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Daily Inspiration Quote by William Shakespeare

"Alas, I am a woman friendless, hopeless!"

About this Quote

"Alas" lands like a curtain drop: not just sorrow, but performance. Shakespeare gives the line the blunt force of a self-indictment - "I am" followed by the social sentence that matters most in his world: "a woman". The despair isn’t abstract; it’s structural. Friendless and hopeless aren’t merely moods, they’re what happens when a woman’s safety is contingent on kinship networks, reputation, and male protection. Strip those away and the character isn’t simply lonely; she is politically unmoored.

The line’s power comes from how it compresses private feeling into public reality. Shakespeare often lets his women speak in the register of emotion while quietly indicting the machinery that produces it. "Friendless" signals isolation as a weapon: the moment the community withdraws recognition, the self becomes indefensible. "Hopeless" follows as the logical consequence, not melodrama. Hope, in these plays, is usually a function of options - marriage, inheritance, patronage, credibility. A woman denied those exits is denied narrative agency.

There’s also a tactical edge to the lament. Shakespearean grief is rarely pure; it’s communicative, meant to move an onstage audience as much as a theater audience. The speaker is doing more than collapsing; she’s pleading for witness, attempting to convert vulnerability into leverage. The tragedy is that she must translate personhood into pity to be legible at all.

Quote Details

TopicLoneliness
Source
Verified source: Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies (William Shakespeare, 1623)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Alas, I am a woman, friendless, hopeless! (Act 3, Scene 1 (Queen Katharine); page varies by facsimile/edition). This line is spoken by Queen Katharine in Shakespeare’s play commonly titled "King Henry VIII" (also known as "All Is True"), in Act 3, Scene 1. Many quote sites drop the comma after "woman"; the primary text commonly prints it as "woman, friendless, hopeless". While Project Gutenberg is not the first publication, it reproduces the play text and confirms the wording and dramatic context. The earliest publication of the play’s text is in the 1623 First Folio ("Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies"), which is the proper primary publication source to cite for "first published."
Other candidates (1)
The Works of William Shakespeare (William Shakespeare, 1874) compilation95.0%
William Shakespeare Charles Cowden Clarke, Mary Cowden Clarke. Let me have time and counsel for my cause : Alas , I a...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Shakespeare, William. (2026, February 8). Alas, I am a woman friendless, hopeless! FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/alas-i-am-a-woman-friendless-hopeless-25047/

Chicago Style
Shakespeare, William. "Alas, I am a woman friendless, hopeless!" FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/alas-i-am-a-woman-friendless-hopeless-25047/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Alas, I am a woman friendless, hopeless!" FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/alas-i-am-a-woman-friendless-hopeless-25047/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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Alas, I am a woman friendless, hopeless - Analysis
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About the Author

William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare (April 26, 1564 - April 23, 1616) was a Dramatist from England.

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