Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Affords. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Affords Quotes And Sayings by 85 Authors including Kate Atkinson,Debasish Mridha,Hilary Mantel,Louisa May Alcott,Robert T. Kiyosaki for you to enjoy and share.
Needs must, and so on.
Abundance in life comes from generosity.
The gift blesses the giver.
Money is a needful and precious thing
To be truly rich, we need to be able to give as well as to receive.
Riches, though they may reward virtues, yet they cannot cause them; he is much more noble who deserves a benefit than he who bestows one.
Giving is a stream of abundance.
Avarice is a uniform and tractable vice; other intellectual distempers are different in different constitutions of mind. That which soothes the pride of one will offend the pride of another, but to the favor of the covetous bring money, and nothing is denied.
Three courses open lie to wealth, to give, enjoy, or lose, Who shrinketh from the former two, perforce the third doth choose.
To help the poor to a capacity for action and liberty is something essential for one's own health as well as theirs: there is a needful gift they have to offer which cannot be offered so long as they are confined by poverty.
Luxury, so far as it reaches the people, will do good to the race of people; it will strengthen and multiply them. Sir, no nation was ever hurt by luxury; for, as I said before; it can reach but a very few.
Capitalism begins with giving.
Luxury is experiencing reality
If thy wealth waste, they wit will give but small warmth.
It is only luxury and avarice that make poverty grievous to us; for it is a very small matter that does our business, and when we have provided against cold, hunger, and thirst, all the rest is but vanity and excess.
Giving opens up avenues for abundance.
The things that are acquired consciously permit us to express ourselves unconsciously with a certain richness.
Giving is stream of abundance.
If rich men would remember that shrouds have no pockets, they would, while living, share their wealth with their children, and give for the good of others, and so know the highest pleasure wealth can give.
Building is a sweet impoverishing.
You cannot enrich yourself with material possessions. However, you can enrich yourself by giving yourself away with love, service, kindness, compassion, and courage.
We honor the rich because they have externally the freedom, power, and grace which we feel to be proper to man, proper to us.
Our purses shall be proud, our garments poor; for 'tis the mind that makes the body rich
Riches are the savings of many in the hands of one.
Of riches it is not necessary to write the praise. Let it, however, be remembered that he who has money to spare has it always in his power to benefit others, and of such power a good man must always be desirous.
What a man does with his wealth depends upon his idea of happiness. Those who draw prizes in life are apt to spend tastelessly, if not viciously; not knowing that it requires as much talent to spend as to make.
We are weary of being without gold in the midst of plenty. We wish to become men of means.
Riches may enable us to confer favors, but to confer them with propriety and grace requires a something that riches cannot give.
Giving is the secret of abundance.
We began by imagining that we are giving to the; we end by realizing that they have enriched us.
I account the office of benefactor, or almoner, to which God appoints all those whom he has favored with wealth, one of the most honorable and delightful in the world. He never institutes a channel for the passage of His bounties that those bounties do not enrich and beautify.
The table groans under the heavy and blood-bought luxuries gathered with painstaking care, at home and abroad. Fields, forests, rivers and seas, are made tributary here. Immense wealth, and its lavish expenditure, fill the great house with all that can please the eye, or tempt the taste.
Riches are but a means, or instrument; and the virtue of an instrument lies in its use.
Not he who has much is rich, but he who gives much.Rich-- Erich Fromm
If thou desire to purchase honor with thy wealth, consider first how that wealth became thine; if thy labor got it, let thy wisdom keep it; if oppression found it, let repentance restore it; if thy parent left it, let thy virtues deserve it; so shall thy honor be safer, better and cheaper.
There is noting truly valuable which can be purchased without pains and labor. The gods have set a price upon every real and noble pleasure.
Abundance is not defined by possessions, but it is defined by inner perceptions.
The wearing of costly array is directly opposite to being adorned with good works. Nothing can be more evident than this; for the more you lay out on your own apparel, the less you have left to clothe the naked, to feed the hungry, to lodge the stranger, to relieve those that are sick and in prison.
The secret of achieving prosperity lies in so vividly keeping yourself centered in the inner focus of affluence that you literally exude the consciousness of it.
Who loves the golden mean is safe from the poverty of a tenement, is free from the envy of a palace.
If you wish to remove avarice you must remove its mother, luxuries.
[Lat., Avaritiam si tollere vultis, mater ejus est tollenda, luxuries.]
Riches are for spending, and spending for honor and good actions; therefore extraordinary expense must be limited by the worth of the occasion.
There are many things wealth cannot buy, and most of those are enumerated by philosophers who have never woken wondering if this day would be their last.
Inner riches supersede outer riches.
I am no longer cursed by poverty because I took possession of my own mind, and that mind has yielded me every material thing I want, and much more than I need. But this power of mind is a universal one, available to the humblest person as it is to the greatest.
