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War & Peace Quote by Charles Wilson

"Character... is a habit, the daily choice of right over wrong; it is a moral quality which grows to maturity in peace and is not suddenly developed on the outbreak of war"

About this Quote

Wilson’s line is a quiet rebuke to the romantic myth that crisis manufactures virtue. By calling character “a habit,” he drags morality out of the realm of grand declarations and into the unglamorous mechanics of repetition: the daily, largely unobserved decision to choose “right over wrong.” That phrasing matters. “Habit” implies training, discipline, and the slow sculpting of reflexes. You don’t rise to the occasion so much as default to the person you’ve been rehearsing.

The real target is the wartime narrative that moral clarity arrives with mobilization - that a nation, or an official, becomes honorable simply because history has gotten louder. Wilson insists the opposite: war is an accelerant, not a teacher. It exposes what’s already there. “Grows to maturity in peace” carries a bureaucrat’s hard-earned skepticism about sudden conversions, especially in public life, where institutions love to launder opportunism into patriotism. If you haven’t built ethical muscle when the stakes are low, you won’t find it when fear, propaganda, and urgent trade-offs start dictating policy.

Contextually, for a 20th-century public servant living through two world wars and the administrative expansion of the modern state, this reads like a warning label for governance under pressure. Emergencies tempt shortcuts, secrecy, and moral exceptionalism. Wilson’s subtext is institutional: the habits that matter are forged in peacetime systems - hiring, oversight, restraint, truthful reporting - long before the “outbreak” tests them. War doesn’t mint character; it audits it.

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
Source
Verified source: The Secret of Maturity, Third Edition (Kevin Everett FitzMaurice, 2012)ISBN: 9781878693310 · ID: PJp-Gk0KxQEC
Text match: 98.28%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... Character ... is a habit , the daily choice of right over wrong ; it is a moral quality which grows to maturity in peace and is not suddenly developed on the outbreak of war . -Charles Wilson Maturity is reached the day we don't need to ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Wilson, Charles. (2026, March 21). Character... is a habit, the daily choice of right over wrong; it is a moral quality which grows to maturity in peace and is not suddenly developed on the outbreak of war. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/character-is-a-habit-the-daily-choice-of-right-123790/

Chicago Style
Wilson, Charles. "Character... is a habit, the daily choice of right over wrong; it is a moral quality which grows to maturity in peace and is not suddenly developed on the outbreak of war." FixQuotes. March 21, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/character-is-a-habit-the-daily-choice-of-right-123790/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Character... is a habit, the daily choice of right over wrong; it is a moral quality which grows to maturity in peace and is not suddenly developed on the outbreak of war." FixQuotes, 21 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/character-is-a-habit-the-daily-choice-of-right-123790/. Accessed 6 Apr. 2026.

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About the Author

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Charles Wilson (October 11, 1882 - April 12, 1977) was a Public Servant from United Kingdom.

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