登陆注册
5400900000017

第17章

Books have been written to discredit Carnegie's work and to picture him as the man who has stolen success from the labor of greater men.Yet Carnegie is the one member of a brilliant company who had the indispensable quality of genius.He had none of the plodding, painstaking qualities of a Rockefeller; he had the fire, the restlessness, the keen relish for adventure, and the imagination that leaped far in advance of his competitors which we find so conspicuous in the older Vanderbilt.Carnegie showed these qualities from his earliest days.Driven as a child from his Scottish home by hunger, never having gone to school after twelve, he found himself, at the age of thirteen, living in a miserable hut in Allegheny, earning a dollar and twenty cents a week as bobbin-boy in a cotton mill, while his mother augmented the family income by taking in washing.Half a dozen years later Thomas Scott, President of the Pennsylvania Railroad, made Carnegie his private secretary.How well the young man used his opportunities in this occupation appeared afterward when he turned his wide acquaintanceship among railroad men to practical use in the steel business.It was this personal adaptability, indeed, that explains Carnegie's success.In the narrow, methodical sense he was not a business man at all; he knew and cared nothing for its dull routine and its labyrinthine details.

As a practical steel man his position is a negligible one.Though he was profoundly impressed by his first sight of a Bessemer converter, he had little interest in the every-day process of making steel.He had also many personal weaknesses: his egotism was marked, he loved applause, he was always seeking opportunities for self-exploitation, and he even aspired to fame as an author and philosopher.The staid business men of Pittsburgh early regarded Carnegie with disfavor; his daring impressed them as rashness and his bold adventures as the plunging of the speculator.Yet in all its aspects Carnegie's triumph was a personal one.He was perhaps the greatest commercial traveler this country has ever known.While his more methodical associates plodded along making steel, Carnegie went out upon the highway, bringing in orders by the millions.He showed this same personal quality in the organization of his force.As a young man, entirely new to the steel industry, he selected as the first manager of his works Captain Bill Jones;his amazing judgment was justified when Jones developed into America's greatest practical genius in making steel."Here lies the man"--Carnegie once suggested this line for his epitaph--"who knew how to get around him men who were cleverer than himself."Carnegie inspired these men with his own energy and restlessness;the spirit of the whole establishment automatically became that of the pushing spirit of its head.This little giant became the most remorseless pace-maker in the steel regions.However astounding might be the results obtained by the Carnegie works the captain at the head was never satisfied.As each month's output surpassed that which had gone before, Carnegie always came back with the same cry of "More." "We broke all records for making steel last week!" a delighted superintendent once wired him and immediately he received his answer, "Congratulations.Why not do it every week?" This spirit explains the success of the Carnegie Company in outdistancing all its competitors and gaining a worldwide preeminence for the Pittsburgh district.But Carnegie did not make the mistake of capitalizing all this prosperity for himself; his real greatness as an American business man consists in the fact that he liberally shared the profits with his associates.Ruthless he might be in appropriating their last ounce of energy, yet he rewarded the successful men with golden partnerships.Nothing delighted Carnegie more than to see the man whom he had lifted from a puddler's furnace develop into a millionaire.

Henry Phipps, still living at the age of seventy-eight, was the only one of Carnegie's early associates who remained with him to the end.Like many of the others, Phipps had been Carnegie's playmate as a boy, so far as any of them, in those early days, had opportunity to play; like all his contemporaries also, Phipps had been wretchedly poor, his earliest business opening having been as messenger boy for a jeweler.Phipps had none of the dash and sparkle of Carnegie.He was the plodder, the bookkeeper, the economizer, the man who had an eye for microscopic details."What we most admired in young Phipps," a Pittsburgh banker once remarked, "is the way in which he could keep a check in the air for three or four days." His abilities consisted mainly in keeping the bankers complaisant, in smoothing the ruffled feelings of creditors, in cutting out unnecessary expenditures, and in shaving prices.

Carnegie's other two more celebrated associates, Henry C.Frick and Charles M.Schwab, were younger men.Frick was cold and masterful, as hard, unyielding, and effective as the steel that formed the staple of his existence.Schwab was enthusiastic, warm-hearted, and happy-go-lucky; a man who ruled his employees and obtained his results by appealing to their sympathies.The men of the steel yards feared Frick as much as they loved "Charlie" Schwab.The earliest glimpses which we get of these remarkable men suggest certain permanent characteristics: Frick is pictured as the sober, industrious bookkeeper in his grandfather's distillery; Schwab as the rollicking, whistling driver of a stage between Loretto and Cresson.Frick came into the steel business as a matter of deliberate choice, whereas Schwab became associated with the Pittsburgh group more or less by accident.

