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Daily Inspiration Quote by Francis Drake

"There must be a beginning of any great matter, but the continuing unto the end until it be thoroughly finished yields the true glory"

About this Quote

Drake doesn’t romanticize the spark; he demotes it. A “beginning” is framed as mere necessity, the unavoidable paperwork of ambition. The sentence saves its reverence for endurance: “continuing unto the end” is where “true glory” is manufactured. That tilt matters coming from a soldier and privateer operating in an age when England was still improvising its imperial identity. In the 16th century, daring departures were common; what separated a raid from a legacy was follow-through, logistics, and the brutal discipline of seeing a campaign through storms, mutiny, disease, and shifting royal favor.

The phrasing is quietly transactional. “Great matter” is deliberately vague, big enough to hold a voyage, a war, a national project, even personal reputation. “Thoroughly finished” carries the moral weight: not just completed, but completed correctly, cleanly, with no loose ends that could embarrass the crown or invite retaliation. Drake’s world rewarded the headline-grabbing act, then punished the unfinished one.

Subtext: he’s also defending a particular kind of heroism. The public loves beginnings because they’re cinematic - the ship leaving harbor, the charge, the declaration. Drake insists glory belongs to the less photogenic middle: repetition, repair, recalculation. It’s an argument for professionalism over bravado, and it flatters authority too. To “continue unto the end” is to submit to command, to strategy, to the long game of state power. In an era of swaggering adventurers, Drake sells persistence as the real conquest.

Quote Details

TopicPerseverance
SourceHelp us find the source
More Quotes by Francis Add to List
Achievement Through Persistence: The True Glory of Endeavors
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About the Author

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Francis Drake (1540 AC - January 28, 1596) was a Soldier from England.

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