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Life & Wisdom Quote by Rose Kennedy

"Prosperity tries the fortunate, adversity the great"

About this Quote

Prosperity isn’t portrayed here as a reward so much as a stress test. Rose Kennedy flips the usual moral math: we assume adversity is the hard part and success is the victory lap, but she insists comfort has its own temptations - complacency, entitlement, moral drift, the quiet rot of being surrounded by yeses. “Tries the fortunate” lands like a warning to anyone insulated by money or status: your character gets examined not by what you survive, but by what you do when you can afford not to care.

Then she draws a bright, almost aristocratic line between “fortunate” and “great.” Fortunate is luck, inheritance, timing, the accident of being on the right side of history. Great is earned, proven under pressure. The subtext is bracingly aspirational and a little severe: suffering alone doesn’t sanctify you, but how you meet it can elevate you into a different category of person.

Context matters. Kennedy wrote from inside America’s most mythologized family, one defined by public ambition and private catastrophe: wartime loss, assassinations, scandal, illness. That biography makes the sentence feel less like a platitude and more like a code of conduct. It offers a socially acceptable way to translate trauma into purpose, and to discipline privilege with duty. In a culture that treats success as evidence of virtue, Kennedy’s line is a corrective: prosperity is not proof; it’s a test you can fail quietly, in plain sight.

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TopicResilience
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Prosperity tries the fortunate, adversity the great
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About the Author

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Rose Kennedy (July 22, 1890 - January 22, 1995) was a Author from USA.

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