"Take time for all things: great haste makes great waste"
About this Quote
Franklin doesn’t romanticize leisure here; he weaponizes it. “Take time for all things” reads like kindly, homespun counsel, but the line is really a Protestant work ethic with a ledger attached. The warning that “great haste makes great waste” isn’t about moving slowly for its own sake. It’s about efficiency, risk management, and the hidden costs of impatience - the errors, repairs, and reputational dents that turn speed into a net loss.
The phrasing is classic Franklin: symmetrical, portable, built to be repeated at a workbench or in a council chamber. “Great” does double duty, intensifying both haste and waste and implying a moral proportionality: the bigger your rush, the bigger your penalty. There’s subtextual discipline in that balance. Franklin is telling an ambitious society - merchants, printers, civic builders - that self-control is not just virtuous but profitable.
Context matters. Franklin’s America was improvisational: a colonial economy hungry for growth, political institutions still under construction, and a public sphere where credibility was currency. Franklin, a printer turned statesman, lived by deadlines and logistics. He’d seen how rushed decisions in commerce and governance cascade into larger crises. The line flatters the reader into adulthood: manage your time, and you manage your outcomes.
It’s also quietly democratic. You don’t need aristocratic pedigree to avoid “waste”; you need habits. Franklin’s genius is making prudence feel like common sense while smuggling in a whole philosophy of civic responsibility.
The phrasing is classic Franklin: symmetrical, portable, built to be repeated at a workbench or in a council chamber. “Great” does double duty, intensifying both haste and waste and implying a moral proportionality: the bigger your rush, the bigger your penalty. There’s subtextual discipline in that balance. Franklin is telling an ambitious society - merchants, printers, civic builders - that self-control is not just virtuous but profitable.
Context matters. Franklin’s America was improvisational: a colonial economy hungry for growth, political institutions still under construction, and a public sphere where credibility was currency. Franklin, a printer turned statesman, lived by deadlines and logistics. He’d seen how rushed decisions in commerce and governance cascade into larger crises. The line flatters the reader into adulthood: manage your time, and you manage your outcomes.
It’s also quietly democratic. You don’t need aristocratic pedigree to avoid “waste”; you need habits. Franklin’s genius is making prudence feel like common sense while smuggling in a whole philosophy of civic responsibility.
Quote Details
| Topic | Time |
|---|---|
| Source | Benjamin Franklin — "Take time for all things; great haste makes great waste." Commonly attributed to Franklin in Poor Richard's Almanack (aphorism; specific edition/page not cited). |
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