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Daily Inspiration Quote by Edmund Burke

"Ambition can creep as well as soar"

About this Quote

Ambition usually sells itself as altitude: the noble climb, the heroic reach, the shining career arc. Burke flips that picture with one unsettling verb. To “soar” is to rise in public, under open sky, in a way that invites admiration. To “creep” is to move low, sideways, half-hidden, close to the ground. In eight words he turns ambition from a banner into a tactic, and the reader from cheerleader into lookout.

As a statesman who watched power consolidate through patronage, court intrigue, and imperial administration, Burke knew that political ascent rarely happens by clean leaps. “Creep” carries the subtext of procedure, of incremental encroachment: a small exception here, a quiet appointment there, a redefinition of norms that looks harmless until it doesn’t. It’s ambition as bureaucracy and insinuation, not ambition as oratory. The line warns that the most consequential grabs for authority may arrive without fireworks, disguised as pragmatism, tradition, or necessity.

The craft is its moral doubleness. Burke isn’t condemning ambition outright; he’s differentiating its aesthetics. Soaring ambition can be checked because it’s visible and therefore contestable. Creeping ambition thrives on distraction and fatigue; it depends on others not wanting to make a scene. For an age wrestling with revolution abroad and reform at home, the sentence reads like a compact theory of political danger: don’t only fear the dramatic demagogue. Watch the quiet climber who advances by inches, and calls it order.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Letters on a Regicide Peace (Letter I) (Edmund Burke, 1796)
Text match: 96.43%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Well is it known that ambition can creep as well as soar. (Letter I ("On the Overtures of Peace")). In Burke’s text the line commonly quoted as “Ambition can creep as well as soar” appears with the prefatory words “Well is it known that …”. In the Project Gutenberg transcription of a collected edition (The Works of the Right Honourable Edmund Burke, Vol. V), the sentence occurs in the section titled “THREE LETTERS TO A MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT ON THE PROPOSALS FOR PEACE WITH THE REGICIDE DIRECTORY OF FRANCE”, in Letter I (“On the Overtures of Peace”), in a passage discussing accusations of British ambition. This establishes a primary-source locus in Burke’s own work; however, the Gutenberg volume itself is a later collected printing (not the first pamphlet printing). The original first appearance of this specific sentence is in Burke’s Letters on a Regicide Peace, Letter I, first published in 1796 (with later letters following in 1796–1797).
Other candidates (1)
The Works of the Right Honorable Edmund Burke (Edmund Burke, 1881) compilation95.0%
Edmund Burke. the enemy's conduct cancels such declarations , - and , I trust , along with them , cancels everything ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Burke, Edmund. (2026, February 11). Ambition can creep as well as soar. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ambition-can-creep-as-well-as-soar-16842/

Chicago Style
Burke, Edmund. "Ambition can creep as well as soar." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ambition-can-creep-as-well-as-soar-16842/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Ambition can creep as well as soar." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/ambition-can-creep-as-well-as-soar-16842/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Ambition Can Creep as Well as Soar - Edmund Burke
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Edmund Burke

Edmund Burke (January 12, 1729 - July 9, 1797) was a Statesman from Ireland.

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