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Life & Wisdom Quote by Silius Italicus

"Virtue herself is her own fairest reward"

About this Quote

A line like "Virtue herself is her own fairest reward" isn’t trying to sweet-talk you into being good; it’s trying to shame you out of needing applause. Silius Italicus writes from a Roman moral universe where reputation is currency, but the highest-status pose is to pretend you don’t care about currency at all. The sentence is engineered as a closed circuit: virtue pays virtue. No spectators required, no trophies, no divine payout. That self-sufficiency is the point and the flex.

The wording matters. "Virtue herself" personifies moral conduct as a dignified figure who can hand you something tangible: a "reward". Yet the reward isn’t a prize stapled on afterward; it’s baked into the act. The adjective "fairest" does quiet rhetorical heavy lifting. It concedes that rewards exist and that people crave them, then declares every external incentive aesthetically inferior. Not just less ethical, but less beautiful. Roman ethics often sells morality as taste.

Contextually, Silius is a poet of empire, writing in the long shadow of civil war and under the surveillance-friendly pieties of the Flavian era. In that world, public virtue is always at risk of becoming performance: loyalty theater, honor theater, grief theater. This line offers an escape hatch from the corruption of spectacle. If virtue is its own reward, you can’t be bought, and you can’t be managed by flattery.

Subtext: don’t ask what goodness gets you. The asking is already a moral downgrade.

Quote Details

TopicEthics & Morality
Source
Verified source: Punica (Silius Italicus, 95)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Ipsa quidem virtus sibimet pulcherrima merces; (Book XIII, line 663). This is the Latin original line that later gets translated/paraphrased in English as “Virtue herself is her own fairest reward.” The quote is from Silius Italicus’ epic poem Punica (Book 13, line 663). The exact composition/publication date of Punica is not precisely known; it is generally placed in the late 1st century CE (often dated to the Flavian period, frequently c. 83–103 CE). I’m giving an approximate year (95 CE) to reflect that uncertainty; the stable locator is Book XIII, line 663. Many modern quote collections copy the English paraphrase, but the primary-source wording to verify is the Latin line above.
Other candidates (1)
Familiar Quotations (John Bartlett, 1891) compilation95.0%
... ( Virtue herself is her own fairest reward ) . SILIUS ITALICUS ( 25 ? -99 ) : