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Life & Wisdom Quote by Horace Walpole

"Men are often capable of greater things than they perform - They are sent into the world with bills of credit, and seldom draw to their full extent"

About this Quote

Walpole frames human potential like finance: a man arrives in the world carrying "bills of credit" (a promise of value), then lives as if he can only cash small notes. It is a beautifully cold metaphor for squandered capacity. Not fate, not lack of talent, but a kind of timid self-accounting keeps people from "draw[ing] to their full extent". The sting is that the limitation is voluntary, even polite.

Coming from an 18th-century aristocratic writer steeped in patronage, Parliament, and inherited advantage, the image doubles as social critique. Credit in Walpole's Britain wasn't just personal; it was reputation, class standing, access. To be "sent into the world" with credit implies you start with resources and expectations already underwritten. That makes the failure to perform "greater things" feel less tragic and more negligent: an indictment of the genteel habit of coasting on promise.

The subtext also cuts toward Walpole's own milieu of cultivated wit and restrained ambition. In a culture that prized decorum and distrusted excess, drawing fully on one's "credit" could look like vulgar striving. So the line carries a quiet provocation: what if understatement, so fashionable, is also a cage?

The sentence works because it makes potential measurable, almost auditable. It swaps inspiration for an account ledger, turning self-knowledge into a moral balance sheet. You're not merely capable; you're obligated to collect on what you were issued.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Walpole, Horace. (2026, January 15). Men are often capable of greater things than they perform - They are sent into the world with bills of credit, and seldom draw to their full extent. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/men-are-often-capable-of-greater-things-than-they-50749/

Chicago Style
Walpole, Horace. "Men are often capable of greater things than they perform - They are sent into the world with bills of credit, and seldom draw to their full extent." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/men-are-often-capable-of-greater-things-than-they-50749/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Men are often capable of greater things than they perform - They are sent into the world with bills of credit, and seldom draw to their full extent." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/men-are-often-capable-of-greater-things-than-they-50749/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Horace Walpole (September 24, 1717 - March 2, 1797) was a Author from England.

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