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Politics & Power Quote by Oscar Wilde

"In America the young are always ready to give to those who are older than themselves the full benefits of their inexperience"

About this Quote

Wilde lands the punch with a mock-generous phrase: "the full benefits". It sounds like a civic virtue, the kind of praise you might offer in a toast. Then he flips it. The "benefits" are not wisdom or renewal but the costly, comic gift of naivete, freely bestowed on elders who should know better. The joke isn’t simply that young people are inexperienced; it’s that age happily launders its own interests through youth’s certainty.

The line carries an immigrant’s side-eye. Wilde spent his last, crucially formative American tour watching a country mythologize itself as new, pragmatic, unburdened by European decay. He needles that self-image by suggesting American youthfulness is less a promise than a political resource. Older people - the establishment, the gatekeepers, the salesmen of progress - rely on the young to mistake novelty for virtue and confidence for competence. Youth becomes a renewable energy source for bad ideas: ready enthusiasm, short memory, high moral volume.

There’s a deeper cynicism tucked into the syntax. "Always ready" implies reflex, not thought; "give" implies generosity, not manipulation. Wilde’s subtext is that the transaction feels voluntary because it flatters the young. They get to feel like disruptors even as they’re recruited into someone else’s script. It’s a one-liner that doubles as a warning label: beware the way power co-opts innocence by calling it hope.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: The American Invasion (Oscar Wilde, 1887)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
In America the young are always ready to give to those who are older than themselves the full benefits of their inexperience. (pp. 270–271 (Vol. IV, No. 142; March 23, 1887)). This line appears in an essay titled “The American Invasion,” published in The Court and Society Review (Vol. IV, No. 142) dated March 23, 1887, on pp. 270–271. The piece was originally published anonymously (i.e., not credited to Wilde in the magazine issue), but it is widely treated in Wilde bibliographies as Wilde’s work; it was later reprinted under his name in the 1908 collected volume Miscellanies (edited by Robert Ross) with an editorial headnote stating “(Court and Society Review, March 23, 1887.)”. Because the earliest appearance was anonymous, the attribution to Wilde is supported indirectly (bibliography/editorial tradition) rather than by an explicit byline in the first printing.
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wilde, Oscar. (2026, February 8). In America the young are always ready to give to those who are older than themselves the full benefits of their inexperience. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-america-the-young-are-always-ready-to-give-to-35704/

Chicago Style
Wilde, Oscar. "In America the young are always ready to give to those who are older than themselves the full benefits of their inexperience." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-america-the-young-are-always-ready-to-give-to-35704/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"In America the young are always ready to give to those who are older than themselves the full benefits of their inexperience." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/in-america-the-young-are-always-ready-to-give-to-35704/. Accessed 10 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Oscar Wilde

Oscar Wilde (October 16, 1854 - November 30, 1900) was a Dramatist from Ireland.

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