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Daily Inspiration Quote by Herodotus

"It is better by noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to half the evils we anticipate than to remain in cowardly listlessness for fear of what might happen"

About this Quote

Herodotus is selling courage the way a seasoned reporter sells skepticism: not as a virtue poster, but as a practical stance in a world where rumor, fate, and human error are always in the room. The line takes a scalpel to anticipatory fear. We don’t just dread suffering; we inflate it into a full inventory of “evils we anticipate,” then let that imagined catalogue govern our choices. His punch is statistical and psychological at once: action carries risk, yes, but paralysis guarantees a slower, more humiliating loss.

The phrasing matters. “Noble boldness” isn’t mere bravado; it’s a claim about public character. In Herodotus’ milieu - city-states weighing war, leaders negotiating fragile alliances - courage is not only personal but civic. To refuse to act is “cowardly listlessness,” a failure of duty that drains a community’s capacity to respond. He frames inaction as its own kind of choice, and a morally compromised one.

Subtext: fear thrives on the hypothetical. Herodotus, chronicler of how small decisions cascade into large catastrophes, knows that people often prefer the illusion of control that comes from waiting. His irony is that waiting doesn’t neutralize danger; it just hands initiative to someone else. Better to face “half the evils” head-on than to be managed by fantasies of the other half. The sentence reads like a warning to rulers and citizens alike: history punishes dithering as efficiently as it punishes recklessness.

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TopicMotivational
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Herodotus. (2026, January 16). It is better by noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to half the evils we anticipate than to remain in cowardly listlessness for fear of what might happen. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-better-by-noble-boldness-to-run-the-risk-of-112039/

Chicago Style
Herodotus. "It is better by noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to half the evils we anticipate than to remain in cowardly listlessness for fear of what might happen." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-better-by-noble-boldness-to-run-the-risk-of-112039/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"It is better by noble boldness to run the risk of being subject to half the evils we anticipate than to remain in cowardly listlessness for fear of what might happen." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-better-by-noble-boldness-to-run-the-risk-of-112039/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Herodotus

Herodotus (484 BC - 425 BC) was a Historian from Greece.

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