“A good name is to be chosen rather than great riches, and favor is better than silver or gold.” – Proverbs 22:1
One morning in April of 1888 Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite,
woke up to read his own obituary. His brother, Ludvig, had died. But a
newspaper reporter mistakenly thought it was
Alfred and carelessly
reported the death of the wrong brother! Anyone would be disturbed under
those circumstances to read their own obituary. However, the headline
was even more disconcerting to Nobel. It read: “The Merchant of Death is
Dead.”
The article called him “The Dynamite King” and stated: “Dr. Alfred Nobel, who became rich by finding ways to kill more people faster than ever before, died yesterday.”
Alfred Nobel was horrified and overwhelmed. For the first time this
great inventor and industrialist who amassed an immense fortune from
explosives saw himself as the world saw him: “The Dynamite King.” Nobel did not want to be remembered as the merchant of death, so he resolved to do something about it.
On November 27, 1895, Alfred Nobel signed his final will and
testament at the Swedish-Norwegian Club in Paris. When Nobel died on
December 10, 1896, it was discovered that according to his will, his
vast wealth was to be used for five annual prizes: physics, chemistry,
physiology or medicine, literature, and peace. The first prizes were
awarded 113 years ago on December 10, 1901.
The prize for peace was to be awarded to the person who “shall
have done the most or the best work for fraternity between nations, for
the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding of
peace congresses.” Just before his death, he confided in a friend, “I want to be remembered for peace, not destruction.”
When Alfred Nobel actually died he held 355 patents, had built
companies and laboratories in over 20 countries and left a nine million
dollar endowment fund to award the prizes. Nobel literally changed his
legacy. Today we remember him for the Nobel peace prize.
While most of us will not leave behind inventions, worldwide success or a 9 million dollars endowment, we are leaving a legacy.
How will you be remembered? What kind of reputation are you building? What legacy are you leaving? Alfred Nobel said, “Every man ought to have the chance to correct his eulogy in midstream and write a new one.” How will your eulogy read?
By John Grant
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