"There is nothing impossible to him who will try"
About this Quote
Spoken in the register of conquest, "There is nothing impossible to him who will try" turns ambition into a moral obligation. It reads like encouragement, but it’s also a recruitment slogan for risk: the world is framed not as a set of limits but as a test of will. For a leader like Alexander, that’s not self-help. It’s statecraft. If impossibility is merely a failure to attempt, then hesitation becomes a kind of disloyalty, and audacity becomes the highest civic virtue.
The line works because it collapses outcome into character. Trying isn’t just an action; it’s proof of worth. That reframing is politically useful. Armies march farther, generals gamble harder, subjects tolerate disruption when the leader’s ideology insists the only true defeat is timidity. In the Macedonian context - a young king consolidating power, then sprinting across the Persian Empire - the quote channels a broader Hellenic admiration for arete (excellence) but sharpens it into something more dangerous: a justification for perpetual forward motion.
The subtext is bracing and faintly tyrannical: if you fail, the world didn’t beat you; your will did. That’s empowering for the chosen few and merciless for everyone else. It also flatters the leader’s myth. A man who defines reality as negotiable by effort is a man positioned to look inevitable. For Alexander, "try" is the hinge between personal legend and imperial expansion - a tidy sentence that makes conquest sound like courage.
The line works because it collapses outcome into character. Trying isn’t just an action; it’s proof of worth. That reframing is politically useful. Armies march farther, generals gamble harder, subjects tolerate disruption when the leader’s ideology insists the only true defeat is timidity. In the Macedonian context - a young king consolidating power, then sprinting across the Persian Empire - the quote channels a broader Hellenic admiration for arete (excellence) but sharpens it into something more dangerous: a justification for perpetual forward motion.
The subtext is bracing and faintly tyrannical: if you fail, the world didn’t beat you; your will did. That’s empowering for the chosen few and merciless for everyone else. It also flatters the leader’s myth. A man who defines reality as negotiable by effort is a man positioned to look inevitable. For Alexander, "try" is the hinge between personal legend and imperial expansion - a tidy sentence that makes conquest sound like courage.
Quote Details
| Topic | Never Give Up |
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