A man that can succeed in working is to me always a man.
 Thomas Carlyle, Past and Present (1843). copy citation

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Author Thomas Carlyle
Source Past and Present
Topic
Date 1843
Language English
Reference
Note
Weblink http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/13534/pg13534-images.html

Context

“by not following Nature's regulations, you have them not. You have them not;—there is no Cotton-web to sell: Nature finds a bill against you; your 'Strength' is not Strength, but Futility! Let faculty be honoured, so far as it is faculty. A man that can succeed in working is to me always a man. How one loves to see the burly figure of him, this thick-skinned, seemingly opaque, perhaps sulky, almost stupid Man of Practice, pitted against some light—adroit Man of Theory, all equipt with clear logic, and able anywhere to give you Why for Wherefore!” source