The Richest Man In Babylon
By George S. Clason
"A lean purse is
easier to cure than to endure"
Chapter
2
The Richest Man In Babylon
In old Babylon there once lived a certain very rich man,
named Arkad. Far and wide he was famed for his great wealth. Also was he famed
for his liberality. He was generous in his charities. He was generous with his
family. He was liberal in his own expenses. But nevertheless each year his
wealth increased more rapidly than he spent it.
And there were certain friends of younger days who came to
him and said: "You, Arkad, are more fortunate than we. You have become the
richest man in all Babylon while we struggle for existence. You can wear the
finest garments and you can enjoy the rarest foods, while we must be content if
we can clothe our families in raiment that is presentable and feed them as best
we can.
"Yet, once we were equal. We studied under the same master.
We played in the same games. And in neither the studies nor the games did you
outshine us. And in the years since, you have been no more an honorable citizen
than we.
"Nor have you worked harder or more faithfully, insofar as
we can judge. Why, then should a fickle fate single you out to enjoy all the
good things of life and ignore us who are equally deserving?"
Thereupon Arkad remonstrated with them, saying, "If you have
not acquired more than a bare existence in the years since we were youths, it
is because you either have failed to learn the laws that govern the building of
wealth, or else you do not observe them.
"’Fickle Fate’ is a vicious goddess who brings no permanent
good to anyone. On the contrary, she brings ruin to almost every man whom she
showers unearned gold. She makes
wanton spenders, who soon dissipate all they receive and are left beset by
overwhelming appetites and desires they have not the ability to gratify. Yet
others who she favors become misers and hoard their wealth, fearing to spend
what they have, knowing they do not possess the ability to replace it. They
further are beset by fear of robbers and doom themselves to lives of emptiness
and secret misery.
"Others there probably are, who can take unearned gold and
add to it and continue to be happy and contented citizens. But so few are they,
I know of them only by hearsay. Think you of the men who have inherited sudden
wealth and see if these things are true or not."
His friends admitted that of the men they knew who had
inherited wealth, these words were true, and they asked him to explain to them
how he had become possessed of so much property, so he continued:
"In my youth I looked about me and saw all the good things
there were to bring happiness and contentment. And I realized that wealth
increased the potency of all these.
"Wealth is a power. With wealth many things are possible.
"One may ornament the home with the richest of furnishings.
"One may sail to distant seas.
"One may feast on the delicacies of far lands.
"One may buy the ornaments of the gold worker and the stone
polisher.
"One may even build mighty temples for the Gods.
"One may do all these things and many others in which there
is delight for the senses and gratification for the soul.
"And, when I realized all this, I declared to myself that I
would claim my share of the good things of life. I would not be one of those
who stands afar off, enviously watching others enjoy. I would not be content to
clothe myself in the cheapest raiment that looked respectable. I would not be
satisfied with the lot of a poor man. On the contrary, I would make myself a
guest at this banquet of good things.
"Being, as you know, the son of a humble merchant, one of a large
family with no hope of an inheritance, and not being endowed, as you have so
frankly said, with superior powers or wisdom, I decided, that if I were to
achieve what I desired, time and study would be required.
"As for time, all men have it in abundance. You, each of
you, have let slip by sufficient time to have made yourselves wealthy. Yet, you
admit, you have nothing to show except your good families, of which you can be
justly proud.
"As for study, did not our wise teacher teach us that
learning was of two kinds: the one kind being the things we learned and knew,
and the other being in the training that taught us how to find out what we did
not know?
"Therefore did I decide to find out how one might accumulate
wealth, and when I had found out, to make this my task to do it well. For, is
it not wise that we should enjoy while we dwell in the brightness of the
sunshine, for sorrows enough shall descend upon us when we depart for the
darkness of the world of spirit?
"I found employment as a scribe in the hall of records, and
long hours each day I labored upon the clay tablets. Week after week, and month
after month, I labored, yet for my earnings I had nought to show. Food and
clothing and penance to the gods, and other things of which I could remember not
what, I absorbed all my earnings. But my determination did not leave me.
"And one day Algamish, the money lender, came to the house
of the city master and ordered a copy of the Ninth Law, and he said to me, ‘I
must have this in two days, and if the task is done by that time, two coppers
will I give to you.’
