"It is costly wisdom that is bought by experience"
About this Quote
“It is costly wisdom that is bought by experience” lands like a Tudor-era invoice: knowledge isn’t granted, it’s charged. Ascham isn’t praising experience in the vague, inspirational way we do now; he’s warning you about its price tag. The line’s quiet power comes from its accounting metaphor. “Bought” implies a transaction you can’t haggle over, and “costly” suggests the fee isn’t just money but time, reputation, safety, even moral comfort. Wisdom arrives, yes, but it often shows up after the damage is already done.
Ascham wrote in a world where mistakes carried hard, public consequences. Court politics under the Tudors could turn a misjudged alliance into exile or worse. Education, too, was shifting from medieval scholasticism toward humanist ideals: disciplined study, classical languages, and the belief that learning could shape character. In that context, the aphorism reads as a defense of book-learning and counsel. Don’t insist on “learning the hard way” when history, literature, and mentors can spare you the worst tuition.
The subtext has a moral edge. Experience is often romanticized as authenticity; Ascham treats it as a last resort. He’s skeptical of bravado and impatient with people who reject instruction until reality forces it on them. The intent is practical, almost parental: be teachable now, because life’s lessons don’t offer refunds. Wisdom earned through experience may be the most convincing kind, but it’s also the kind that arrives with scars attached.
Ascham wrote in a world where mistakes carried hard, public consequences. Court politics under the Tudors could turn a misjudged alliance into exile or worse. Education, too, was shifting from medieval scholasticism toward humanist ideals: disciplined study, classical languages, and the belief that learning could shape character. In that context, the aphorism reads as a defense of book-learning and counsel. Don’t insist on “learning the hard way” when history, literature, and mentors can spare you the worst tuition.
The subtext has a moral edge. Experience is often romanticized as authenticity; Ascham treats it as a last resort. He’s skeptical of bravado and impatient with people who reject instruction until reality forces it on them. The intent is practical, almost parental: be teachable now, because life’s lessons don’t offer refunds. Wisdom earned through experience may be the most convincing kind, but it’s also the kind that arrives with scars attached.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | 'The Scholemaster' (The Schoolmaster), Roger Ascham, 1570 (posthumous). |
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