Skip to main content

Life & Wisdom Quote by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

"Something attempted, something done, Has earned a nights repose"

About this Quote

Rest is framed here not as a reward for virtue but as wages for effort. Longfellow’s tidy couplet turns sleep into a moral economy: attempt something, do something, and you’ve earned the only luxury that can’t be faked - a quiet mind at night. The rhyming certainty (“done”/“repose”) is the point. It sounds like a lullaby, but it’s also a work ethic in miniature, calibrated for a 19th-century America busy manufacturing both goods and character.

The intent is gently disciplinary. Longfellow isn’t cheering grand achievements; he’s lowering the bar to make action itself the antidote to anxious self-reproach. “Something attempted” matters because it acknowledges failure as part of the bargain, then rescues the speaker from the paralysis of perfectionism. The subtext is that unrest comes from the sense of wasted time: the mind races when it believes the day was squandered. By linking repose to tangible effort, he offers a secular form of absolution - not God’s forgiveness, but the conscience’s.

Context helps explain the line’s polish. Longfellow was a popular, institution-building poet: accessible, didactic, designed to be memorized. The meter and capitalization give the sentiment a proverb’s authority, as if it arrived pre-approved by tradition. It’s aspirational propaganda for steadiness: a culture telling itself that the decent life is made of small completed acts, and that peace is less a mood than a receipt you can earn.

Quote Details

TopicWork Ethic
Source
Verified source: The Village Blacksmith (Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1840)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Something attempted, something done, Has earned a night's repose. (null). This line is from Longfellow’s poem “The Village Blacksmith.” The earliest publication I can substantiate from primary-source evidence available online is its appearance in the November 1840 issue of The Knickerbocker (a contemporary magazine publication repeatedly cited by reference sources). As a book publication, the line appears in Longfellow’s collection Ballads and Other Poems (Cambridge: John Owen, 1842) on the poem’s page 101 in the scanned PDF edition; the quoted lines occur in the stanza beginning “Toiling,, rejoicing,, sorrowing,” and run across pages 101–102 in that scan (the poem starts on page 99 in the book). I used the Internet Archive PDF scan to verify the exact wording in print. The user’s version drops the apostrophe in “night’s.”
Other candidates (1)
The Summary (1908)95.0%
... HENRY WADSWORTH LONGFELLOW Under a spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands ; The smith , a mighty man ....
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. (2026, February 11). Something attempted, something done, Has earned a nights repose. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/something-attempted-something-done-has-earned-a-36464/

Chicago Style
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth. "Something attempted, something done, Has earned a nights repose." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/something-attempted-something-done-has-earned-a-36464/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Something attempted, something done, Has earned a nights repose." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/something-attempted-something-done-has-earned-a-36464/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Henry Add to List
Something attempted, something done, Has earned a nights repose
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (February 27, 1807 - March 24, 1882) was a Poet from USA.

67 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Ralph Waldo Emerson, Philosopher
Ralph Waldo Emerson
John Florio, Writer
Margaret Drabble, Novelist