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" Every workingman who is worth his salt (I care not whether he works with his hands and brains, or with his brains alone), takes satisfaction first in the working, secondly, in the product of his work, and thirdly in what that product yields to him. The... "
The Happy Life - Página 20
por Charles William Eliot - 1895 - 31 páginas
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American Contributions to Civilization: And Other Essays and Addresses

Charles William Eliot - 1897 - 406 páginas
...through that new value, we have the common pleasurable conditions of productive labor. Every working man who is worth his salt (I care not whether he works...who takes no pleasure in the mantel he has made, the farm-laborer who does not care for the crops he has cultivated, the weaver who takes no pride in the...
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Beautiful Thoughts about Happiness

Effie M. Chadsey - 1911 - 154 páginas
...sense of humor directly adds to the happiness of life. — Henry D. Chapin. NINTH Every working man who is worth his salt (I care not whether he works...work; and thirdly, in what that product yields to him. —Charles W. Eliot. TENTH Cheerfulness is an excellent wearing quality. It has been called the bright...
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The Administration of Industrial Enterprises: With Special ..., Volumen1

Edward David Jones - 1925 - 640 páginas
...similar groups. Of the normal incentives to labor, President-Emeritus Charles W. Eliot has said: " Every working-man who is worth his salt (I care not...work, and thirdly, in what that product yields to him."1 The Sense of Service. — Every intelligent person has a value sense, and exercises it in the...
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Charles W. Eliot: The Man and His Beliefs, Volumen2

Charles William Eliot - 1926 - 428 páginas
...through that new value, we have the common pleasurable conditions of productive labor. Every working man who is worth his salt (I care not whether he works...who takes no pleasure in the mantel he has made, the farm-laborer who does not care for the crops he has cultivated, the weaver who takes no pride in the...
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The Atlantic Monthly, Volumen98

1906 - 894 páginas
...parsimonious barrenness. "Every workman," writes President Eliot in The Happy Life, "who is worthy of his salt takes satisfaction, first, in the working; secondly,...and thirdly, in what that product yields to him." With this my life is in agreement. I live The Happy Life because I like my daily work. While there...
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Fibre & Fabric: A Record of American Textile Industries in the ..., Volumen43

1906 - 710 páginas
...the material is improved by applying them. Where to Look for Satisfaction. Every workingman who la worth his salt (I care not whether he works with his...work, and thirdly, in what that product yields to htm. The carpenter who takea no pleasure In the mantel he has made, the farm laborer who does not care...
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