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Life & Wisdom Quote by Charles Baudelaire

"Evil is committed without effort, naturally, fatally; goodness is always the product of some art"

About this Quote

Baudelaire doesn’t flatter the reader with the comforting idea that virtue is our default setting. He flips the moral script: evil, he suggests, is the path of least resistance, the human animal left to its own momentum. The triad "without effort, naturally, fatally" tightens like a noose. "Naturally" shrugs off the notion that wickedness is exotic; "fatally" adds a grim determinism, as if vice isn’t merely chosen but baked into the architecture of desire, habit, and boredom.

The sting is in the second clause: "goodness is always the product of some art". Baudelaire was a poet of artifice, a connoisseur of the made thing, and he casts morality in the same register as aesthetic creation. Goodness isn’t a warm inner glow; it’s craft. It requires composition, revision, discipline - the deliberate shaping of impulse into something fit to live with. The word "art" also smuggles in performance: ethics as practiced style, not innocent sincerity. That’s both bracing and suspicious, a very Baudelairean ambivalence.

Context matters. Writing in a 19th-century Paris intoxicated by modernity and haunted by Catholic gravity, Baudelaire kept returning to the pleasure of decay and the labor of transcendence. His intent isn’t to excuse evil but to diagnose it as effortless drift - and to insist that any real goodness will feel, unavoidably, like work.

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
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Evil is committed without effort, naturally, fatally goodness is always the product of some art
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About the Author

Charles Baudelaire

Charles Baudelaire (April 9, 1821 - August 31, 1867) was a Poet from France.

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