soon found ourselves in the presence of the
illustrious showman, and he proved to be the sharpest man in that
line I had ever met. He told us some extraordinary stories in
reference to his bearded ladies, his Albinos, and his Armadillos,
which we could hardly believe, but thought it "better to believe it
than look after the proof'." He finally begged to call our
attention to some wax statuary, and showed us a lot of the dirtiest
and filthiest wax figures imaginable. They looked as if they had
not seen water since the Deluge.
"What is there so wonderful about your statuary?" I asked.
"I beg you not to speak so satirically," he replied, "Sir,
these are not Madam Tussaud's wax figures, all covered with gilt
and tinsel and imitation diamonds, and copied from engravings and
photographs. Mine, sir, were taken from life. Whenever you look
upon one of those figures, you may consider that you are looking
upon the living individual."
Glancing casually at them, I saw one labeled "Henry VIII,"
and feeling a little curious upon seeing that it looked like Calvin
Edson, the living skeleton, I said: "Do you call that 'Henry the
Eighth?'" He replied, "Certainly; sir; it was taken from life at
Hampton Court, by special order of his majesty; on such a day."
He would have given the hour of the day if I had resisted; I
said, "Everybody knows that 'Henry VIII.' was a great stout old
king, and that figure is lean and lank; what do you say to that?"
"Why," he replied, "you would be lean and lank yourself if
you sat there as long as he has."