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Justice & Law Quote by Sean O'Casey

"Wealth often takes away chances from men as well as poverty. There is none to tell the rich to go on striving, for a rich man makes the law that hallows and hollows his own life"

About this Quote

O'Casey, the great dramaturge of Irish disillusionment, flips the usual moral math: wealth is not the cure for hardship but its own kind of sabotage. The line’s engine is the phrase "takes away chances" - a blunt, almost economic description of what we tend to romanticize as comfort. Poverty blocks you with walls; wealth blocks you with padding. It dulls risk, mutes hunger, and replaces ambition with self-protection disguised as "security."

The subtext sharpens in the second sentence, where he sketches a social vacuum around the rich. "There is none to tell the rich to go on striving" isn’t sympathy so much as indictment: money insulates people from the friction that produces growth, critique, and accountability. O'Casey knows how power works onstage and off - characters surrounded by dependents and flatterers start confusing their preferences with reality.

Then comes the biting paradox: "a rich man makes the law that hallows and hollows his own life". The alliteration is doing moral double-duty. To "hallow" is to sanctify, to wrap your choices in legitimacy; to "hollow" is to empty them of meaning. Wealth lets you author your own permission structure - you can call your appetites "rights", your comforts "deserved", your avoidance "prudence". The tragedy, O'Casey implies, is self-inflicted: when you can purchase exemption from consequence, you also purchase exemption from purpose.

In O'Casey's Ireland - marked by class struggle, nationalism’s promises, and the theater of public virtue - this is a warning about private sovereignty: when a person becomes their own law, they rarely become their own conscience.

Quote Details

TopicWealth
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
O'Casey, Sean. (n.d.). Wealth often takes away chances from men as well as poverty. There is none to tell the rich to go on striving, for a rich man makes the law that hallows and hollows his own life. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/wealth-often-takes-away-chances-from-men-as-well-95085/

Chicago Style
O'Casey, Sean. "Wealth often takes away chances from men as well as poverty. There is none to tell the rich to go on striving, for a rich man makes the law that hallows and hollows his own life." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/wealth-often-takes-away-chances-from-men-as-well-95085/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Wealth often takes away chances from men as well as poverty. There is none to tell the rich to go on striving, for a rich man makes the law that hallows and hollows his own life." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/wealth-often-takes-away-chances-from-men-as-well-95085/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Sean O'Casey

Sean O'Casey (March 30, 1880 - September 18, 1964) was a Playwright from Ireland.

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