"One promises much, to avoid giving little"
About this Quote
Aphorisms like this don’t just skewer hypocrisy; they map the evasions that polite society calls “good intentions.” Luc de Clapiers, marquis de Vauvenargues, wrote from inside an aristocratic world where reputation was currency and generosity was often performative. “One promises much, to avoid giving little” reads like a diagnosis of that economy: grand pledges operate as a substitute for actual cost. The promise becomes a kind of social IOU that never matures, a way to purchase moral credit on layaway.
The sentence works because it flips the usual moral hierarchy. We assume promising “much” is ambitious, even noble, while giving “little” is stingy. Vauvenargues exposes the real trade: the lavish promise is cheap precisely because it’s postponed; the small gift is expensive because it’s immediate, concrete, and measurable. You can’t hide behind it. A tiny act forces accountability in a way a sweeping vow never does.
There’s also a quietly modern insight here about rhetoric as camouflage. Overpromising isn’t merely optimism; it’s a strategy for dodging the modest request that would reveal your priorities. Offer the moon so you don’t have to hand over a coin. The line lands with the crisp cruelty of Enlightenment salon talk, where elegance is a weapon and moral clarity arrives in miniature. It’s less a call to cynicism than a warning: watch who uses future grandeur to escape present obligation.
The sentence works because it flips the usual moral hierarchy. We assume promising “much” is ambitious, even noble, while giving “little” is stingy. Vauvenargues exposes the real trade: the lavish promise is cheap precisely because it’s postponed; the small gift is expensive because it’s immediate, concrete, and measurable. You can’t hide behind it. A tiny act forces accountability in a way a sweeping vow never does.
There’s also a quietly modern insight here about rhetoric as camouflage. Overpromising isn’t merely optimism; it’s a strategy for dodging the modest request that would reveal your priorities. Offer the moon so you don’t have to hand over a coin. The line lands with the crisp cruelty of Enlightenment salon talk, where elegance is a weapon and moral clarity arrives in miniature. It’s less a call to cynicism than a warning: watch who uses future grandeur to escape present obligation.
Quote Details
| Topic | Honesty & Integrity |
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