"I have often met with happiness after some imprudent step which ought to have brought ruin upon me, and although passing a vote of censure upon myself I would thank God for his mercy"
About this Quote
Luck is Casanova's most reliable accomplice, and he knows it. In this line, the famous libertine performs a neat balancing act: he admits to recklessness ("imprudent step"), flirts with the moral accounting ("vote of censure"), then pivots into gratitude. The move isn’t just piety; it’s reputational strategy. Casanova understands that a life built on risk needs a story that makes survival feel meaningful rather than merely lucky.
The phrasing does a lot of quiet work. "Ought to have brought ruin" signals that he accepts the social math: certain acts should end a man. That "ought" carries the weight of 18th-century respectability, the expectation that desire, debt, scandal, and ambition eventually collect their due. Yet he repeatedly meets "happiness" instead. The subtext is almost entrepreneurial: he’s testing the system and being rewarded, which makes him both thrilled and slightly unnerved.
Then comes the clincher: he condemns himself while thanking God. It's a clever moral double-entry ledger, allowing him to keep his self-image as a man with a conscience without giving up the pleasures that require forgiveness. Mercy becomes the alibi that lets his narrative continue.
Context matters: Casanova wrote with an eye toward posterity. His memoirs aren’t a confession as much as a controlled burn, turning near-disasters into proof of charisma, resilience, and divine favor. The result is a self-portrait that converts irresponsibility into destiny, and destiny into entertainment.
The phrasing does a lot of quiet work. "Ought to have brought ruin" signals that he accepts the social math: certain acts should end a man. That "ought" carries the weight of 18th-century respectability, the expectation that desire, debt, scandal, and ambition eventually collect their due. Yet he repeatedly meets "happiness" instead. The subtext is almost entrepreneurial: he’s testing the system and being rewarded, which makes him both thrilled and slightly unnerved.
Then comes the clincher: he condemns himself while thanking God. It's a clever moral double-entry ledger, allowing him to keep his self-image as a man with a conscience without giving up the pleasures that require forgiveness. Mercy becomes the alibi that lets his narrative continue.
Context matters: Casanova wrote with an eye toward posterity. His memoirs aren’t a confession as much as a controlled burn, turning near-disasters into proof of charisma, resilience, and divine favor. The result is a self-portrait that converts irresponsibility into destiny, and destiny into entertainment.
Quote Details
| Topic | Gratitude |
|---|
More Quotes by Giacomo
Add to List




