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Politics & Power Quote by W. H. Auden

"The class distinctions proper to a democratic society are not those of rank or money, still less, as is apt to happen when these are abandoned, of race, but of age"

About this Quote

Auden slips a blade under democracy's self-congratulation. If a society claims it has ditched rank and money, it doesn’t float into egalitarian bliss; it just finds a new way to sort people. The line’s pivot - "still less" - is the acid: he treats racial hierarchy not as an aberration outside democracy but as a familiar replacement people reach for when old aristocratic markers lose legitimacy. That parenthetical sting ("as is apt to happen") reads like a weary footnote from someone who’s watched supposedly modern nations reinvent ancient prejudices with better PR.

His real provocation, though, is the last word: "age". It lands with the force of an uncomfortable diagnosis. Age is a distinction that can masquerade as natural rather than political. You can discriminate while claiming you’re merely being "realistic" about experience, energy, maturity, or "the future". In a democracy, where inherited titles are embarrassing and overt plutocracy is at least rhetorically taboo, age becomes a cleaner proxy for authority and exclusion: who gets listened to, who gets hired, who is seen as expendable, who is trusted with power.

Context matters: Auden writes as a 20th-century witness to mass politics, propaganda, and the bureaucratic state - a world where citizenship is equal on paper and stratified in practice. The sentence is shaped like a syllogism, but it behaves like satire: democracy doesn’t abolish hierarchy; it updates it. Age is the hierarchy that can be defended as common sense, right up until it hardens into a caste system with birthday-based borders.

Quote Details

TopicEquality
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APA Style (7th ed.)
Auden, W. H. (2026, January 17). The class distinctions proper to a democratic society are not those of rank or money, still less, as is apt to happen when these are abandoned, of race, but of age. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-class-distinctions-proper-to-a-democratic-66514/

Chicago Style
Auden, W. H. "The class distinctions proper to a democratic society are not those of rank or money, still less, as is apt to happen when these are abandoned, of race, but of age." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-class-distinctions-proper-to-a-democratic-66514/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The class distinctions proper to a democratic society are not those of rank or money, still less, as is apt to happen when these are abandoned, of race, but of age." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-class-distinctions-proper-to-a-democratic-66514/. Accessed 27 Mar. 2026.

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About the Author

W. H. Auden

W. H. Auden (February 21, 1907 - September 29, 1973) was a Poet from England.

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