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NAPOLEON HILL'S GOLDEN RULES | FULL BOOK | PDF DOWNLOAD ||


 


TABLE OF CONTENT:

FOREWORD DON M. GREEN v
PREFACE ix
Lesson #1: Your Social and Physical Heredity 1
Lesson #2: Auto-Suggestion 7
Lesson #3: Suggestion 27
Lesson #4: The Law of Retaliation 51
Lesson #5: The Power of Your Mind 69
Lesson #6: How to Build Self-Confidence 81
Lesson #7: Environment and Habit 95
Lesson #8: How to Remember 121
Lesson #9: How Mark Antony Used Suggestion in
Winning the Roman Mob 147
Lesson #10: Persuasion versus Force 161
Lesson #11: The Law of Compensation 187
Lesson #12: The Golden Rule as a Passkey to
All Achievement 199

Foreword
P erhaps you are like millions the world over who have read
Napoleon Hill’s writings and have profited from them.
Whether you are a follower of Hill’s teaching or this is your first
encounter with his writing, you will benefit from these lessons on
human potential.
The sources of the book you have in your hands are magazines Hill
published over eighty years ago. Hill’s Golden Rule Magazine and Hill’s
Magazine were published for several years before his first book
appeared. Hill’s lessons are a series of writings on human potential.
The remote mountains of Wise County, Virginia, where Hill was
born in 1883, did not provide a lot of opportunities for a boy being
raised in poverty. Hill’s mother died when he was ten years old, and
his father married again a year later. Napoleon’s new stepmother was
to be a blessing to the young boy. Martha was a young widow who was
educated, the daughter of a doctor; she took a liking to her highly
energized stepson, who was often involved in mischievous deeds.
The newest member of the Hill household was a source of encour-
agement that lasted a lifetime. Later in life, Hill credited his step-
mother in a manner similar to the way Abraham Lincoln, the
sixteenth President of the United States, credited his, when he
once remarked that ‘‘whatever I am or ever aspire to be I owe to
that dear woman.’’ By the age of thirteen, with the help of his
stepmother, he had traded a pistol for a typewriter. A series of articles
would encourage his pursuit of a profession in writing.



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