Skip to main content

Love Quote by Jean de La Fontaine

"Anyone entrusted with power will abuse it if not also animated with the love of truth and virtue, no matter whether he be a prince, or one of the people"

About this Quote

Power, La Fontaine suggests, is less a coronation than a corrosion test. The line has the clean, fable-maker’s brutality: strip away the costumes (prince, commoner) and you’re left with the same human animal, newly equipped to justify itself. It’s a warning that lands with special force from a poet whose job was to smuggle political critique past the censors of Louis XIV’s France. In that world, speaking directly about royal overreach could be dangerous; speaking “generally” about power’s habits was safer, and sharper.

The intent isn’t just to scold kings. It’s to puncture the comforting fantasy that tyranny is a monarchy problem while “the people” are naturally virtuous. La Fontaine levels the hierarchy: anyone entrusted with power will abuse it, unless something internal restrains them. That “unless” matters. Institutions can limit damage, but he’s arguing that the decisive safeguard is moral animation - love of truth and virtue - not mere rules, not pedigree, not popularity. Without that appetite for truth, power turns into a story you tell yourself: every advantage becomes “necessity,” every rival becomes “threat,” every indulgence becomes “for the greater good.”

The subtext is a cynical anthropology delivered in polished classical diction: moral character isn’t a decorative accessory to authority; it’s the only thing keeping authority from becoming predation. By pairing “truth” with “virtue,” La Fontaine also implies that corruption thrives on lies - not only to the public, but to the self. Abuse begins as a narrative before it becomes a policy.

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
Source
Later attribution: The Power of One (Ron Luce, 2003) modern compilationISBN: 9781418529840 · ID: 7yQo0z0SD2MC
Text match: 97.50%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Anyone entrusted with power will abuse it if not also animated with the love of truth and virtue, no matter whether he be a prince, or one of the people. —JEAN DE LA FONTAINE Read the following statements and then react to them as you ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Fontaine, Jean de La. (2026, March 30). Anyone entrusted with power will abuse it if not also animated with the love of truth and virtue, no matter whether he be a prince, or one of the people. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/anyone-entrusted-with-power-will-abuse-it-if-not-147070/

Chicago Style
Fontaine, Jean de La. "Anyone entrusted with power will abuse it if not also animated with the love of truth and virtue, no matter whether he be a prince, or one of the people." FixQuotes. March 30, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/anyone-entrusted-with-power-will-abuse-it-if-not-147070/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Anyone entrusted with power will abuse it if not also animated with the love of truth and virtue, no matter whether he be a prince, or one of the people." FixQuotes, 30 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/anyone-entrusted-with-power-will-abuse-it-if-not-147070/. Accessed 7 Apr. 2026.

More Quotes by Jean Add to List
La Fontaine on Power, Truth, and Virtue
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Jean de La Fontaine

Jean de La Fontaine (July 8, 1621 - April 13, 1695) was a Poet from France.

38 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

We use cookies and local storage to personalize content, analyze traffic, and provide social media features. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media and analytics partners. By continuing to use our site, you consent to our Privacy Policy.