"There have been in this century only one great man and one great thing: Napoleon and liberty. For want of the great man, let us have the great thing"
About this Quote
Hugo sets up a provocation and then yanks the rug: he names Napoleon as the century's lone "great man", but he refuses to end on hero worship. The pivot to "liberty" is the real move - a deliberate demotion of charisma in favor of principle. Hugo knows the 19th century's addiction to saviors: the romantic cult of the exceptional individual, the myth that history needs a rider on a white horse. He grants that hunger just long enough to expose its cost.
The line works because it's a bait-and-switch between two kinds of greatness. Napoleon represents concentrated will: decisive, theatrical, violently efficient. Liberty represents distributed power: messier, slower, less photogenic. By pairing them as the only contenders, Hugo frames a choice between the seduction of domination and the harder project of self-government. "For want of the great man" reads like a shrug, but it's a loaded shrug. It implies that the search for another Napoleon is not only futile; it's childish, a refusal to grow up politically.
Context matters: Hugo lived through regime whiplash - empire, restoration, monarchy, republic, another empire - and would later exile himself under Napoleon III. That experience sharpens the subtext: strongmen keep returning because they offer narrative clarity. Hugo is arguing for a different kind of story, one where the protagonist is an idea, not a person. The final plea isn't resignation; it's a rebuke. If we can't stop craving emperors, at least choose the "great thing" that makes emperors unnecessary.
The line works because it's a bait-and-switch between two kinds of greatness. Napoleon represents concentrated will: decisive, theatrical, violently efficient. Liberty represents distributed power: messier, slower, less photogenic. By pairing them as the only contenders, Hugo frames a choice between the seduction of domination and the harder project of self-government. "For want of the great man" reads like a shrug, but it's a loaded shrug. It implies that the search for another Napoleon is not only futile; it's childish, a refusal to grow up politically.
Context matters: Hugo lived through regime whiplash - empire, restoration, monarchy, republic, another empire - and would later exile himself under Napoleon III. That experience sharpens the subtext: strongmen keep returning because they offer narrative clarity. Hugo is arguing for a different kind of story, one where the protagonist is an idea, not a person. The final plea isn't resignation; it's a rebuke. If we can't stop craving emperors, at least choose the "great thing" that makes emperors unnecessary.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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