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Wealth & Money Quote by Benjamin Franklin

"Who is rich? He that is content. Who is that? Nobody"

About this Quote

Franklin sets up a neat little moral fable, then snaps it shut on your fingers. The first line sounds like clean Enlightenment virtue: redefine wealth as contentment, not coin. It’s the kind of maxim a rising republic could staple to the wall while it tries to look less like Europe’s aristocratic money-chase. Then comes the dagger: “Who is that? Nobody.” Franklin isn’t abandoning the ideal; he’s exposing how rarely it survives contact with human appetite.

The intent is double-edged. On the surface, it’s a sermon against greed. Underneath, it’s a diagnosis of a culture where desire is engineered to outrun satisfaction. Franklin, politician and printer, lived in an economy of hustle: credit systems expanding, land speculation booming, social rank supposedly up for grabs if you worked (and networked) hard enough. Contentment becomes both the advertised endpoint and the one thing the system can’t afford you to fully achieve. A citizen who’s truly content stops striving; a citizen who keeps feeling “almost there” keeps producing, buying, climbing.

Rhetorically, the quote works because it weaponizes the catechism format. The repeated questions mimic a moral lesson for children or congregants, building trust through simplicity. The punchline collapses that comfort into bleak comedy: the definition of “rich” is impeccable, and also functionally unattainable.

Franklin’s subtext is not “give up.” It’s closer to: be suspicious of any society, or inner voice, that keeps moving the finish line and calling it virtue.

Quote Details

TopicContentment
Source
Verified source: Poor Richard Improved, 1755 (Benjamin Franklin, 1755)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Who is wise? He that learns from every One. Who is powerful? He that governs his Passions. Who is rich? He that is content. Who is that? Nobody.. Primary-source transcription in Founders Online (Benjamin Franklin Papers) of the almanac Franklin published under the pseudonym Richard Saunders (“Poor Richard”). This is a longer form of the quote you provided; the commonly-circulated shorter form (“Who is rich? He that is content. Who is that? Nobody”) appears to be an excerpt from this four-line maxim. Founders Online gives the imprint statement and ties the text to a Yale University Library copy; the quote appears in the 1755 almanac text (within the monthly pages, around the July/August section in the transcription).
Other candidates (1)
Ben Franklin's Almanac (Candace Fleming, 2014) compilation95.0%
... BENJAMIN FRANKLIN . EL Than the key the Destroy the ke B en stuffed hundreds of wise and witty say- ings between ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Franklin, Benjamin. (2026, February 8). Who is rich? He that is content. Who is that? Nobody. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-is-rich-he-that-is-content-who-is-that-nobody-25551/

Chicago Style
Franklin, Benjamin. "Who is rich? He that is content. Who is that? Nobody." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-is-rich-he-that-is-content-who-is-that-nobody-25551/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Who is rich? He that is content. Who is that? Nobody." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-is-rich-he-that-is-content-who-is-that-nobody-25551/. Accessed 10 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin (January 17, 1706 - April 17, 1790) was a Politician from USA.

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