"Some accidents there are in life that a little folly is necessary to help us out of"
About this Quote
Life doesn’t just punish vice; it also blindsides the virtuous. La Rochefoucauld’s line lands because it treats “folly” not as a moral failure but as an emergency tool: the small, strategic irrationality that gets you through a situation reason and prudence can’t untangle. It’s a coolly subversive move from a writer famous for stripping human behavior down to self-interest and vanity. Here, the cynicism is gentler but no less sharp: the world is messy enough that your best intentions can trap you, and your best logic can freeze you.
The intent is to puncture the fantasy that good outcomes are always produced by good judgment. “Accidents” suggests contingency - the sudden illness, the political reversal, the social misunderstanding. These are problems with no clean solution, where the rational response might be paralysis, pride, or interminable calculation. A “little folly” can mean taking a leap without sufficient evidence, breaking protocol, making an audacious apology, telling a half-truth to preserve a larger peace, even choosing optimism when pessimism feels more “accurate.” It’s not an endorsement of stupidity; it’s an argument for tactical imperfection.
Context matters: a 17th-century court culture obsessed with appearances and precarious status, where survival often depended on improvisation, not sincerity. The subtext is that moral purity can be a luxury. Sometimes you don’t escape by being right; you escape by being flexible enough to look wrong for a moment.
The intent is to puncture the fantasy that good outcomes are always produced by good judgment. “Accidents” suggests contingency - the sudden illness, the political reversal, the social misunderstanding. These are problems with no clean solution, where the rational response might be paralysis, pride, or interminable calculation. A “little folly” can mean taking a leap without sufficient evidence, breaking protocol, making an audacious apology, telling a half-truth to preserve a larger peace, even choosing optimism when pessimism feels more “accurate.” It’s not an endorsement of stupidity; it’s an argument for tactical imperfection.
Context matters: a 17th-century court culture obsessed with appearances and precarious status, where survival often depended on improvisation, not sincerity. The subtext is that moral purity can be a luxury. Sometimes you don’t escape by being right; you escape by being flexible enough to look wrong for a moment.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
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