"The lessons of their early youth regulated the conduct of their riper years"
About this Quote
Character is framed here less as a moral choice than as a kind of early software install. Godwin’s line moves with the calm confidence of Enlightenment psychology: what you absorb in youth doesn’t merely influence you later, it “regulated” you. That verb is doing the real work. It suggests an internal governor, a hidden mechanism that keeps adult behavior within rails laid down long before anyone thinks they’re choosing a direction.
The subtext is polemical. Godwin, a radical writer steeped in arguments about perfectibility and social reform, is quietly indicting the institutions that get to shape “early youth”: family discipline, schooling, church doctrine, class expectation. If the adult self is largely an echo of early training, then society can’t keep blaming individual vice while ignoring the machinery that manufactures it. The sentence also flatters the reformer’s imagination: change the inputs and you can change the person. That’s not sentimentality; it’s a political theory disguised as an observation.
There’s a second edge to it, more unsettling. If your “riper years” are regulated by early lessons, freedom becomes fragile. Godwin isn’t denying agency so much as shrinking the space where it operates, making adulthood look like the delayed consequence of childhood governance. The line’s cool, balanced phrasing reinforces that determinism: no melodrama, just cause and effect. It reads like a moral autopsy performed by someone convinced that the deepest scandals of adulthood begin as ordinary instructions given to children.
The subtext is polemical. Godwin, a radical writer steeped in arguments about perfectibility and social reform, is quietly indicting the institutions that get to shape “early youth”: family discipline, schooling, church doctrine, class expectation. If the adult self is largely an echo of early training, then society can’t keep blaming individual vice while ignoring the machinery that manufactures it. The sentence also flatters the reformer’s imagination: change the inputs and you can change the person. That’s not sentimentality; it’s a political theory disguised as an observation.
There’s a second edge to it, more unsettling. If your “riper years” are regulated by early lessons, freedom becomes fragile. Godwin isn’t denying agency so much as shrinking the space where it operates, making adulthood look like the delayed consequence of childhood governance. The line’s cool, balanced phrasing reinforces that determinism: no melodrama, just cause and effect. It reads like a moral autopsy performed by someone convinced that the deepest scandals of adulthood begin as ordinary instructions given to children.
Quote Details
| Topic | Youth |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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