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Life & Mortality Quote by Benjamin Franklin

"He that lives upon hope will die fasting"

About this Quote

Franklin doesn’t bother to dress this up in enlightenment optimism; he serves it cold, like a ledger entry. "He that lives upon hope will die fasting" is a proverb with teeth, aimed at a particular American vice before it even had a name: confusing aspiration with sustenance. The sentence is built like a trap. "Lives upon" sounds almost religious, as if hope were daily bread, and then Franklin snaps it shut with the bodily fact of "die fasting". No abstract punishment, no moral thunder - just the quiet certainty of biology.

The intent is practical, even punitive: stop treating the future as a meal plan. Franklin’s political world was full of speculation, debt, and get-rich schemes in the colonies, along with the early stirrings of a culture that prized self-making. He knew how easily "hope" can become a rhetorical alibi for inaction, or for tolerating bad conditions because tomorrow might improve. In that sense, the line is less anti-hope than anti-delay: hope is a spark, not a diet.

Subtextually, it’s also a warning about power. People in charge often sell hope because it costs them nothing; the hungry pay the real price. Franklin’s genius is to translate that dynamic into a blunt physical metaphor: you can’t eat promises. The wit is that it sounds like folk wisdom, but it lands like policy advice - a small sentence arguing for labor, planning, and skepticism toward comforting forecasts.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
SourcePoor Richard's Almanack (Benjamin Franklin) — aphorism: "He that lives upon hope will die fasting." (commonly attributed to Franklin; specific edition/date varies in sources)
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About the Author

Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 - April 17, 1790) was a Politician from USA.

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