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Daily Inspiration Quote by William Penn

"Time is what we want most, but what we use worst"

About this Quote

A Quaker leader warning against squandered hours lands differently than the same line from a self-help influencer. Penn lived in an age when time was not an abstract productivity hack but a moral ledger: days measured by labor, worship, and the precariousness of health, travel, and political favor. The sentence reads like a compact sermon, built to sting. Its power comes from the tight antithesis - want most / use worst - a rhetorical trap that makes the listener indict themselves. You can almost hear the pause after "most", the pivot into accusation.

Penn's intent is disciplinary, but not merely personal. As a founder of Pennsylvania and a figure navigating persecution, prisons, and the ethics of governance, he is talking to a community trying to live deliberately under pressure. "Time" becomes shorthand for stewardship: not just scheduling, but accountability to God, neighbors, and one's own stated principles. The subtext is that desire is cheap. Everyone claims to value time, yet our behavior reveals what we actually worship: comfort, distraction, status, petty quarrels.

The line also smuggles in a political ethic. A leader insisting that time is misused is implicitly critiquing frivolous authorities and complacent citizens alike. In Penn's world, wasted time isn't a vibe; it's complicity. The quote works because it refuses to flatter. It names a human contradiction that still holds: we treat the scarcest resource as if it's renewable, then act surprised when life collects its debts.

Quote Details

TopicTime
Source
Verified source: Fruits of Solitude (William Penn, 1693)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Time is what we want most, but what, alas! we use worst; and for which God will certainly most strictly reckon with us, when Time shall be no more. (Preface; Harvard Classics Vol. 1 p. 333 (Wikisource scan)). This line appears in the Preface to William Penn’s work commonly titled “Fruits of Solitude” / “Some Fruits of Solitude in Reflections and Maxims.” The shortened modern form (“Time is what we want most, but what we use worst”) omits Penn’s “alas!” and the following religious clause. The Wikisource page shown is a scan/transcription from the 1909 Harvard Classics (Vol. 1) edition, where this sentence is on p. 333, but the earliest publication is in Penn’s own book, first published in the 1690s (often cataloged with an imprimatur/license date of May 24, 1693).
Other candidates (1)
Little Book for Teachers Who Think Big (Jeffrey Dutt, 2022) compilation95.0%
... William Penn, the original founder of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, wisely said in a very poignant statement,...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Penn, William. (2026, February 10). Time is what we want most, but what we use worst. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/time-is-what-we-want-most-but-what-we-use-worst-117901/

Chicago Style
Penn, William. "Time is what we want most, but what we use worst." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/time-is-what-we-want-most-but-what-we-use-worst-117901/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Time is what we want most, but what we use worst." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/time-is-what-we-want-most-but-what-we-use-worst-117901/. Accessed 23 Feb. 2026.

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Time is What We Want Most, But Use Worst - William Penn
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About the Author

William Penn

William Penn (October 14, 1644 - July 30, 1718) was a Leader from England.

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