“ The law of nature is, Do the thing, and you shall have the power: but they who do not the thing have not the power. ”
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Compensation (1841). copy citation
Author | Ralph Waldo Emerson |
---|---|
Source | Compensation |
Topic | power law |
Date | 1841 |
Language | English |
Reference | in "Essays: First Series" |
Note | |
Weblink | https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Essays:_First_Series/Compensation |
Context
“These ends of labor cannot be answered but by real exertions of the mind, and in obedience to pure motives. The cheat, the defaulter, the gambler, cannot extort the knowledge of material and moral nature which his honest care and pains yield to the operative. The law of nature is, Do the thing, and you shall have the power: but they who do not the thing have not the power.
Human labor, through all its forms, from the sharpening of a stake to the construction of a city or an epic, is one immense illustration of the perfect compensation of the universe. The absolute balance of Give and Take, the doctrine that every thing has its price, — and if that price is not paid, not that thing but something else is obtained, and that it is impossible to get any thing without its price, — is not less sublime in the columns of a leger than in the budgets of states, in the laws of light and darkness, in all the action and reaction of nature.”
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