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Daily Inspiration Quote by Miguel de Cervantes

"A private sin is not so prejudicial in this world, as a public indecency"

About this Quote

Cervantes slices straight through the pieties of his age: it is not the hidden flaw that corrodes a community, but the flaunted one. The line turns on a sly recalibration of “sin” versus “indecency.” Sin belongs to the private ledger of conscience and God; indecency is social theater, the kind of offense that forces everyone else to participate. A “private sin” can be quarantined inside the self. A “public indecency” recruits witnesses, normalizes bad behavior, and dares the crowd to accept it.

That distinction matters in Cervantes’s Spain, where reputation functioned as currency and the state-policed performance of Catholic virtue could be more urgent than inner moral life. He’s not offering a pious endorsement of secrecy; he’s exposing the hypocrisy of a culture that punishes visible breach more harshly than hidden corruption. The prejudice here is pragmatic: public conduct sets the temperature of what’s tolerable. Once the shameless act becomes spectacle, it chips away at the community’s shared standards, making vice feel less like a transgression and more like an option.

The sentence also carries Cervantes’s novelist’s instinct for human comedy. He understands that societies are less governed by pure ethics than by embarrassment, gossip, and imitation. Public indecency is contagious; it grants permission. Private sin, by comparison, is a solitary failure - morally real, but socially contained. Beneath the wit is a warning: when vice stops needing a mask, it stops fearing consequence, and that’s when a culture starts to rot in the open.

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
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Cervantes on Private Sin and Public Indecency
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About the Author

Miguel de Cervantes

Miguel de Cervantes (September 29, 1547 - April 23, 1616) was a Novelist from Spain.

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