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Success Quote by Jose Bergamin

"Better than succeeding little by little is failing at one go"

About this Quote

Bergamin’s line lands like a dare: stop romanticizing “progress” when it’s really just prolonged compliance. “Succeeding little by little” sounds wholesome, the kind of incrementalism societies praise because it’s legible, controllable, and, crucially, non-threatening. Bergamin flips it into an insult. That slow success can be a way of staying inside the rules long enough to forget the rules were ever negotiable.

“Failing at one go,” by contrast, isn’t just defeat; it’s clarity. One clean collapse exposes the stakes, the limits, the hypocrisies. It’s the difference between being politely managed by reality and forcing reality to answer back. The subtext is moral and political: there are situations where “making it work” is another name for complicity, and where a spectacular failure is the only honest refusal.

Context matters because Bergamin wasn’t a salon aphorist idly toying with paradox. As a Spanish writer shaped by the convulsions of the 20th century, including the Spanish Civil War and Franco’s long shadow, he lived in a culture where gradual adjustment often meant accommodation to authoritarian normality. In that light, incremental success can look like survival purchased at the cost of conscience. Total failure becomes a kind of integrity: you lose, but you don’t pretend.

The wit is in the reversal of bourgeois common sense. Bergamin makes catastrophe sound preferable not because he’s nihilistic, but because he’s suspicious of the small, respectable victories that keep a bad world running.

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TopicFailure
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Better than succeeding little by little is failing at one go
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About the Author

Jose Bergamin

Jose Bergamin (1895 - 1983) was a Writer from Spain.

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