A Commonplace Book

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The Dyer 7s Hand and Other Essays (Auden)

 

The most striking difference between an American and a European is the difference in their attitudes towards money. Every European knows, as a matter of historical fact, that, in Europe, wealth could only be acquired at the expense of other human beings, either by conquering them or by exploiting their labor in factories. Further, even after the Industrial Revolution began, the number of persons who could rise from poverty to wealth was small: the vast majority took it for granted that they would not be much richer nor poorer than their fathers. In consequence, no European associates wealth with personal merit or poverty with personal failure.
-- W.H. Auden."Postscript: The Almighty Dollar" in The Dyer's Hand and Other Essays (1962)
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