"That which costs little is less valued"
About this Quote
Value, Cervantes implies, is rarely a pure judgment; its often a reflex shaped by friction. "That which costs little is less valued" reads like a proverb, but it carries the wary eye of a novelist who watched Spain chase imperial glory while ordinary people haggled over scraps. The line is blunt because its meant to land as social diagnosis: humans dont simply want things, they want proof those things are worth wanting. Cost becomes that proof.
The intent is pragmatic, almost managerial: if you give something away too easily, you teach people to treat it as disposable. Cervantes is not praising greed so much as observing a cognitive glitch we still live with. Effort and expense create a story we can tell ourselves: I suffered, therefore this matters. The subtext is a critique of status economics before the term existed. Price isnt just a number; its a signal, a performance of scarcity, a small ritual that turns an object (or opportunity, or relationship) into a badge.
Context matters because Cervantes wrote from the bruised margins of prestige. A soldier, a captive, a tax collector, a man chronically short of money, he understood how institutions monetize dignity. Don Quixote is full of characters mistaking theater for truth, and this aphorism sits comfortably in that world: we worship the costume of value, not value itself.
The irony is that the line can be read as both warning and weapon. It cautions the generous that their gifts may be squandered, and it gives the powerful a rationale to keep access expensive. Cervantes is pointing at the mechanism, not sanctifying it.
The intent is pragmatic, almost managerial: if you give something away too easily, you teach people to treat it as disposable. Cervantes is not praising greed so much as observing a cognitive glitch we still live with. Effort and expense create a story we can tell ourselves: I suffered, therefore this matters. The subtext is a critique of status economics before the term existed. Price isnt just a number; its a signal, a performance of scarcity, a small ritual that turns an object (or opportunity, or relationship) into a badge.
Context matters because Cervantes wrote from the bruised margins of prestige. A soldier, a captive, a tax collector, a man chronically short of money, he understood how institutions monetize dignity. Don Quixote is full of characters mistaking theater for truth, and this aphorism sits comfortably in that world: we worship the costume of value, not value itself.
The irony is that the line can be read as both warning and weapon. It cautions the generous that their gifts may be squandered, and it gives the powerful a rationale to keep access expensive. Cervantes is pointing at the mechanism, not sanctifying it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
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