"Human felicity is produced not as much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen as by little advantages that occur every day"
About this Quote
The subtext is Franklin’s lifelong project: demystify virtue by making it practical. Happiness here isn’t a private mood so much as a civic technology. A person trained to notice and accumulate small benefits - time saved, habits improved, quarrels avoided, pennies not wasted - becomes steadier, less desperate, less easily swayed by demagogues or dazzled by spectacle. That’s an Enlightenment argument disguised as self-help.
Context matters. Franklin’s America was a place where catastrophe was common and security was not. In that environment, betting your life on “great fortune” isn’t romantic; it’s reckless. He’s also speaking as a politician and public communicator who understood incentives. If citizens believe well-being comes from jackpots, they’ll chase patronage and gamble on patrons. If they believe it comes from daily “advantages,” they’ll build systems: libraries, fire brigades, savings, schedules. The wit is that it sounds modest while smuggling in an entire worldview: happiness is engineered, not granted.
Quote Details
| Topic | Happiness |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (Benjamin Franklin, 1791)
Evidence: Human felicity is produc'd not so much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen, as by little advantages that occur every day. (Part Three (often printed as Part III / Section 13; exact pagination varies by edition)). This line appears in Franklin’s Autobiography in the section discussing street-cleaning and small practical improvements (followed immediately by the example about teaching a poor young man to shave himself and keep his razor in order). While Franklin wrote this portion earlier (the Autobiography was composed in stages), the earliest generally cited first publication of the Autobiography material containing this sentence is in posthumous editions that began appearing in 1791. Because edition history is complex and early printings differ (and some were incomplete/translated), pinning down the single first printing and exact page number requires consulting a specific 1791 printing/scan; the Project Gutenberg text confirms the wording but is not itself the first publication. Other candidates (1) Legendary Quotes of Benjamin Franklin (Sreechinth C) compilation97.7% ... Human felicity is produced not as much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen as by little advantages... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Franklin, Benjamin. (2026, February 15). Human felicity is produced not as much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen as by little advantages that occur every day. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/human-felicity-is-produced-not-as-much-by-great-42092/
Chicago Style
Franklin, Benjamin. "Human felicity is produced not as much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen as by little advantages that occur every day." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/human-felicity-is-produced-not-as-much-by-great-42092/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Human felicity is produced not as much by great pieces of good fortune that seldom happen as by little advantages that occur every day." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/human-felicity-is-produced-not-as-much-by-great-42092/. Accessed 18 Feb. 2026.














