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Ihara Saikaku Quotes

Ancient simplicity is gone...the people of today are satisfied with nothing but finery.

"The Japanese Family Storehouse" by Ihara Saikaku, (Book I, ch. 4), 1688.

In life it is training rather than birth which counts.

Saikaku Ihara (1955). “Nippon Eitaigura: The Way to Wealth”

To make a fortune some assistance from fate is essential. Ability alone is insufficient.

Saikaku Ihara (1959). “The Japanese Family Storehouse: Or, The Millionaire's Gospel Modernised. Nippon Eitai-gura, Or Daifuku Shin Chōja Kyō (1688)”, Cambridge University Press

If making money is a slow process, losing it is quickly done.

Saikaku Ihara (1959). “The Japanese Family Storehouse: Or, The Millionaire's Gospel Modernised. Nippon Eitai-gura, Or Daifuku Shin Chōja Kyō (1688)”, Cambridge University Press

Like ice beneath the sun's rays - to such poverty did he fall...his fortune melted to water.

"The Japanese Family Storehouse" by Ihara Saikaku, (Book III, ch. 5), 1688.

If we live by subhuman means we might as well never have had the good fortune to be born human.

Saikaku Ihara (1959). “The Japanese Family Storehouse: Or, The Millionaire's Gospel Modernised. Nippon Eitai-gura, Or Daifuku Shin Chōja Kyō (1688)”, Cambridge University Press

To think twice in every matter and follow the lead of others is no way to make money.

Saikaku Ihara (1955). “Nippon Eitaigura: The Way to Wealth”

Harshness is for the good of a boy, soft-heartedness will ruin him.

Saikaku Ihara (1959). “The Japanese Family Storehouse: Or, The Millionaire's Gospel Modernised. Nippon Eitai-gura, Or Daifuku Shin Chōja Kyō (1688)”, Cambridge University Press

Men take their misfortunes to heart and keep them there.

Saikaku Ihara (1958). “Five Japanese Love Stories”, London : Folio Societry

The first consideration for all, throughout life, is the earning of a living.

Saikaku Ihara (1955). “Nippon Eitaigura: The Way to Wealth”

Though mothers and fathers give us life, it is money alone which preserves it.

Saikaku Ihara (1955). “Nippon Eitaigura: The Way to Wealth”

There is always something to upset the most careful of human calculations.

Saikaku Ihara (1959). “The Japanese Family Storehouse, Or, The Millionaires' Gospel Modernised”, Cambridge University Press

Take care! Kingdoms are destroyed by bandits, houses by rats, and widows by suitors.

Saikaku Ihara (1959). “The Japanese Family Storehouse, Or, The Millionaires' Gospel Modernised”, Cambridge University Press

When you send a clerk on business to a distant province, a man of rigid morals is not your best choice.

"The Japanese Family Storehouse" by Ihara Saikaku, (Book II, ch. 5), 1688.