同类推荐
  • 发觉净心经

    发觉净心经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 普陀洛迦新志

    普陀洛迦新志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 经验麻科

    经验麻科

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 经律异相

    经律异相

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Speeches-Literary & Social

    Speeches-Literary & Social

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 墙上的斑点

    墙上的斑点

    阅读世界名家中短篇小说丛书,用宝贵的时间阅读最有价值的作品,在文字中体味文学世界里的人生百态,做有深度、有广度、有品位的阅读者。本书收录有《墙上的斑点》《雨》《乞力马扎罗的雪》《另外的两个人》《死者》《起风了》六篇小说。
  • 我在时光里听过你

    我在时光里听过你

    许卿:十年之前,与你相识,那时候天真地觉得只要熬过了高考,就能和你一直一直在一起!秋瑾:七年之前,我拼了命一样努力,终于和你踏入了同一所大学,那时候我就发誓,毕业的时候我一定要左手毕业证右手结婚证。只是后来,一切似乎都变得不那么顺利了,生活不再是甜蜜和幸福,当分手突如其来闯进所有对于未来的幻想中,我们该何去何从?
  • 网游之氪金土豪

    网游之氪金土豪

    一个在《启世》这款游戏中的老玩家,一次偶然的苏醒,重生回到《启世》开启的前一星期,此时没人知道《启世》这款游戏在开启时充值渠道将会彻底关闭,凭借重生的优势,他将在游戏中氪金变成玩家心中的土豪。
  • 大外交

    大外交

    21世纪,科技革命席卷全球,谁能拥有科技上的话语权,谁就能够占据未来世界的经济主导地位,贸易战的危机决不能够避免。在这种时代洪流里,外交官和企业家,是首当其冲的两种职业。全球最大的IT公司新任接班总裁梁咏年在异国邂逅度假的预备外交官叶泠,二人拥有了短暂而美好的一周,但很快,叶泠回国任职,但很快就被派驻,二人再次重逢,因华策公司对外政策危机东道国利益而出现危机,二人因此有了更多接触的理由……
  • 中小企业财务一本通

    中小企业财务一本通

    公司运营,财务金融是核心!资金是企业顺畅运转的生命线,多少企业因为资金短缺而得不到持续快速的发展,又有多少企业在发展的顶峰时期因为现金流断裂而轰然倒塌。如何管理好企业财务,如何防范和化解财务风险,如何通过资本市场进行有效的融资和投资,如何通过成本管理和纳税筹划减少企业的运营成本,实现股东价值(或企业净利润)的最大化……所有这些,都是我们的企业管理者需要时时面对的问题!
  • 80后辣妈的快乐孕产手记

    80后辣妈的快乐孕产手记

    80后的年轻妈妈们追求时尚,讲究品位,多为独生子女的她们却自主而有远见,对于下一代的要求“精益求精”,她们关注明星的育儿心经,了解最先进的孕育知识,努力培养出最优秀的宝宝,且在孕育宝宝的同时,不忘自身的恢复和保养,人们叫她们“辣妈”。本书这位年轻的辣妈根据亲身经历从孕前准备、产前检查到孕前、孕中、产后各时期的营养饮食调理,再到生产方式的选择以及产后母婴的恢复等各方面,为年轻的80后妈妈们提供了全套的生育计划。新妈妈们可以在此学到最详细真实的孕育知识,做一个年轻称职的时尚妈妈。
  • 微笑以对世界

    微笑以对世界

    世间有太多的东西总是向着我们不期待的方向发展,在经历这些事情的同时,内心煎熬无比,甚至没有可以倾诉的对象,精神上的崩溃时常让我对生活失去希望,人活着有些时候显得毫无意义。但是我依旧坚定的认为:如果事与愿违,请相信老天另有安排。
  • 李嘉诚成大事忠告

    李嘉诚成大事忠告

    李嘉诚是一位成大事者,他纵横商海多年,在虎狼相争的商战中,不但脚跟稳立,而且能鹤立群雄,这与他诚信做人,以诚为本是分不开的。就如他的忠告中所述的“拥有了信誉就等于拥有了胜利”,“未立事前先立信”,“诚信是扭转困局的法宝”一样,一辈子踏踏实实,勤勤恳恳做事。这就是成大事者对有志于成就一番事业者的忠告。
  • 菊与刀

    菊与刀

    本书是美国人类学家本尼迪克特为美国政府提供对日决策而作的研究报告,但出版后,却引起轰动,被译成30多种语言,行销100多个国家,成为现代日本学的开山鼻祖。是了解日本人的最佳读本,解析日本民族根性的权威著作,全球人销量超过3000万册,历任美国总统的必读之书。《菊与刀》 解析日本民族根性的权威著作,历任美国总统的必读之书。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。