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Daily Inspiration Quote by Mary Webb

"Saddle your dreams before you ride 'em"

About this Quote

Dreams are usually sold as wild horses: beautiful, untamed, somehow more authentic if they bolt. Mary Webb flips that romance into something sterner and more practical. "Saddle your dreams before you ride em" doesn’t tell you to stop dreaming; it tells you to stop confusing yearning with direction.

The verb choice matters. To saddle is to prepare for friction: weight, distance, the possibility of being thrown. A saddle is also an instrument of control. Webb’s line implies that an unprepared dream doesn’t liberate you, it endangers you. The subtext is almost pastoral and quietly moral: ambition without equipment becomes spectacle, not progress. You don’t get credit for wanting a different life; you get results from building one.

Webb wrote as a novelist of rural England, attuned to how fantasy collides with constraint: poverty, class expectations, physical labor, weather. In that world, "saddling" isn’t metaphorical decoration; it’s a daily technology, the kind that separates wishful thinking from survivable action. The colloquial "em" keeps it from sounding like a sermon. It’s advice passed across a gate, not declared from a lectern.

The line’s intent is to discipline the dream without killing it. Make it carryable. Give it a plan, a price, a set of straps you can actually buckle. Otherwise the dream rides you.

Quote Details

TopicMotivational
Source
Verified source: Precious Bane (Mary Webb, 1924)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
'Saddle your dreams afore you ride 'em, my wench,' he said. (Chapter title: "Saddle Your Dreams Before You Ride Em"; page 49 in the 1928 Jonathan Cape edition). The commonly circulated wording "before you ride 'em" appears to be a modernization/paraphrase. A reliable secondary source quoting the passage from the novel gives the line as spoken by Mr. Beguildy in Mary Webb's novel Precious Bane: "Saddle your dreams afore you ride 'em, my wench," and Google Books confirms that a chapter in Precious Bane is titled "SADDLE YOUR DREAMS BEFORE YOU RIDE EM" and begins on page 49 in the 1928 Jonathan Cape edition. Google Books also lists an earlier full-view edition from 1926, indicating the quote was in print by then, and the novel itself is generally dated 1924 as the original publication. I could verify the novel as the primary source, but I could not directly inspect the 1924 first-edition page image in this session to give the exact first-edition page number.
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Webb, Mary. (2026, March 15). Saddle your dreams before you ride 'em. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/saddle-your-dreams-before-you-ride-em-122700/

Chicago Style
Webb, Mary. "Saddle your dreams before you ride 'em." FixQuotes. March 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/saddle-your-dreams-before-you-ride-em-122700/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Saddle your dreams before you ride 'em." FixQuotes, 15 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/saddle-your-dreams-before-you-ride-em-122700/. Accessed 1 Apr. 2026.

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Saddle Your Dreams Before You Ride Them - Mary Webb
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About the Author

Mary Webb

Mary Webb (March 25, 1881 - October 8, 1927) was a Novelist from England.

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