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Daily Inspiration Quote by Robert Walpole

"The very idea of true patriotism is lost, and the term has been prostituted to the very worst of purposes. A patriot, sir! Why, patriots spring up like mushrooms!"

About this Quote

Patriotism, Walpole suggests, isn’t dying quietly; it’s being weaponized in broad daylight. The line lands like a slap because it treats “patriot” not as an honor earned but as a costume anyone can throw on when it’s politically useful. “Prostituted” is deliberately abrasive: it implies degradation through transactional use, a sacred word reduced to a commodity. He’s not lamenting a vague moral decline so much as accusing his opponents of turning national loyalty into a rhetorical bribe.

The sneer in “A patriot, sir!” matters. It’s parliamentary theater: a statesman performing disbelief at the sudden abundance of virtue. The punchline - “spring up like mushrooms” - is almost modern in its contempt for trend-driven identities. Mushrooms appear overnight, in clusters, fed by rot. The metaphor implies that these self-styled patriots thrive on decay: crisis, scandal, public fear, any fertile compost that lets ambition present itself as principle.

Context sharpens the intent. Walpole, often tagged as Britain’s first de facto prime minister, governed amid fierce factional politics, propaganda wars, and constant attempts to brand rivals as corrupt or un-British. In that environment, “patriot” became less a description than a cudgel: a way to delegitimize government policy as betrayal and elevate opposition as the nation’s sole guardian.

Subtextually, Walpole is also defending the messy compromises of governance. He’s warning that loud professions of national purity can be a cover for power-seeking - and that the marketplace for outrage will always be oversupplied. The line endures because it captures a recurring political trick: redefining loyalty as agreement, then selling that definition back to the public as virtue.

Quote Details

TopicSarcastic
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Walpole, Robert. (2026, January 18). The very idea of true patriotism is lost, and the term has been prostituted to the very worst of purposes. A patriot, sir! Why, patriots spring up like mushrooms! FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-very-idea-of-true-patriotism-is-lost-and-the-12099/

Chicago Style
Walpole, Robert. "The very idea of true patriotism is lost, and the term has been prostituted to the very worst of purposes. A patriot, sir! Why, patriots spring up like mushrooms!" FixQuotes. January 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-very-idea-of-true-patriotism-is-lost-and-the-12099/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The very idea of true patriotism is lost, and the term has been prostituted to the very worst of purposes. A patriot, sir! Why, patriots spring up like mushrooms!" FixQuotes, 18 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-very-idea-of-true-patriotism-is-lost-and-the-12099/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

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Robert Walpole (August 26, 1676 - March 18, 1745) was a Statesman from United Kingdom.

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