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Daily Inspiration Quote by William Shakespeare

"To do a great right do a little wrong"

About this Quote

Moral purity is a luxury Shakespeare rarely grants his characters, and this line is a neat distillation of his most unsettling insight: justice often arrives wearing the mask of sin. "To do a great right do a little wrong" isn’t a cheerful permission slip for misbehavior; it’s a pressure-valve argument, the kind people reach for when the clean path is blocked by law, custom, or cowardice. The phrasing itself does the persuasive work. "Great" and "little" rig the scale in advance, asking the listener to accept a lopsided moral arithmetic where consequences outweigh method. It’s rhetoric designed to soothe conscience even as it compromises it.

The subtext is all about power. Only someone with confidence - or desperation - talks this way, because the line assumes a world in which systems fail and private action has to compensate. That’s Shakespeare’s political realism: institutions are porous, virtue is often impractical, and the people most committed to "right" are tempted into tactical wrongdoing. It’s not just ethical complexity for its own sake; it’s a warning about how easily self-justification metastasizes. Once you’ve made "a little wrong" your tool, you start needing it again.

In Shakespeare’s dramatic universe, this logic often precedes disaster: a benevolent lie that curdles, a strategic cruelty that normalizes cruelty, a shortcut that becomes the road. The line works because it captures the exact moment morality is being negotiated in real time, not preached after the fact.

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
Source
Verified source: The Merchant of Venice (William Shakespeare, 1600)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Wrest once the Law to your authority. To do a great right, do a little wrong, And curbe this cruell diuell of his will (Act 4, Scene 1 (line 2133 in Folger line numbering; often cited as 4.1.213)). This line is spoken by Bassanio in the trial scene. The widely-circulated shortened version (“To do a great right do a little wrong”) is a partial quotation; in Shakespeare’s text it is preceded by “Wrest once the Law to your authority” and followed by “And curb this cruel devil of his will.” The earliest printing of The Merchant of Venice is the first quarto (Q1) published in 1600; the Folger’s Shakespeare Documented entry provides the primary-source bibliographic identification of that 1600 first edition (quarto) and its imprint details. For the wording of the line itself, see a diplomatic transcription of the early text (e.g., Project Gutenberg’s transcription of the 1600 quarto text).
Other candidates (1)
The Dramatic Works of William Shakespeare (William Shakespeare, 1826) compilation95.0%
William Shakespeare. To do a great right , do a little wrong ; And curb this cruel devil of his will . Por . It must ...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Shakespeare, William. (2026, February 9). To do a great right do a little wrong. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-do-a-great-right-do-a-little-wrong-27599/

Chicago Style
Shakespeare, William. "To do a great right do a little wrong." FixQuotes. February 9, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-do-a-great-right-do-a-little-wrong-27599/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To do a great right do a little wrong." FixQuotes, 9 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-do-a-great-right-do-a-little-wrong-27599/. Accessed 11 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

William Shakespeare

William Shakespeare (April 26, 1564 - April 23, 1616) was a Dramatist from England.

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