The Strenuous Life
Theodore Roosevelt
Roosevelt's conviction runs against the grain of comfort culture. At the dawn of the 20th century, the U.S. was riding high on industrial advancement and economic prosperity, but Roosevelt saw the danger in complacency. To him, the real dishonor lay not in the attempt that ends in failure, but in the paralysis of inaction. His call to action speaks against the backdrop of a nation becoming increasingly comfortable, urging it to embrace the productive struggle as a core virtue.