"Difficulties are meant to rouse, not discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict"
About this Quote
The pairing “rouse, not discourage” is doing quiet rhetorical work. “Rouse” implies latency - a spirit half-asleep, capable but unactivated. That’s a very American, early-19th-century faith in self-making, but it’s also distinctly Unitarian in its confidence that human beings can improve through moral effort. Channing doesn’t promise comfort; he promises usefulness. Conflict isn’t glamorized as conquest; it’s framed as training.
Then comes the crucial shift: “The human spirit is to grow strong.” Not “may,” not “might.” The modal “is to” sounds like an assignment, even a duty. Strength here isn’t brute force; it’s character under pressure. “By conflict” keeps the mechanism blunt. Growth is frictional. You become more yourself by meeting resistance, not by avoiding it.
Context matters: Channing wrote in an era of reform energy - abolition, education, temperance - when optimism had to be rugged enough to face entrenched injustice and personal setback. The subtext is a moral call to endurance that refuses victimhood without denying pain: difficulty is real, but it’s also formative, and surrender is the only outcome he won’t permit.
Quote Details
| Topic | Resilience |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Self-Culture (William Ellery Channing, 1838)
Evidence: But difficulties are meant to rouse not discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict. (Page 62 (in the 1839 printed edition; see Internet Archive scan)). Primary source: William Ellery Channing’s address “Self-Culture: An Address Introductory to the Franklin Lectures, delivered at Boston, September, 1838.” The earliest form is the delivered address (Sept. 1838). A contemporaneous published version appears as a stand-alone printed pamphlet/edition; the widely circulated book-form printing shown in the Internet Archive scan has an 1839 Boston imprint (James Munroe & Co.) and contains this sentence on p. 62. The quote is often repunctuated online with a comma after “rouse,” but the original line in this edition appears without that comma in the sentence as printed. Other candidates (1) The Works of William E. Channing (William Ellery Channing, 1877) compilation95.0% With an Introduction William Ellery Channing. culture spreads among a people , the cheapest and commonest of ... diff... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Channing, William Ellery. (2026, February 14). Difficulties are meant to rouse, not discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/difficulties-are-meant-to-rouse-not-discourage-114041/
Chicago Style
Channing, William Ellery. "Difficulties are meant to rouse, not discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict." FixQuotes. February 14, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/difficulties-are-meant-to-rouse-not-discourage-114041/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Difficulties are meant to rouse, not discourage. The human spirit is to grow strong by conflict." FixQuotes, 14 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/difficulties-are-meant-to-rouse-not-discourage-114041/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.












