There is evidently a wrong way of interpreting this maxim, which says, “First let us accumulate fortune, intelligence, health, love, energies of all kinds, then we shall distribute them.”
For, from the material standpoint, when will the accumulation stop? One who acquires the habit of piling up never finds his pile big enough.
I have even been led to make an observation about this: that in most men generosity seems to exist in inverse proportion to their pecuniary resources.
From observing the way in which workmen, the needy and all the unfortunate act among themselves, I was forced to conclude that the poor are far more charitable, far more prepared to succour their fellow-sufferers than are those more favoured by fortune. There is not enough time to go into the details of all that I have seen, but I assure you that it is instructive. I can, in any case, assure you that if the rich, in proportion to what they have, gave as much as the poor, soon there would no longer be a single starving person in the world.
Thus gold seems to attract gold, and nothing would be more fatal than wanting to accumulate riches before distributing them.
But also, nothing would be more fatal than a rash prodigality which, from lack of discernment, would squander a fortune without benefiting anyone.
Let us never confuse disinterestedness, which is one of the conditions of true charity, with a lack of concern that springs from idle thoughtlessness.
Ref : Words of Long Ago