"So
I labored hard, but the law was long, and when Algamish returned the task was
unfinished. He was angry, and had I been his slave he would have beaten me. But
knowing the city master would not permit him to injure me, I was unafraid, so I
said to him, ‘Algamish, you are a very rich man. Tell me how I may also become
rich, and all night I will carve upon the clay, and when the sun rises, it
shall be completed.’
"He smiled at me and replied, ‘You are a forward knave, but
we will call it a bargain.’
"All that night I carved, though my back pained and the
smell of the wick made my head ache until my eyes could hardly see. But when he
returned at sunup, the tablets were complete.
"’Now,’ I said, ‘tell me what you promised.’
"’You
have fulfilled your part of our bargain, my son,’ he said to me kindly, ‘and I
am ready to fulfill mine. I will tell you these things you wish to know because
I am becoming an old man, and an old tongue loves to wag. And when youth comes
to age for advice he receives the wisdom of years. But too often does youth
think that age knows only the wisdom of days that are gone, and therefore
profits not. But remember this, the sun that shines today is the sun that shone
when your father was born, and will still be shining when your last grandchild
shall pass into the darkness.
"’The thoughts of youth, he continued, ‘are bright lights
that shine forth like the meteors that make brilliant the sky, but the wisdom
of age is like the fixed stars that shine so unchanged that the sailor may
depend upon them to steer his course.
"’Mark you well my words, for if you do not, you will fail
to grasp the truth that I will tell you, and you will think that your night’s
work has been in vain.’
"Then he looked at me shrewdly from under his shaggy brows
and said in a low, forceful tone, ‘I found the road to wealth when I decided
that a part of all I earned was mine to keep. And so will you.’
"’Is that all?’ I asked.
"’That was sufficient to change the heart of a sheep herder
into the heart of a money lender,’ he replied.
"’But all I earn
is mine to keep, is it not?’ I demanded.
"’Far from it,’ he replied. ‘Do you not pay the garment
maker? Do you not pay the sandal maker? Do you not pay for the things you eat?
Can you live in Babylon without spending? What have you show for your earnings
of the past month? What for the past year? Fool! You pay to everyone but
yourself. Dullard, you labor for others. As well be a slave and work for what
your master gives you to eat and wear. If you did keep for yourself on-tenth of
all you earn, how much would you have in ten years?’
"My knowledge of the numbers did not forsake me, and I
answered, ‘As much as I earn in one year.’
"’You speak but half the truth,’ he retorted, ‘Every gold
piece you save is a slave to work for you. Every copper it earns is its child
that also can earn for you. If you would become wealthy, then what you save
must earn, and its children must earn, that all may help to give to you the
abundance you crave.
"’You think I cheat you for your long night’s work,’ he
continued, ‘but I am paying you a thousand times over if you have the
intelligence to grasp the truth I offer you.
"’A part of all you earn is yours to keep. It should be no
less than a tenth, no matter how little you earn. It can be as much more as you
can afford. Pay yourself first. Do not buy from the clothes-maker and the
sandal-maker more than you can pay out of the rest and still have enough for
food and charity and penance to the gods.
"’Wealth, like a tree, grows from a tiny seed. The first
copper you save is the seed from which your tree of wealth shall grow. The
sooner you plant that seed the sooner shall the tree grow. And the more
faithfully you nourish and water that tree with consistent savings, the sooner
may you bask in contentment beneath its shade.’
"So saying, he took his tablets and went away.
"I thought much about what he had said to me, and it seemed
reasonable. So I decided that I would try it. Each time I was paid I took one from
each ten pieces of copper and hid it away. And strange as it may seem, I was no
shorter of funds than before. I noticed little difference as I managed to get
along without it. But often I was tempted, as my hoard began to grow, to spend
it for some of the good things the merchants displayed, brought by camels and
ships from the land of the Phoenicians. But I wisely refrained.
"A twelfth months after Algamish had gone he again returned
and said to me, ‘Son, have you paid yourself not less than one-tenth of all you
have earned for the past year?’
"I answered proudly, ‘Yes, master, I have.’
"’That is good,’ he answered beaming upon me, ‘and what have
you done with it?’
