"Persevere in virtue and diligence"
About this Quote
An old Roman comedian telling you to keep your head down is exactly the kind of moral punchline that lands harder than it first appears. "Persevere in virtue and diligence" reads like a stitched-on proverb, but coming from Plautus, it carries the sly aftertaste of a stagecraft professional who knew how messy people actually are. He wrote for crowds who loved clever servants, greedy old men, and schemes that spiral; in that world, "virtue" is less halo than habit, and "diligence" is the one thing even a con artist has to practice.
The specific intent is practical, not sanctimonious: keep going, keep working, keep your conduct intact. The key word is "persevere" - not "be" virtuous, but stay virtuous under pressure, boredom, temptation, and bad incentives. That’s an ethic tailored to a republic-turned-empire culture that prized disciplina and labor as social glue, especially as Rome absorbed wealth, slaves, and luxury that made self-restraint feel optional for the lucky.
The subtext is that virtue is fragile and effortful. Plautus isn’t promising that goodness gets rewarded; he’s implying it needs endurance because the world doesn’t cooperate. For a playwright, that’s also a wink about the work itself: comedy is built on shortcuts and appetites, yet it takes relentless craft to make chaos look effortless. The line doubles as audience management - a moral tag that lets a rowdy, pleasure-seeking crowd exit feeling briefly upright, even if they’ll be back tomorrow for another farce.
The specific intent is practical, not sanctimonious: keep going, keep working, keep your conduct intact. The key word is "persevere" - not "be" virtuous, but stay virtuous under pressure, boredom, temptation, and bad incentives. That’s an ethic tailored to a republic-turned-empire culture that prized disciplina and labor as social glue, especially as Rome absorbed wealth, slaves, and luxury that made self-restraint feel optional for the lucky.
The subtext is that virtue is fragile and effortful. Plautus isn’t promising that goodness gets rewarded; he’s implying it needs endurance because the world doesn’t cooperate. For a playwright, that’s also a wink about the work itself: comedy is built on shortcuts and appetites, yet it takes relentless craft to make chaos look effortless. The line doubles as audience management - a moral tag that lets a rowdy, pleasure-seeking crowd exit feeling briefly upright, even if they’ll be back tomorrow for another farce.
Quote Details
| Topic | Perseverance |
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