"Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness"
About this Quote
The subtext is classic early-20th-century American success literature, where capitalism needed an ethical alibi. Hill wrote in an era obsessed with industrial titans and personal uplift, when “making it” risked looking predatory. So the sentence rehabilitates striving by laundering it through sacrifice: long hours become virtue, risk becomes character, and the costs borne by families, bodies, and time get recast as the price of greatness rather than a set of choices with winners and losers.
It also performs a subtle rhetorical trick: it collapses selfishness into failure. If you achieve something and people resent how you did it, Hill offers an interpretation that protects both the achiever and the system. Either you didn’t really achieve, or you weren’t really selfish. That’s comforting, clean, and culturally sticky - especially in a society that rewards outsized ambition but wants to believe it’s still fundamentally fair.
Quote Details
| Topic | Success |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Law of Success in Sixteen Lessons (Napoleon Hill, 1928)
Evidence: GREAT ACHIEVE- MENT IS USUALLY BORN OF GREAT SACRIFICE, AND IS NEVER THE RESULT OF SELFISHNESS. (Lesson Six: Imagination (p. 82 in the scanned/flipbook pagination)). I located this sentence in a 1928 copyrighted text of Napoleon Hill’s The Law of Success in Sixteen Lessons, within Lesson Six ("Imagination"). In the copy I found, the line appears as a standalone, all-caps display statement on the page labeled “- 82 -” (the text itself is line-broken with a hyphen in “ACHIEVE-MENT”). This provides a primary-source match for the wording. However, this does NOT prove this was the *first* time Hill used the line. Multiple bibliographic summaries indicate The Law of Success material circulated earlier (e.g., as earlier lesson booklets / a correspondence course / earlier releases), and some sources claim a 1925 version exists; I did not find a verifiable, viewable 1925 primary text containing this exact line during this search session. Therefore I can verify a primary publication in 1928, but I cannot yet confirm whether 1928 is the first appearance. Other candidates (1) Great Thinkers Great Thoughts (Tejgyan Global Foundation, 2015) compilation95.0% ... Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice , and is never the result of selfishness . - Napoleon Hill 9... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hill, Napoleon. (2026, February 9). Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/great-achievement-is-usually-born-of-great-993/
Chicago Style
Hill, Napoleon. "Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/great-achievement-is-usually-born-of-great-993/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Great achievement is usually born of great sacrifice, and is never the result of selfishness." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/great-achievement-is-usually-born-of-great-993/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.