"’I have given it to Azmur, the brick-maker, who told me he
was traveling over the far seas and in Tyre he would buy for me the rare jewels
of the Phoenicians. When he returns we shall sell these at high prices and
divide the earnings.’
"’Every fool must learn,’ he growled, ‘but why trust the
knowledge of a brick-maker about jewels? Would you go to the bread-maker to
inquire about the stars? No, by my tunic, you would go to the astrologer, if
you had power to think. Your savings are gone, youth, you have jerked your
wealth-tree up by the roots. But plant another. Try again. And next time, if you
would have advice about jewels, go to the jewel merchant. If you would know the
truth about sheep, go to the herdsman. Advice is one thing that is freely given
away, but watch that you take only what is worth having. He who takes advice about his savings from one who is inexperienced in
such matters, shall pay with his savings for proofing the falsity of their
opinions.’ Saying this, he went away.
"’And it was as he said. For the Phoenicians are scoundrels
and sold to Azmur worthless bits of glass that looked like gems. But as Algamish
had bid me, I again saved each tenth copper, for I now had formed the habit,
and it was no longer difficult.
"Again, twelve months later, Algamish came to the room of
the scribes and addressed me. ‘What progress have you made since last I saw
you?’
"’I have paid myself faithfully,’ I replied, ‘and my savings
I have entrusted to Agger, the shield-maker, to buy bronze, and each fourth
month he does pay me the rental.’
"’That is good. And what do you do with the rental?’
"’I do have a great feast with honey and fine wine and
spiced cake. Also I have bought me a scarlet tunic. And some day I shall buy me
a young ass upon which to ride.’
"To which Algamish laughed, ‘You do eat the children of your
savings. Then how do you expect them to work for you? And how can they have
children that will also work for you? First get you an army of golden slaves
and then many a rich banquet may you enjoy without regret.’ So saying, he again
went away.
"Nor did I again see him for two years, when he once more
returned, and his face was full of deep lines and his eyes drooped, for he was
becoming a very old man. And he said to me, ‘Arkad, have you yet achieved the
wealth you dreamed of?"’
"And I answered, ‘Not yet all that I desire, but some I have
and it earns more, and its earnings earn more.’
"’And do you still take the advice of brick-makers"’
"’About brick-making they give good advice,’ I retorted.
"’Arkad,’ he continued, ‘you have learned your lessons well.
You first learned to live upon less than you could earn. Next you learned to
seek advice from those who were competent through their own experiences to give
it. And, lastly, you have learned to make gold work for you.
"’You have taught yourself how to acquire money, how to keep
it, and how to use it. Therefore, you
are competent for a responsible position. I am becoming an old man. My sons
think only of spending and give no thought to earning. My interests are great,
and I fear too much for me to look after. If you will go to Nippur and look after
my lands there, I shall make you my partner, and you shall share in my estate.’
"So I went to Nippur and took charge of his holdings, which
were large. And because I was full of ambition and because I had mastered the
three laws of successfully handling wealth, I was enabled to increase greatly
the value of his properties. So I prospered much, and when the spirit of
Algamish departed for the sphere of darkness, I did share in his estate as he
had arranged under the law."
So spoke Arkad, and when he had finished his tale, one of
his friends said, "You were indeed fortunate that Algamish made of you an
heir."
"Fortunate only that I had the desire to prosper before I first met him. For four years
did I not prove my definiteness of purpose by keeping one-tenth of all I
earned? Would you call a fisherman lucky who for years so studied the habits of
the fish so that with each changing wind he could cast his nets about them?
Opportunity is a haughty goddess who wasters no time with those who are
unprepared."
"You had strong will power to keep on after you lost your
first year’s savings. You are unusual in that way," spoke up another.
