WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Thrift cover

Thrift

Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The author presents thrift as the practical foundation of independence and social improvement, showing how industry, prudent spending, and saving develop virtues like self-reliance, honesty, and generosity. He analyzes causes of improvidence and the obstacles of idleness, vanity, and intemperance, then outlines practical means of saving — life assurance, savings banks, penny and mechanics' banks, cooperative societies, building associations — and methods such as keeping accounts and collective organisation. Case studies of frugal individuals, employers, and community institutions illustrate how forethought, self-denial, and employer–worker cooperation reduce poverty, discourage drink and extravagance, and promote steadiness, dignity, and wider social wellbeing.

About the Author

Smiles, Samuel portrait

Samuel Smiles

Samuel Smiles was a Scottish author and social reformer, best known for his influential work "Self Help," which emphasizes the importance of personal responsibility and perseverance. Born in 1812, Smiles wrote extensively on the lives of notable figures in industry and engineering, contributing significantly to the literature of the Victorian era. His biographies, such as "Lives of Boulton and Watt" and "The Life of George Stephenson," highlight the achievements of inventors and industrialists, reflecting his interest in the progress of technology and society. Smiles' writings continue to inspire readers with their themes of self-improvement and industriousness.

More Books by This Author

You May Also Like