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Aging & Wisdom Quote by Aristotle

"Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age"

About this Quote

Bashfulness, for Aristotle, isn’t a charming personality quirk; it’s a time-bound social signal, and he’s cold-eyed about when it reads as virtue versus failure. In youth, bashfulness functions like a kind of moral training wheel: it suggests you still feel the sting of judgment, that you’re impressionable enough to be shaped by shame, praise, and the expectations of the polis. It “ornaments” because it flatters the community’s desire to see the young as teachable, not yet fully formed, still calibrating the boundaries of appetite, speech, and ambition.

Shift that same trait onto old age and Aristotle turns it into an accusation. Bashfulness becomes “reproach” because the elderly, in his ethical framework, are supposed to have metabolized experience into steadiness. If you’re still shrinking from scrutiny, you’re advertising unfinished moral work: either you never cultivated the right kind of courage, or you’ve lived so cautiously you never earned authority. The subtext is brutal: a life spent evading exposure is a life that cannot credibly instruct others.

The line also reveals Aristotle’s political anthropology. Virtue isn’t merely internal sincerity; it’s legible conduct, judged in public, indexed to role and season. Youth can be forgiven for self-consciousness because it’s a stage. Old age is supposed to cash in its social capital, not ask for more patience. It’s a reminder that, for classical ethics, character is performance under communal gaze, and time is the harshest critic.

Quote Details

TopicAging
Source
Later attribution: The Problem Behind All Problems (Michael Hansbury) modern compilationISBN: 9789380297422 · ID: zVlA2lHvOswC
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age (Aristotle) Why did Aristotle (384-322 BCE) say, “Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age?” Because in the young, bashfulness appears to be 'cute' and ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Aristotle. (2026, February 9). Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/bashfulness-is-an-ornament-to-youth-but-a-27108/

Chicago Style
Aristotle. "Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/bashfulness-is-an-ornament-to-youth-but-a-27108/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Bashfulness is an ornament to youth, but a reproach to old age." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/bashfulness-is-an-ornament-to-youth-but-a-27108/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Bashfulness: Youth's Ornament, Old Age's Reproach
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Aristotle

Aristotle (384 BC - 322 BC) was a Philosopher from Greece.

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