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Daily Inspiration Quote by Charles Lamb

"Riches are chiefly good because they give us time"

About this Quote

A neat Victorian heresy hides in Lamb's line: money isn't morally suspect or spiritually ennobling; it's just a lever on the clock. "Riches are chiefly good" reads almost like a reluctant concession from a writer-critic who knows how easily wealth curdles into vanity. The sting is in "chiefly". Lamb strips riches of their usual alibis (status, security, taste) and reduces them to one brutal advantage: they buy time away from necessity.

The intent is less celebratory than diagnostic. In a culture beginning to industrialize its hours, Lamb identifies the real class divide as control over one's day. Time is the scarce resource that makes reading, thinking, making art, or even simply being idle possible. Riches, in this view, are valuable not because they add pleasures but because they subtract obligations. The subtext is a quiet indictment: if money's best feature is the freedom to be unbiddable, then poverty isn't just lack of comfort; it's a regime of enforced attention, where your minutes belong to someone else.

Context matters. Lamb wrote as a London man of letters living in the wake of the Enlightenment and into the churn of early capitalism, when "improvement" increasingly meant monetizing every interval. His own life, marked by office work and family caretaking, makes the observation feel earned rather than theoretical. The sentence works because it's plainspoken but radical: it doesn't romanticize labor or demonize wealth; it reframes both around autonomy, the most modern of desires.

Quote Details

TopicWealth
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Riches are Chiefly Good Because They Give Us Time
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About the Author

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Charles Lamb (February 10, 1775 - July 27, 1834) was a Critic from England.

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