"Anger is never without a reason, but seldom with a good one"
About this Quote
Franklin’s line lands like a moral skewer: it grants anger its dignity, then quietly pulls the chair out from under it. “Never without a reason” sounds like validation, a nod to the lived reality that outrage usually has a trigger - insult, injustice, fear. But the second clause, “seldom with a good one,” is where the Enlightenment pragmatist shows his hand. He’s not denying causes; he’s interrogating quality. Anger may be explainable, even predictable, yet still a poor guide for action.
The subtext is political as much as personal. Franklin helped engineer coalitions, manage rivalries, and keep a fractious revolutionary project from splintering. In that world, anger was plentiful and often useful as fuel, but disastrous as strategy. The quote reads like advice to citizens and statesmen: don’t confuse being provoked with being right. “Reason” can mean justification in a courtroom sense; “good” smuggles in ethics and long-term consequence. You can win an argument, torch a relationship, and still be wrong in the only way that matters.
Rhetorically, the sentence is built to be remembered and repeated: a clean antithesis, almost symmetrical, with the pivot on “but.” Franklin’s genius was making self-government sound like self-management. He frames anger as an understandable impulse that becomes suspect the moment it starts steering the ship. That’s not softness; it’s an early warning about how easily righteous heat turns into bad decisions, and how quickly public passions can be recruited by people with terrible aims.
The subtext is political as much as personal. Franklin helped engineer coalitions, manage rivalries, and keep a fractious revolutionary project from splintering. In that world, anger was plentiful and often useful as fuel, but disastrous as strategy. The quote reads like advice to citizens and statesmen: don’t confuse being provoked with being right. “Reason” can mean justification in a courtroom sense; “good” smuggles in ethics and long-term consequence. You can win an argument, torch a relationship, and still be wrong in the only way that matters.
Rhetorically, the sentence is built to be remembered and repeated: a clean antithesis, almost symmetrical, with the pivot on “but.” Franklin’s genius was making self-government sound like self-management. He frames anger as an understandable impulse that becomes suspect the moment it starts steering the ship. That’s not softness; it’s an early warning about how easily righteous heat turns into bad decisions, and how quickly public passions can be recruited by people with terrible aims.
Quote Details
| Topic | Anger |
|---|---|
| Source | Attributed to Benjamin Franklin; commonly cited in collections of his maxims. See Wikiquote entry for Benjamin Franklin (contains this proverb). |
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