Encouragement
Some of the greatest success stories of history have followed a word
of encouragement or an act of confidence by a loved one or a trusting friend.
Had it not been for a confident wife, Sophia, we might not have listed
among the great names of literature the name of Nathaniel Hawthorne. When
Nathaniel, a heartbroken man, went home to tell his wife that he was a
failure and had been fired from his job in a customhouse, she surprised
him with an exclamation of joy.
"Now," she said triumphantly, "you can write your book!"
"Yes," replied the man, with sagging confidence, "and what shall we
live on while I am writing it?"
To his amazement, she opened a drawer and pulled out a substantial amount
of money. "Where on earth did you get that?" he exclaimed.
"I have always known you were a man of genius," she told him. "I knew
that someday you would write a masterpiece. So every week, out of the money
you gave me for housekeeping, I saved a little bit. So here is enough to
last us for one whole year."
From her trust and confidence came one of the greatest novels of American
literature, The Scarlet Letter.