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Life & Wisdom Quote by Jonathan Swift

"Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches as to conceive how others can be in want"

About this Quote

Wealth doesn not just buy comfort; it buys a kind of blindness, and Swift skewers it with the calm cruelty of a surgeon. The line is built on an inversion: the poor have to understand the rich to survive (their rules, their prices, their whims), but the rich can afford not to understand the poor at all. "Conceive" is the tell. Swift isnt talking about generosity or policy yet; he is talking about imagination as a moral faculty. The scandal is that abundance can shrink the mind.

The subtext is less "rich people are mean" than "rich people are structurally incapable of grasping deprivation unless forced". Want becomes not a fact but an alien condition, something that requires an effort of conceptual translation. Swift frames that effort as "hard" precisely because the rich are insulated from the daily proofs of scarcity: the missed meals, the unpaid rents, the small humiliations that make poverty legible to those living it.

Context matters: Swift wrote amid Britains rising commercial wealth, brutal class stratification, and an Ireland ground down by colonial extraction and famine risk. In that world, elite incomprehension wasnt an accident; it was a feature of a system that kept suffering out of sight and then treated it as a moral failure when it did appear.

Like much of Swift, the wit is weaponized understatement. He doesnt thunder; he diagnoses. The sentence lands because it turns empathy into a class privilege problem: if you never need to imagine want, you probably wont.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
Source
Verified source: A Preface to the Bishop of Sarum's Introduction (Reformat... (Jonathan Swift, 1713)
Text match: 99.74%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
But nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches, as to conceive how others can be in want. (Page 38 (as referenced in the tract; quote appears in the Preface text)). This sentence appears in Jonathan Swift's polemical piece commonly cited as “A Preface to the Bishop of Sarum’s Introduction to the Third Volume of the History of the Reformation of the Church of England” (dated 8 December 1713 in many reference lists). In Project Gutenberg’s Temple Scott edition of Swift’s Prose Works ("Swift's Writings on Religion and the Church , Volume 1"), the line occurs in the Preface text during a discussion of poor clergy incomes versus the Bishop’s wealth (see around the passage beginning with discussion of tithes and clerical poverty; the quote appears verbatim there).
Other candidates (1)
The Prose Works of Jonathan Swift: Writings on religion &... (Jonathan Swift, 1898) compilation95.0%
... nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches , as to conceive how others can be in want . How can the neigh-...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Swift, Jonathan. (2026, February 15). Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches as to conceive how others can be in want. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-is-so-hard-for-those-who-abound-in-riches-61590/

Chicago Style
Swift, Jonathan. "Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches as to conceive how others can be in want." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-is-so-hard-for-those-who-abound-in-riches-61590/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Nothing is so hard for those who abound in riches as to conceive how others can be in want." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/nothing-is-so-hard-for-those-who-abound-in-riches-61590/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Jonathan Add to List
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About the Author

Jonathan Swift

Jonathan Swift (November 30, 1667 - October 19, 1745) was a Writer from Ireland.

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