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Wealth & Money Quote by Alexander Smith

"A man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor"

About this Quote

Memory is a ruthless kind of wealth: it can’t be inherited, audited, or safely stored, yet it decides who gets to feel “rich” when the lights go out. Alexander Smith’s line works because it steals the language of property and turns it inward. “Real possession” sounds like deeds and accounts, but he immediately narrows the estate to something you can’t sell and can’t fully control. The sly austerity of “In nothing else” repeats like a gavel, flattening every other measure of value.

Smith wrote in a 19th-century Britain obsessed with accumulation and status, when industrial capitalism was rapidly reorganizing daily life and class identity. Against that backdrop, this is both consolation and indictment. Consolation: if you have little in the world’s terms, your lived experience still counts; you can be internally affluent. Indictment: the “rich” are not protected from poverty of the spirit if their inner archive is barren, repressed, or simply unexamined.

The subtext is also uneasy. Memory is not a neutral bank; it’s selective, haunted, prone to revision. If memory is the only true property, then loss, trauma, and forgetting become forms of dispossession. Smith is quietly raising the stakes on interior life: your moral and emotional net worth depends on what you carry, what you can bear to remember, and what you refuse to. In that sense, the quote reads less like sentiment and more like a hard standard for living.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Later attribution: The Complete Works of William Walker Atkinson (Unabridged) (William Walker Atkinson, 2024) modern compilation
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Alexander Smith has said: "A man's real possession is his memory; in nothing else is he rich; in nothing else is he poor." Richter has said: "Memory is the only paradise from which we cannot be driven away. Grant but memory to us, and ...
Other candidates (2)
A summer in Skye (Smith, Alexander, 1830?-1867, 1912) primary41.4%
on the present occasion but there is a knack in de scending hills as there is in everything else first of all i
Alexander Smith (Alexander Smith) compilation33.9%
y bradbury the man who in this world can keep the whiteness of his soul is not likely to lose it in any other dr
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Smith, Alexander. (2026, February 7). A man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-real-possession-is-his-memory-in-nothing-20966/

Chicago Style
Smith, Alexander. "A man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-real-possession-is-his-memory-in-nothing-20966/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A man's real possession is his memory. In nothing else is he rich, in nothing else is he poor." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-real-possession-is-his-memory-in-nothing-20966/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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A mans real possession is his memory, nothing else is rich
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About the Author

Alexander Smith

Alexander Smith (December 31, 1830 - January 5, 1867) was a Poet from Scotland.

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