"Great causes and little men go ill together"
About this Quote
A great cause is a moral amplifying glass: it enlarges not only courage and vision, but also vanity, pettiness, and the appetite for control. Nehru’s line lands because it refuses the comforting idea that noble movements automatically attract noble actors. It’s a warning from inside the machinery of nation-building: the higher the stakes, the more disastrous smallness becomes.
As a leader who helped steer India from colonial rule into independence, Nehru knew how easily liberation projects can be captured by the wrong temperament. “Little men” isn’t about height or even raw intelligence; it’s a character diagnosis. The petty operator thrives on symbolism, factional intrigue, and personal loyalty tests. Put that personality near a “great cause” and you get moral theater: the rhetoric of freedom used to settle scores, reward cronies, and flatten dissent. The cause becomes a costume.
The sentence works rhetorically because it’s clean and uncompromising. “Go ill together” has the cool finality of a physician’s prognosis, not a rival’s insult. Nehru isn’t merely scolding; he’s setting a standard for leadership: greatness of purpose demands largeness of spirit - patience, self-restraint, and an ability to hold complexity without turning it into grievance.
The subtext is also self-directed. In mass politics, everyone is tempted to become smaller when threatened. Nehru’s phrase is a prophylactic against that shrinkage, a reminder that the real enemy of historic projects is rarely only the external opponent; it’s the internal downgrade of character once power is within reach.
As a leader who helped steer India from colonial rule into independence, Nehru knew how easily liberation projects can be captured by the wrong temperament. “Little men” isn’t about height or even raw intelligence; it’s a character diagnosis. The petty operator thrives on symbolism, factional intrigue, and personal loyalty tests. Put that personality near a “great cause” and you get moral theater: the rhetoric of freedom used to settle scores, reward cronies, and flatten dissent. The cause becomes a costume.
The sentence works rhetorically because it’s clean and uncompromising. “Go ill together” has the cool finality of a physician’s prognosis, not a rival’s insult. Nehru isn’t merely scolding; he’s setting a standard for leadership: greatness of purpose demands largeness of spirit - patience, self-restraint, and an ability to hold complexity without turning it into grievance.
The subtext is also self-directed. In mass politics, everyone is tempted to become smaller when threatened. Nehru’s phrase is a prophylactic against that shrinkage, a reminder that the real enemy of historic projects is rarely only the external opponent; it’s the internal downgrade of character once power is within reach.
Quote Details
| Topic | Leadership |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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