There is satisfaction in seeing one's household prosper; in being both bountiful and provident.
Gratefulness is a payment everyone can afford.
Lavish spending cloaks the dark side of generosity
How the sting of poverty, or small means, is gone when one keeps house for one's own comfort and not for the comfort of one's neighbors.
Giving is the sacred-gift that creates wealth.
Riches are gotten with pain, kept with care, and lost with grief. The cares of riches lie heavier upon a good man than the inconveniences of an honest poverty.
As if it were Injustice to sell dearer than we buy; or to give more to a man than he merits. The value of all things contracted for, is measured by the Appetite of the Contractors: and therefore the just value, is that which they be contented to give.
If our credit be so well built, so firm, that it is not easy to be shaken by calumny or insinuation, envy then commends us, and extols us beyond reason to those upon whom we depend, till they grow jealous, and so blow us up when they cannot throw us down.
Blessed are the generous, for they know their riches belong to others. Blessed
He who don't know what envy can do shall always do what envy can do
Riches do not consist in the possession of treasures, but in the use made of them.
(Its) admirable words can purchase honour; (its) admirable deeds can raise their performer above others.
Affluence means influence.
My conscience is my crown,Contented thoughts my rest;My heart is happy in itself,My bliss is in my breast.Enough I reckon wealth;A mean the surest lot,That lies too high for base contempt,Too low for envy's shot.
Whoever cultivates the golden mean avoids both the poverty of a hovel and the envy of a palace.
Our income are like our shoes; if too small, they gall and pinch us; but if too large, they cause us to stumble and trip.
Nothing of value comes without being earned.
The meaning or value of a thing consists of what it affords.
Money brings honor, friends, conquest, and realms.
Riches attract attention, consideration, and congratulations of mankind.
The possessors of wealth can scarcely be indifferent to processes which, nearly or remotely have been the fertile source of their possessions.
A man is rich in proportion to the number of things which he can afford to let alone.
The tools of 'The Prosperous Heart' help people to embrace the life that they actually have, where they often find that they already have 'enough.'
Riches should be admitted into our houses, but not into our hearts; we may take them into our possession, but not into our affections.
A budget is more than just a series of numbers on a page; it is an embodiment of our values.
Wealth comes from knowing
what others do not know.
Ability is a poor man's wealth.
We are not rich by what we possess but by what we can do without.
Wealth is conscience about truth in abundance.
Necessity reforms the poor, and satiety reforms the rich.
Gratitude builds a bridge to abundance.
It is the great privilege of poverty to be happy and yet unenvied, to be healthy with physic, secure without a guard, and to obtain from the bounty of nature what the great and wealthy are compelled to procure by the help of art.
Richness does not come from wealth or splendor, but from an appreciation of those things that you cannot buy.
Enjoy what thou has inherited from thy sires if thou wouldn't really possess it. What we employ and use is never an oppressive burden; what the moment brings forth, that only can it profit by.
The necessity of every one paying in his own labor for what he consumes, affords the only legitimate and effectual check to excessive luxury, which has so often ruined individuals, states and empires; and which has now brought almost universal bankruptcy upon us.
Whoever acts right is rich in deed
You create wealth by what you give.
Prosperity knits a man to the world. He feels that he is finding his place in it, while really it is finding its place in him.
Wealth is an inborn attitude of mind, like poverty. The pauper who has made his pile may flaunt his spoils, but cannot wear them plausibly.
Let us not envy some men their accumulated riches; their burden would be too heavy for us; we could not sacrifice, as they do, health, quiet, honor and conscience, to obtain them: It is to pay so dear from them that the bargain is a loss.
Worth begets in base minds, envy; in great souls, emulation.
He is not poore that hath little, but he that desireth much.
The wealthiest person on earth is the one who appreciates
What we obtain too cheaply, we esteem too lightly; it's dearness only that gives everthing its value.
None is poor but the mean in mind, the timorous, the weak, and unbelieving; none is wealthy but the affluent in soul, who is satisfied and floweth over.
Money does not sate Avarice, but stimulates it.
The essential elements of giving are power and love - activity and affection - and the consciousness of the race testifies that in the high and appropriate exercise of these is a blessedness greater than any other.
Wealth is thoughts, not things.
Unlocking the treasuries of real home love and mutual helpfulness, which the poorest may possess, and the richest cannot buy.
Love enriches my heart.
Each of us has the ability to build
As signs of inadequacy and weakness, they look on wealth as a source of stability and strength. Our proud hearts shrink from weakness, real or fancied, in all its forms, as we have already noted, and they embrace whatever looks like strength, including the goal and the reality of affluence. The
What we buy, and pay for, is part of ourselves.
With affluence come the debased gifts born of abuse, misuse, and overuse.
Money buys things that people with money never even realize they've bought, like time and freedom.
Whitney Otto