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Success Quote by Walter Scott

"For success, attitude is equally as important as ability"

About this Quote

Scott’s line flatters talent just enough to make the real point land: ability is never the whole story, and the culture that pretends otherwise is lying to itself. By putting “attitude” on equal footing with “ability,” he nudges “success” away from the romantic myth of the born genius and toward something more social, more behavioral, more controllable. It’s a subtle rebuke to meritocracy before the word existed: what you can do matters, but so does how you carry it, how you’re perceived doing it, and how relentlessly you keep doing it when the room isn’t applauding.

Coming from a novelist in the early 19th century, the subtext feels especially pointed. Scott wasn’t writing from the sidelines; he was a literary brand before branding, navigating patrons, publishers, reviews, politics, and public taste. “Attitude” here isn’t just positivity. It’s discipline, self-command, tactical humility, the capacity to endure boredom, criticism, and fashion’s whiplash. In a period when class and connections still shaped who got heard, attitude also reads as the portable currency of someone who knows that doors don’t open for skill alone; they open for people who can persuade others they’re worth the risk.

The quote works because it compresses an entire social truth into a clean equation. Ability is private; attitude is legible. Success happens where the legible meets the gatekeepers: in interviews, salons, publishing houses, courtrooms, committees. Scott’s insight is that competence gets you to the table, but attitude decides whether anyone wants you to stay.

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For Success, Attitude Equals Ability - Walter Scott Quote
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About the Author

Walter Scott

Walter Scott (August 14, 1771 - September 21, 1832) was a Novelist from Scotland.

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