The “Pearson touch”—his knack for success on a grand scale—was much admired. But he had few illusions about how it worked. To his daughter, he wrote: “Dame Fortune is very elusive; the only way is to sketch a fortune which you think you can realize and then go for it baldheaded.” To his son, he added, “Do not hesitate for one second to be in opposition to your colleagues or in overriding their decisions. No business can be a permanent success unless its head is an autocrat—of course the more disguised by the silken glove the better.”