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Life & Wisdom Quote by Kahlil Gibran

"I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, with visions to be realized, than lord among those without dreams and desires"

About this Quote

Gibran rigs the choice so that status looks not just hollow but faintly embarrassing. “Lord among those without dreams and desires” isn’t merely a bad bargain; it’s a kind of spiritual demotion, a crown earned in a kingdom of the sleepwalking. The line flatters the reader into siding with the “dreamer,” yet the real engine is his quiet contempt for prestige when it isn’t tethered to inner life.

The phrasing does double duty. “Dreamer among the humblest” signals solidarity with ordinary people, but it’s not the humility of self-erasure; it’s the humility of proximity, choosing to stand where life is still raw and unfinished. “Visions to be realized” keeps the sentiment from drifting into soft focus. He’s not praising escapism. He’s pitching imagination as a form of labor: dreams have to be built, not merely admired.

Subtextually, Gibran is defending the outsider’s dignity. Immigrants, artists, and anyone living slightly out of step with the social script recognize the moral of the trade: you can be socially minor and existentially rich. That tracks with Gibran’s broader project in The Prophet-era writing, where spiritual authority comes from inward clarity rather than institutions. The quote also reads as a rebuke to the early 20th-century appetite for rank, respectability, and “proper” ambition. He reframes ambition away from climbing over people and toward becoming someone capable of desire. In Gibran’s hands, dreaming isn’t naïve; it’s the only sane refusal to let other people’s ceilings become your sky.

Quote Details

TopicHumility
Source
Later attribution: Top Inspiring Thoughts of Kahlil Gibran (M.D. Sharma, 2021) modern compilationID: b6QFEAAAQBAJ
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest , with visions to be realized , than lord among those without dreams and desires . 33. I said to Life , I would hear Death speak . And Life raised her voice a little higher and said , you hear ...
Other candidates (1)
Sand and Foam (Kahlil Gibran, 1926)50.0%
I would be the least among men with dreams and the desire to fulfill them, rather than the greatest with no dreams an...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Gibran, Kahlil. (2026, February 28). I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, with visions to be realized, than lord among those without dreams and desires. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-prefer-to-be-a-dreamer-among-the-humblest-with-17072/

Chicago Style
Gibran, Kahlil. "I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, with visions to be realized, than lord among those without dreams and desires." FixQuotes. February 28, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-prefer-to-be-a-dreamer-among-the-humblest-with-17072/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, with visions to be realized, than lord among those without dreams and desires." FixQuotes, 28 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-prefer-to-be-a-dreamer-among-the-humblest-with-17072/. Accessed 28 Mar. 2026.

More Quotes by Kahlil Add to List
Gibran on Dreamers and Humility
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About the Author

Kahlil Gibran

Kahlil Gibran (January 6, 1883 - April 10, 1931) was a Poet from Lebanon.

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