"The worst education which teaches self-denial is better than the best which teaches everything else, and not that"
About this Quote
Sterling writes in a 19th-century moral climate where “education” was becoming a modern religion: examinations, institutions, cultural capital. His jab aims at the kind of learning that trains the mind while flattering the ego. “Everything else” stands in for the dazzling inventory of knowledge that can be acquired and displayed. “Not that” is the knife twist: without an inner discipline, the rest is ornamental, even corrosive. He’s arguing that character isn’t a nice add-on to competence; it’s the governor on the engine.
The subtext is almost political. An educated class that hasn’t learned restraint is poised to rationalize its appetites, to baptize ambition as merit, to turn “I want” into “I’m entitled.” Self-denial here isn’t dour repression so much as a capacity to choose long-term goods over short-term cravings: to stop, to yield, to accept limits. Sterling’s hierarchy implies that knowledge without constraint doesn’t just fail to improve a person; it amplifies whatever is already there.
It works because the sentence mirrors its ethic. It withholds comfort, refuses nuance, and forces a hard comparison. The austerity is the point: a moral lesson delivered without sugar, daring the reader to argue back without proving him right.
Quote Details
| Topic | Self-Discipline |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Blackwood's Magazine: Sayings and Essayings (John Sterling, 1839)
Evidence: The worst education which teaches self-denial is better than the best which teaches every thing else, and not that. (Page 674, item 30). The earliest primary-source appearance I found is in John Sterling's unsigned piece 'Sayings and Essayings' in Blackwood's Magazine, vol. 46, November 1839. The quote appears as numbered item 30 on page 674. It was later reprinted in Sterling's posthumous collection 'Essays and Tales' (J. W. Parker, 1848), in the section 'Sayings and Essayings' on page 182, which confirms authorship but is not the first publication. The 1848 reprint gives nearby context under the heading 'MONTANUS. EDUCATION.' Other candidates (1) English Prose Reader (Charles William Palotta, Louis Charle..., 1889) compilation94.4% ... John Sterling 2 ) says truly , that " the worst education which teaches self - denial , is better than the best w... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Sterling, John. (2026, March 16). The worst education which teaches self-denial is better than the best which teaches everything else, and not that. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-worst-education-which-teaches-self-denial-is-118275/
Chicago Style
Sterling, John. "The worst education which teaches self-denial is better than the best which teaches everything else, and not that." FixQuotes. March 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-worst-education-which-teaches-self-denial-is-118275/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The worst education which teaches self-denial is better than the best which teaches everything else, and not that." FixQuotes, 16 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-worst-education-which-teaches-self-denial-is-118275/. Accessed 19 Mar. 2026.














