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Life's Pleasures Quote by Lord Byron

"Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; the best of life is but intoxication"

About this Quote

Byron doesn’t romanticize drunkenness so much as he weaponizes it against the Enlightenment fantasy of the self-governing, rational man. The line turns “reasonable” into an accusation: if you’re lucid enough to see what life actually offers, you’ll need an exit hatch. “Must” is the tell. This isn’t a toast to partying; it’s a grim little syllogism. Consciousness hurts, therefore anesthesia becomes a duty.

The sly brilliance is how he expands “drunk” into “intoxication,” widening the target from alcohol to any ecstatic override: sex, art, speed, war, love, spectacle. Byron is describing a cultural operating system, not a bar tab. The best of life, he implies, isn’t virtue or progress; it’s the moments when the mind stops keeping accounts. That’s a Romantic credo delivered with a cynic’s grin.

Context matters: early 19th-century Britain is industrializing, moralizing, and tightening its social screws while Byron plays celebrity outcast, scandal magnet, political sympathizer, and poet of beautiful self-destruction. His work repeatedly stages the same collision: a hyper-aware sensibility trapped in a world too dull, hypocritical, or brutish to deserve it. Intoxication becomes both protest and self-medication, a way to refuse bourgeois sobriety and its promised rewards.

The subtext is darker than the aphorism’s swagger: if lucidity is the price of being “reasonable,” then unreason is the only mercy. Byron makes the hedonist sound like a philosopher, and the philosopher sound like someone reaching for the bottle.

Quote Details

TopicMeaning of Life
Source
Verified source: Don Juan (Lord Byron, 1819)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; The best of life is but intoxication: (Canto II, stanza 179). This line is from Byron’s poem Don Juan, Canto II, stanza 179. Don Juan was first published anonymously in London by John Murray; Cantos I–II appeared in 1819 (often dated 15 July 1819). Many modern quote sites truncate it to the two-line version you provided; in the poem it continues with additional lines beginning “Glory, the grape, love, gold, in these are sunk…”.
Other candidates (1)
The Poetical Works of Lord Byron: Childe Harold; Don Juan (George Gordon Byron Baron Byron, 1886) compilation95.0%
George Gordon Byron Baron Byron. CLXXIX . Man , being reasonable , must get drunk ; The best of life is but intoxicat...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Byron, Lord. (2026, February 26). Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; the best of life is but intoxication. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/man-being-reasonable-must-get-drunk-the-best-of-36006/

Chicago Style
Byron, Lord. "Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; the best of life is but intoxication." FixQuotes. February 26, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/man-being-reasonable-must-get-drunk-the-best-of-36006/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; the best of life is but intoxication." FixQuotes, 26 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/man-being-reasonable-must-get-drunk-the-best-of-36006/. Accessed 2 Apr. 2026.

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Man, being reasonable, must get drunk; life is intoxication
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About the Author

Lord Byron

Lord Byron (January 22, 1788 - April 19, 1824) was a Poet from United Kingdom.

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