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Quotes About Wealth

Do not all improvements simply increase the value of land—the price that some must pay others for the privilege of living?
~ Henry George
Grant that a man has a right to appropriate such natural elements as he can use, has he any right to appropriate more than he can use? Has a guest in such a case as I have supposed a right to appropriate more than he needs and make other people stand up? That is what is done.
~ Henry George
what do they want with our land? They do not want it at all; it is not the land they want; they have no use for American land. What they want is the income that they know they can in a little while get from it. Where does that income come from? It comes from labour, from the labour of American citizens. What we are selling to these people is our children, not land.
~ Henry George
There is no difficulty in discovering what makes those people poor. They have no right to anything that nature gives them. All they can make above a living they must pay to the landlord. They not only have to pay for the land that they use, but they have to pay for the seaweed that comes ashore and for the turf they dig from the bogs. They dare not improve, for any improvements they make are made an excuse for putting up the rent.
~ Henry George
To ascertain the effects of material progress upon the distribution of wealth, let us, therefore, consider the effects of increase of population apart from improvement in the arts, and then the effect of improvement in the arts apart from increase of population.
~ Henry George
Any man with a moderate income can afford to buy more books than he can read in a lifetime.
~ Henry Holt
Money's a horrid thing to follow, but a charming thing to meet.
~ Henry James
I call people rich when they're able to meet the requirements of their imagination.
~ Henry James
Who controls money control the world.
~ Henry Kissinger
Who controls the money controls the world
~ Henry Kissinger
but the world is apt to make an erroneous estimate: ignorant of the dispositions which constitute our happiness or misery, they bring to an undistinguished scale the means of the one, as connected with power, wealth, or grandeur, and of the other with their contraries.  Philosophers and poets have often protested against this decision; but their arguments have been despised as declamatory, or ridiculed as romantic.
~ Henry Mackenzie
Disregard females, acquire currency
~ Henry Saunders
What you possess in the world will be found at the day of your death to belong to someone else. But what you are will be yours forever.
~ Henry Van Dyke
In this world it is not what we take up, but what we give up, that makes us rich.
~ Henry Ward Beecher
Gambling with cards or dice or stocks is all one thing. It's getting money without giving an equivalent for it.
~ Henry Ward Beecher
Money will buy you a pretty good dog, but it won't buy the wag of his tail.
~ Henry Wheeler Shaw
I am poor, and I am glad that i am, for i find that wealth makes more people mean than it duz generous.
~ Henry Wheeler Shaw
When a doktor looks me square in the face and kant see no money in me, then i am happy.
~ Henry Wheeler Shaw
Rand herself composed a sentence that could have come from the pen of a Southern planter: "The man at the bottom who, left to himself, would starve in his hopeless ineptitude, contributes nothing to those above him, but receives the bonus of all their brains.
~ Henry Wiencek
In actuality, it was like the homes of all people who are not really rich but who want to look rich, and therefore end up looking like one another: it had damasks, ebony, plants, carpets, and bronzes, everything dark and gleaming—all the effects a certain class of people produce so as to look like people of a certain class. And his place looked so much like the others that it would never have been noticed, though it all seemed quite exceptional to him.
~ Leo Tolstoy
In reality it was just what is usually seen in the houses of people of moderate means who want to appear rich, and therefore succeed only in resembling others like themselves: there are damasks, dark wood, plants, rugs, and dull and polished bronzes -- all the things people of a certain class have in order to resemble other people of that class. His house was so like the others that it would never have been noticed, but to him it all seemed to be quite exceptional.
~ Leo Tolstoy
Luxury cannot be obtained other than by enslaving other people.
~ Leo Tolstoy
I have hundreds of roubles that I don't know what to do with, and she stands there in a tattered coat and looks at me timidly," thought Pierre. "And what does she need money for? As id this money can add one hair's breadth to her happiness, her peace of mind? Can anything in the world make her or me less subject to evil and death? Death, which will end everything and which must come today or tomorrow - in a moment, anyhow, compared with eternity.
~ Leo Tolstoy
No man is satisfied with his fortune, but every man is satisfied with his wit.
~ Leo Tolstoy