Alexander Graham Bell — "I have always been a great believer in luck, and I find that the harder I work, …"
I have always been a great believer in luck, and I find that the harder I work, the more I have of it.
I have always been a great believer in luck, and I find that the harder I work, the more I have of it.
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The quote cleverly redefines luck as the byproduct of hard work rather than random fortune. Luck isn't something that happens to you — it's what you generate by staying prepared, persistent, and present. The more effort you put in, the more opportunities you create and recognize. What looks like a lucky break to outsiders is really preparation colliding with circumstance. Work manufactures favorable outcomes; passivity just waits for them.
Bell spent years of grinding laboratory work before transmitting voice over wire in 1876, driven by deep personal ties to hearing loss — his mother and wife were both deaf, fueling his obsession with acoustics and speech. He filed his telephone patent hours ahead of rival Elisha Gray on the same day. That near-simultaneous 'lucky' timing was no accident; it reflected relentless experimentation with assistant Thomas Watson that put Bell in position to win.
Bell worked during America's Gilded Age, when industrialization was remaking society and inventors competed fiercely for patents worth fortunes. The 1870s–1890s celebrated the 'self-made man' — Carnegie, Rockefeller, and Edison embodied the belief that diligence conquered circumstance. Social Darwinism framed success as earned through individual merit. In that climate, reframing luck as the earned reward of hard labor was both culturally resonant and a sharp rebuke to those who attributed great invention to mere chance.
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