"Your expectations opens or closes the doors of your supply, If you expect grand things, and work honestly for them, they will come to you, your supply will correspond with your expectation"
About this Quote
Marden is selling a proto-self-help theology in the brisk language of commerce: “doors,” “supply,” “correspond.” It’s not just optimism; it’s an implied system of exchange where the universe behaves like a well-run storefront, stocking your shelves in proportion to your mindset. That metaphor does a lot of work. It makes aspiration feel managerial and controllable, turning the messy contingencies of class, luck, illness, and discrimination into something that can be audited internally: check your expectations, adjust your output, reap your inventory.
The subtext is moral as much as motivational. Notice the hinge phrase “work honestly.” Marden isn’t endorsing daydreaming; he’s laundering ambition through Protestant respectability. Desire is permitted, even “grand,” as long as it arrives with clean hands and industrious posture. In that way, the quote flatters the reader twice: you’re entitled to want big things, and you’re the kind of person who would earn them the right way. If results don’t materialize, the logic quietly reroutes blame back to the individual: you expected too little, worked incorrectly, or failed the “honesty” test.
Context matters. Writing at the turn of the 20th century, Marden helped shape an American success ethos for a rapidly modernizing economy, where mobility was both a genuine possibility and a convenient myth. His formula comforts a society anxious about churn: if the market feels chaotic, at least the self can be disciplined. The line still survives because it offers a simple bargain in an era that rarely honors bargains: believe, grind, and the world will match your faith.
The subtext is moral as much as motivational. Notice the hinge phrase “work honestly.” Marden isn’t endorsing daydreaming; he’s laundering ambition through Protestant respectability. Desire is permitted, even “grand,” as long as it arrives with clean hands and industrious posture. In that way, the quote flatters the reader twice: you’re entitled to want big things, and you’re the kind of person who would earn them the right way. If results don’t materialize, the logic quietly reroutes blame back to the individual: you expected too little, worked incorrectly, or failed the “honesty” test.
Context matters. Writing at the turn of the 20th century, Marden helped shape an American success ethos for a rapidly modernizing economy, where mobility was both a genuine possibility and a convenient myth. His formula comforts a society anxious about churn: if the market feels chaotic, at least the self can be disciplined. The line still survives because it offers a simple bargain in an era that rarely honors bargains: believe, grind, and the world will match your faith.
Quote Details
| Topic | Success |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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