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Time & Perspective Quote by Benjamin Franklin

"You may delay, but time will not"

About this Quote

Franklin’s line lands like a polite threat: you can procrastinate all you want, but the clock isn’t taking requests. It’s a maxim with the blunt efficiency of a ledger entry, and that’s the point. Franklin understood time not as a poetic abstraction but as a civic resource and a personal balance sheet. The sentence turns “delay” into a private vice and “time” into an impersonal sovereign, one that keeps moving whether you negotiate or not.

The intent is practical moral instruction, but the subtext is sharper. Franklin isn’t only urging better habits; he’s warning against the comforting fantasy that consequences are negotiable. “You may” grants the reader agency for a split second, then yanks it away. The structure enacts the lesson: a brief allowance followed by an immutable refusal. It’s rhetoric as demonstration.

Context matters. Franklin’s America was a place where printing schedules, shipping routes, trades, and politics all depended on punctuality and planning. As a printer, inventor, diplomat, and public servant, he lived inside systems where delays compound and credibility is a form of currency. The quote fits the Protestant-work-ethic atmosphere without preaching salvation; it preaches solvency. Waste time and you don’t just lose hours, you lose leverage.

What makes it endure is its modernity. It anticipates a world of deadlines and opportunity costs, where “later” becomes a story we tell ourselves to avoid the anxiety of choosing. Franklin’s genius is turning that story into a two-clause verdict.

Quote Details

TopicTime
Source
Verified source: Poor Richard Improved (Poor Richard’s Almanack for 1758) (Benjamin Franklin, 1758)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
You may delay, but Time will not.. This line appears in Benjamin Franklin’s 1758 Poor Richard’s Almanack issue titled “Poor Richard improved: Being an Almanack and Ephemeris … for the Year of our Lord 1758 … By Richard Saunders, Philom.” The Founders Online (U.S. National Archives / Univ. of Virginia Press) transcription reproduces the almanac text and includes the standalone maxim exactly as shown above. The common expanded version (“You may delay, but time will not, and lost time is never found again.”) appears to be a later conflation of separate Franklin sayings; the primary 1758 almanac text supports only the shorter sentence as an exact match.
Other candidates (1)
Brain Teaser Cryptogram Puzzle (2022) compilation95.0%
... You may delay, but time will not. -Benjamin Franklin 190. You must have been warned against letting the golden ho...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Franklin, Benjamin. (2026, February 8). You may delay, but time will not. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/you-may-delay-but-time-will-not-34435/

Chicago Style
Franklin, Benjamin. "You may delay, but time will not." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/you-may-delay-but-time-will-not-34435/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"You may delay, but time will not." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/you-may-delay-but-time-will-not-34435/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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You May Delay, But Time Will Not - Benjamin Franklin Quote
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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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