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Daily Inspiration Quote by Fanny Burney

"To despise riches, may, indeed, be philosophic, but to dispense them worthily, must surely be more beneficial to mankind"

About this Quote

There is a sly moral one-upmanship baked into Burney's line: it takes a familiar genteel pose - scorning money as vulgar - and flips it into an indictment. “To despise riches” can be “philosophic,” she allows, but the phrasing drips with suspicion. Philosophy, in this framing, becomes a kind of parlor performance: easy to claim when you are insulated from the consequences of want, or when disdain for wealth doubles as a badge of refinement.

The real ethical test, Burney argues, is practical. “To dispense them worthily” shifts the focus from private purity to public responsibility. It’s not enough to be untempted by money; you have to be accountable for what money can do. That word “dispense” matters: it implies stewardship, distribution, and judgment, not self-indulgence. And “worthily” is the knife edge - wealth is morally legible only through how it moves, who it reaches, and whether it alleviates harm rather than polishing status.

In Burney’s world - a late-18th-century literary marketplace entangled with patronage, inheritance, and rigid class hierarchies - virtue often masqueraded as taste. The quote punctures that masquerade. It also carries a proto-modern skepticism about performative austerity: renouncing riches can be narcissistic; using them well is measurable, messy, and socially consequential. Burney’s subtext feels aimed at the comfortable moralist: if you have the means, the hardest thing isn’t refusing luxury. It’s choosing, repeatedly, to make your prosperity useful.

Quote Details

TopicWealth
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APA Style (7th ed.)
Burney, Fanny. (2026, January 17). To despise riches, may, indeed, be philosophic, but to dispense them worthily, must surely be more beneficial to mankind. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-despise-riches-may-indeed-be-philosophic-but-54165/

Chicago Style
Burney, Fanny. "To despise riches, may, indeed, be philosophic, but to dispense them worthily, must surely be more beneficial to mankind." FixQuotes. January 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-despise-riches-may-indeed-be-philosophic-but-54165/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To despise riches, may, indeed, be philosophic, but to dispense them worthily, must surely be more beneficial to mankind." FixQuotes, 17 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-despise-riches-may-indeed-be-philosophic-but-54165/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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To Despise Riches vs. Dispense Them Worthily – Fanny Burney
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About the Author

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Fanny Burney (June 13, 1752 - January 6, 1840) was a Novelist from England.

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