248 •
The Expanded and Annotated My Life and Work
called
virtù. Ford (1922, p. 148) described its aspects as follows: “And the
texture of a man is his vitality,
his energy, his character, his courage and
his rock-bottom brain power.” The lesson, therefore, is that a clear sense of
fatum or destiny in combination with virtù leads to world-class success in
any enterprise.
* * *
Every advance begins in a small way and with the individual. The mass can
be no better than the sum of the individuals. Advancement begins within the
man himself; when he advances from half-interest to strength of purpose;
when he advances from hesitancy to decisive directness; when he advances
from immaturity to maturity of judgment; when he advances from appren-
ticeship to mastery; when he advances from a mere dilettante at labour to
a worker who finds a genuine joy in work; when he advances from an eye-
server to one who can be entrusted to do his work without oversight and
without prodding—why, then the world advances! The advance is not easy.
We live in flabby times when men are being taught that everything ought to
be easy. Work that amounts to anything will never be easy. And the higher
you go in the scale of responsibility, the harder becomes the job. Ease has its
place, of course. Every man who works ought to have sufficient leisure. The
man who works hard should have his easy chair, his comfortable fireside, his
pleasant surroundings. These are his by right. But no one deserves ease until
after his work is done. It will never be possible to put upholstered ease into
work. Some work is needlessly hard. It can be lightened by proper manage-
ment. Every device ought to be employed to leave a man free to do a man’s
work. Flesh and blood should not be made to bear burdens that steel can
bear. But even when the best is done, work still remains work, and any man
who puts himself into his job will feel that it is work.
And there cannot be much picking and choosing. The appointed task may
be less than was expected. A man’s real work is not always what he would
have chosen to do. A man’s real work is what he is chosen to do. Just now
there are more menial jobs than there will be in the future; and as long as
there are menial jobs, someone will have to do them; but there is no reason
why a man should be penalized because his job is menial. There is one thing
that can be said about menial jobs that cannot be said about a great many
so-called more responsible jobs, and that is, they are useful and they are
respectable and they are honest.
The time has come when drudgery must be taken out of labour. It is not
work that men object to, but the element of drudgery. We must drive out
drudgery wherever we find it. We shall never be wholly civilized until we
remove the treadmill from the daily job. Invention is doing this in some
degree now. We have succeeded to a very great extent in relieving men of