According to Russell Conwell's speech "Acres of Diamonds," wealth is accessible to you no matter who or where you are. The term acres of diamonds doesn't literally refer to acres of diamonds, but is a metaphor used to express the belief that opportunities are endless if you just use your resources. You should also be reasonably ambitious to attain your goals. A man's ambition to attain wealth helps to make him a good man. Opportunities surround us in our everyday lives. It's just a matter of being honest, trustworthy, and hard working. Conwell says "Now then, I say again that the opportunity to get rich, to attain unto great wealth, is here in Philadelphia now, within the reach of almost every man and woman who hears me speak tonight, and I mean just what I say." Conwell feels that if he shares his point of view and experiences, everyone has the opportunity to attain unto great wealth. During Conwell's speech, he shares many stories to try to prove his position. An old guide once told Conwell the story of a Persian man by the name of Ali Hafed, whose story he saves for his particular friends. An old priest tells Hafed the value of a diamond and that diamonds can be found in the river that runs through white sand between two high mountains. The Persian sells his farm, leaves his family in the care of a neighbor, and travels the world in search of the diamonds. In the end, Hafed faces death in a strange land all in search of the diamonds that had been in his own back yard the entire time. The man who bought Hafeds farm was the one who profited from them in the end. The moral of this story is that anyone has the opportunity to become wealthy if they use their resources.Conwell then retold the story he told to the guide, a similar story of a man from California who had a love for gold. He heard that there had been gold found in the South and to the South he went. Like Hafed, this man sold his ranch and the man who bought...