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Daily Inspiration Quote by Plautus

"Conquered, we conquer"

About this Quote

"Conquered, we conquer" is a neat little paradox with a dramatist's timing: defeat arrives first, then gets flipped into a weapon. Plautus, writing Roman comedies built on reversals, disguises, and social upsets, knows the pleasure of watching the underdog wriggle out of the trap. The line isn’t inspirational in the modern, poster-ready sense; it’s a pragmatic boast about how power actually circulates. Loss can be leverage. Humiliation can be a training ground. The beaten party learns the victor’s methods, habits, even blind spots - and comes back sharper.

The intent feels double-edged. Onstage, it can read as defiant: we’re down, not dead. Offstage, in a Rome expanding through war and assimilation, it also hints at an imperial truth the audience would recognize. Rome conquered peoples, then absorbed their gods, art, and know-how; the conquered, in turn, influenced the conqueror from within. "Conquered" becomes not just a condition but a position inside the winner’s house, close enough to rearrange the furniture.

Subtext: conquest is never clean. It leaves residues - resentment, imitation, opportunism - that can reverse the story. Plautus’s comic worldview treats dominance as unstable and slightly ridiculous. The phrase is almost a wink at triumphalism: today’s victor is tomorrow’s mark, because power breeds complacency and the defeated are forced into invention. In seven syllables, he turns surrender into strategy and victory into something temporarily rented, not owned.

Quote Details

TopicOvercoming Obstacles
Source
Verified source: Casina (Plautus, -200)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
nostro omine it dies; iam victi vicimus. (Act 1, Scene 1 (line varies by edition; often numbered around 510)). This is Plautus’s original Latin line (not an English proverb) from the comedy *Casina*. The commonly-circulated English rendering “Conquered, we conquer” corresponds to the shorter form “Victi vincimus” found in later quotation tradition, but the primary text as transmitted here is “iam victi vicimus” (“now, though conquered, we have conquered / now, beaten, we have won”). Plautus wrote in the late 3rd–early 2nd century BCE; the play’s first performance/publication date is not precisely known, so the year is approximate. Many secondary quote lists cite it as *Casina* Act I.1; some give a line number around 510 depending on the editor’s lineation.
Other candidates (1)
The Routledge Dictionary of Latin Quotations (Jon R. Stone, 2013) compilation95.0%
... conquered, we conquer (after Plautus) victis honor: honor to the vanquished victor mortalis est: the conqueror is...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Plautus. (2026, February 8). Conquered, we conquer. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/conquered-we-conquer-6732/

Chicago Style
Plautus. "Conquered, we conquer." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/conquered-we-conquer-6732/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Conquered, we conquer." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/conquered-we-conquer-6732/. Accessed 28 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Plautus

Plautus (254 BC - 184 BC) was a Playwright from Rome.

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