"Will power!" retorted Arkad. "What nonsense. Do you think
will power gives a man the strength to lift a burden the camel cannot carry, or
to draw a load the oxen cannot budge? Will power is but the unflinching purpose
to carry a task you set for yourself to fulfillment. If I set for myself a
task, be it ever so trifling, I shall see it through. How else shall I have
confidence in myself, to do important things? Should I say to myself, ‘For a
hundred days as I walk across the bridge into the city, I will pick from the
road a pebble and cast it into the stream,’ I would do it. If on the seventh
day I passed by without remembering, I would not say to myself, ‘Tomorrow I
will cast two pebbles which will do as well.’ Instead, I would retrace my steps
and cast the pebble. Nor on the twentieth day would I say to myself, ’Arkad,
this is useless. What does it avail you to cast a pebble every day? Throw in a
handful and be done with it.’ No, I would not say that nor do it. When I set a
task for myself, I complete it. Therefore, I am careful not to start difficult
and impractical tasks, because I love leisure."
And then another friend spoke up and said, "If what you tell
is true, and it does seem as you have said, reasonable, then being so simple,
if all men did it, there would not be enough wealth to go around."
"Wealth grows wherever men exert energy," Arkad replied. "If
a rich man builds him a new palace, is the gold he pays out gone? No, the brick-maker
has part of it, and the laborer has part of it, and the artist has part of it.
And everyone who labors upon the house has part of it. Yet when the palace is
completed, is it not worth all it cost? And is the ground upon which it stands
not worth more because it is there? And is the ground that adjoins it not worth
more because it is there? Wealth grows in magic ways. No man can prophesy the
limit of it. Have not the Phoenicians build great cities on barren coasts with
the wealth that comes from their ships of commerce on the seas?"
"What then do you advise us to do that we also may become
rich?" asked still another of his friends. "The years have passed and we are no
longer young men and we have nothing put by."
"I advise that you take the wisdom of Algamish and say to
yourselves, ‘A part of all I earn is mine to keep.’ Say it in the morning when
you first arise. Say it at noon. Say it at night. Say it each hour of every
day. Say it to yourself until the words stand out like letters of fire across
the sky.
"Impress yourself with the idea. Fill yourself with the
thought. Then take whatever portion seems wise. Let it be not less than
one-tenth and lay it by. Arrange your other expenditures to do this if
necessary. But lay by that portion first. Soon you will realize what a rich
feeling it is to own a treasure upon which you alone have claim. As it grows it
will stimulate you. And new joy of life will thrill you. Greater efforts will
come to you to earn more. For, of your increased earnings, will not the same
percentage be also yours to keep?
"Then learn to make your treasure work for you. Make it your
slave. Make its children and its children’s children work for you.
"Insure an income for your future. Look at the aged and
forget not that in the days to come you also will be numbered among them.
Therefore invest your treasure with greatest caution that it be not lost.
Usurious rates of return are deceitful sirens that sing but to lure the unwary
upon the rocks of loss and remorse.
"Proved also that your family may not want, should the Gods
call you to their realms. For such protection it is always possible to make
provisions with small payments at regular intervals. Therefore the provident
man delays not in expectation of a large sum becoming available for such a wise
purpose.
"Counsel with wise men. See the advice of men whose daily
work is handling money. Let them save you from such an error as I myself made
in entrusting my money to the judgment of Azmur, the brick-maker. A small
return and a safe one is far more desirable than risk.
"Enjoy life while you are here. Do not overstrain or try to
save too much. If one-tenth of all you earn is as much as you can comfortably
keep, be content to keep this portion. Live otherwise according to your income
and let not yourself get niggardly and afraid to spend. Life is good and life
is rich with things worthwhile and things to enjoy."
His friends thanked him and went away. Some were silent
because they had no imagination and could not understand. Some were sarcastic
because they thought that one so rich should divide with old friends not so
fortunate. But some had in their eyes a new light. They realized that Algamish
had come back each time to the room of the scribes because he was watching a
man work his way out of darkness into light. When that man had found the light,
a place awaited him. No one could fill that place until he had for himself
worked out his own understanding, until he was ready for opportunity.
These latter were the ones, who, in the following years,
frequently revisited Arkad, who received them gladly. He counseled with them
and gave them freely of his wisdom as men of broad experience are always glad
to do. And he assisted them in so investing their savings that it would bring
in a good interest with safety and would neither be lost, nor entangled in
investments that paid no dividends.
The turning point in these men’s lives came upon that day
when they realized the truth that had come from Algamish to Arkad and from
Arkad to them.
A Part of All You Earn is Yours To Keep
Chapter 3