"Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown"
About this Quote
The wording is quietly absolutist: “fear of any kind” and “unknown” don’t leave much room for partial credit. That’s the subtextual provocation. Buchan, a politician of the early 20th century and a veteran of an era defined by mass war and political upheaval, is implicitly arguing that a society can be formally stable while still being profoundly unfree. Fear can be produced without open conflict: by arbitrary authority, economic precarity, sectarian resentment, propaganda, surveillance. If fear persists, “peace” is just a managed truce.
It also carries an ethical sting aimed at leaders. Fear is not treated as a private weakness but as a public failure, something governments either reduce or cultivate. That makes the quote feel modern: it anticipates today’s argument that security isn’t only border control or policing but the baseline confidence that institutions won’t turn on you. Buchan’s peace isn’t passive; it’s engineered by trust, fairness, and predictability. When fear is the common currency, even quiet streets are only quiet on the surface.
Quote Details
| Topic | Peace |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Memory Hold-the-Door (US: Pilgrim's Way) (John Buchan, 1940)
Evidence: Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown. (Chapter XII, "The Other Side Of The Hill" (exact page varies by edition; Project Gutenberg Australia e-text line ~680)). Primary source confirmed in John Buchan's own prose in his memoir/autobiographical work. The Project Gutenberg Australia text states: "First published by Hodder & Stoughton Ltd, London, June 1940" and contains the sentence in context: "There are no more comfortable words in the language than Peace and Joy... Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown." This verifies the quote as Buchan's and anchors it to the 1940 publication. Determining whether it appeared earlier (e.g., in a speech, letter, or magazine excerpt) would require checking Buchan's periodical publications and any pre-publication extracts/serializations of this chapter; I did not find an earlier primary instance in the searches run. Other candidates (1) The Complete Works of John Buchan (John Buchan, 2022) compilation95.0% ... Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown . But Joy is a positive thing ; in Joy one does not only... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Buchan, John. (2026, February 21). Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-is-that-state-in-which-fear-of-any-kind-is-133362/
Chicago Style
Buchan, John. "Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown." FixQuotes. February 21, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-is-that-state-in-which-fear-of-any-kind-is-133362/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Peace is that state in which fear of any kind is unknown." FixQuotes, 21 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/peace-is-that-state-in-which-fear-of-any-kind-is-133362/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.












