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Daily Inspiration Quote by Charles Dickens

"If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers"

About this Quote

Dickens lands this line like a grin with a knife behind it: a joke that flatters lawyers with necessity while quietly accusing them of feeding on human failure. On the surface, it’s a neat syllogism - wrongdoing creates disputes; disputes create legal work. Underneath, it’s an indictment of a society that industrializes vice into a profession and then congratulates itself for managing the mess.

The barb works because it reverses the moral hierarchy. “Good” doesn’t mean virtuous here; it means competent, reputable, employable. Dickens is poking at the way institutions launder moral ambiguity into respectable careers. The lawyer becomes a kind of moral recycler: converting “bad people” into billable hours, drafting the paperwork that turns harm into procedure. The punchline isn’t that lawyers are evil; it’s that the system rewards a particular kind of goodness - tactical, adversarial, often indifferent to the human cost.

Context matters: Dickens wrote amid the maze of Victorian bureaucracy, when law and administration expanded alongside urban poverty, debt prisons, and punishing social codes. He made a literary sport of exposing how “justice” could feel like theater staged for those who could afford tickets. So the quote isn’t merely anti-lawyer; it’s anti-complacency. It suggests a feedback loop: the more a society tolerates exploitation and inequality, the more it needs “good” professionals to rationalize it - and the more normal the arrangement becomes.

It’s funny because it’s true in a slightly sick way, which is Dickens at his sharpest.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: The Old Curiosity Shop (Charles Dickens, 1841)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
It's a pleasant world we live in sir, a very pleasant world. There are bad people in it, Mr Richard, but if there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers. (Chapter 56). The commonly-circulated shortened form (“If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers”) is a partial extraction. In the novel, the line is spoken by the character Sampson Brass. The work was first published in weekly serial parts in Dickens’s periodical Master Humphrey’s Clock from April 1840 to February 1841, and then issued in book form in 1841.
Other candidates (1)
Charles Dickens. not more particularly mention or describe ) might find to their cost . " I mean the gentleman up ......
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Dickens, Charles. (2026, February 9). If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-there-were-no-bad-people-there-would-be-no-5603/

Chicago Style
Dickens, Charles. "If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-there-were-no-bad-people-there-would-be-no-5603/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"If there were no bad people, there would be no good lawyers." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-there-were-no-bad-people-there-would-be-no-5603/. Accessed 9 Feb. 2026.

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If there were no bad people there would be no good lawyers - Dickens
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About the Author

Charles Dickens

Charles Dickens (February 7, 1812 - June 9, 1870) was a Novelist from England.

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