"Men who are resolved to find a way for themselves will always find opportunities enough; and if they do not find them, they will make them"
About this Quote
Smiles is selling something sturdier than optimism: a moral theory of agency. The line turns “opportunity” from a scarce external resource into a byproduct of character. “Resolved” is the hinge word; it frames success as a prior act of will, not a lucky collision with circumstance. The promise is bracing and slightly prosecutorial: if you’re truly determined, the world will yield; if it doesn’t, you’ll force it to. That second clause is the Victorian self-help mic drop, recasting constraints as raw material for ingenuity.
The subtext is less inspirational poster, more social blueprint. Smiles wrote in the mid-19th century, when industrial Britain was reorganizing work, class mobility, and the mythology of merit. His message flatters an emerging middle-class ethic: discipline and initiative aren’t just useful, they’re righteous. In that frame, “making” opportunities isn’t merely entrepreneurship; it’s a kind of moral self-authorship. The quote reassures readers that the chaos of industrial change can be tamed by personal resolve, and it quietly instructs them to blame themselves when they can’t.
That’s also where the line’s power and its blind spot meet. It motivates by collapsing the distance between intention and outcome, offering a clean narrative in an era of messy structural realities. Smiles isn’t naive; he’s strategic. By elevating grit to destiny, he builds a portable religion of effort - one that comforts, disciplines, and, conveniently, justifies the new order’s winners.
The subtext is less inspirational poster, more social blueprint. Smiles wrote in the mid-19th century, when industrial Britain was reorganizing work, class mobility, and the mythology of merit. His message flatters an emerging middle-class ethic: discipline and initiative aren’t just useful, they’re righteous. In that frame, “making” opportunities isn’t merely entrepreneurship; it’s a kind of moral self-authorship. The quote reassures readers that the chaos of industrial change can be tamed by personal resolve, and it quietly instructs them to blame themselves when they can’t.
That’s also where the line’s power and its blind spot meet. It motivates by collapsing the distance between intention and outcome, offering a clean narrative in an era of messy structural realities. Smiles isn’t naive; he’s strategic. By elevating grit to destiny, he builds a portable religion of effort - one that comforts, disciplines, and, conveniently, justifies the new order’s winners.
Quote Details
| Topic | Never Give Up |
|---|---|
| Source | Self-Help: with Illustrations of Character and Conduct — Samuel Smiles, 1859. |
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