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The Midas Touch

 

 

The term “Midas touch” is used to refer to an ability to make anything potentially profitable, allowing people to make and manage large amounts of money. People often use it enviously, declaring that someone has a Midas touch which allows him or her to succeed where others fail. In fact, most people with such abilities work very hard for them, and they may have suffered their fair share of failures before they developed their keen business sense.

The Midas touch is named for a legendary Greek king. Midas actually did exist, as ample historical evidence shows, although it is unlikely that he was actually able to turn things into gold. The desire to be able to turn things into gold is ancient; the entire discipline of alchemy was founded around the idea that it was theoretically possible to “transmute” various base metals into gold, for example, and the desire for gold in some form or another persists in many modern human societies.

According to legend, when Dionysus approached Midas and offered him any boon, the king requested the ability to turn things into gold. Dionysus duly made it so, and at first the king was delighted with the fact that everything he touched turned to gold. The blessing quickly turned out to be a curse, however, as Midas found himself dying of starvation because the food and drink he touched also turned into gold, and in some versions of the story he also turned his own daughter into a gold statue.

Midas came back to Dionysus, and begged him to revoke the gift. The king was informed that he could bathe in a particular river to get rid of his magical touch, which he duly did. In many stories, he goes on to abhor wealth, living a life of extreme asceticism. The original fable about the Midas touch was probably a cautionary tale about greed, pointing out that greed can swallow everything you love, leaving you with no happiness.

In the modern world, anyone who does remarkably well, especially in a challenging field like the stock market, may be said to have a Midas touch. While a touch of envy is involved, the term is also used with a note of caution; when someone has a “Midas touch,” people may wonder how he or she got there, and whether happiness has come with the wealth.

 

 


Date: 2015-04-20; view: 1021


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