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Daily Inspiration Quote by Pedro Calderon de la Barca

"These flowers, which were splendid and sprightly, waking in the dawn of the morning, in the evening will be a pitiful frivolity, sleeping in the cold night's arms"

About this Quote

Calderon takes a handful of morning flowers and turns them into a moral time-bomb. The line is lavish on purpose: "splendid and sprightly" feels almost theatrical in its brightness, a stage-lit dawn where beauty looks self-sufficient. Then he snaps the image shut. By evening, the same bloom is reduced to "pitiful frivolity" - not merely dead, but faintly ridiculous, as if its earlier radiance now counts against it. The cruelty is deliberate: transience doesn’t just end pleasure; it retroactively mocks it.

The engine here is Baroque contrast. Calderon writes in an age obsessed with vanitas, the ornate reminder that magnificence decays. The flowers are props in a larger argument about human display: courtly charm, youth, status, even virtue when it becomes performance. "Waking" and "sleeping" make the lifecycle feel intimate, almost domestic, but the "cold night's arms" chills any comfort. Night is personified as an embrace that isn’t love but inevitability - a counterfeit tenderness.

As a dramatist, Calderon knows how quickly scenes change. Morning and evening are basically acts in a play, and the audience is forced to watch meaning flip in real time. The subtext lands on a famously Spanish Golden Age anxiety: the world dazzles, then withdraws; honor and beauty can be real, but they’re never secure. The line doesn’t plead for despair so much as discipline: if the gorgeous thing will be gone by curtain call, you’d better decide what, if anything, lasts after the applause.

Quote Details

TopicMortality
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Barca, Pedro Calderon de la. (2026, January 16). These flowers, which were splendid and sprightly, waking in the dawn of the morning, in the evening will be a pitiful frivolity, sleeping in the cold night's arms. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/these-flowers-which-were-splendid-and-sprightly-85704/

Chicago Style
Barca, Pedro Calderon de la. "These flowers, which were splendid and sprightly, waking in the dawn of the morning, in the evening will be a pitiful frivolity, sleeping in the cold night's arms." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/these-flowers-which-were-splendid-and-sprightly-85704/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"These flowers, which were splendid and sprightly, waking in the dawn of the morning, in the evening will be a pitiful frivolity, sleeping in the cold night's arms." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/these-flowers-which-were-splendid-and-sprightly-85704/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.

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Calderon de la Barca: Morning Flowers and Vanitas
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About the Author

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Pedro Calderon de la Barca (January 17, 1600 - May 25, 1681) was a Dramatist from Spain.

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