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Life & Wisdom Quote by Samuel Johnson

"There are goods so opposed that we cannot seize both, but, by too much prudence, may pass between them at too great a distance to reach either"

About this Quote

Johnson is taking a wrecking ball to the polite fiction that “prudence” is always a virtue. The line turns moral life into a physical problem: two desirable “goods” sit on opposite sides, and the cautious person, terrified of choosing wrong, threads the middle so safely that they end up touching nothing. It’s a ruthlessly economical metaphor for a certain British pathology Johnson knew well in the 18th-century world of patronage, pamphlets, and reputation: the cultivated habit of hedging until your convictions become invisible.

The key trick is how he reframes failure. You don’t miss out because you were reckless; you miss out because you were careful in the wrong way. “Too much prudence” isn’t wisdom, it’s self-protection masquerading as judgment. Johnson’s subtext is psychological before it’s ethical: the over-prudent mind wants to avoid loss more than it wants to achieve good, so it chooses distance as a strategy. That distance feels like safety, but it’s also a refusal of consequence.

Contextually, it sits comfortably in Johnson’s moral essays and his suspicion of fashionable rationality. Enlightenment culture prized moderation and balance; Johnson, never impressed by slogans, reminds readers that moderation can become cowardice, and “balance” can become a way to evade commitment. The sentence warns that some conflicts are structured so that neutrality is not a third option, just a slower kind of defeat.

Quote Details

TopicDecision-Making
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Johnson, Samuel. (2026, January 16). There are goods so opposed that we cannot seize both, but, by too much prudence, may pass between them at too great a distance to reach either. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-are-goods-so-opposed-that-we-cannot-seize-137718/

Chicago Style
Johnson, Samuel. "There are goods so opposed that we cannot seize both, but, by too much prudence, may pass between them at too great a distance to reach either." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-are-goods-so-opposed-that-we-cannot-seize-137718/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"There are goods so opposed that we cannot seize both, but, by too much prudence, may pass between them at too great a distance to reach either." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/there-are-goods-so-opposed-that-we-cannot-seize-137718/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Samuel Johnson on Prudence and the Perils of Excess Caution
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About the Author

Samuel Johnson

Samuel Johnson (September 18, 1709 - December 13, 1784) was a Author from England.

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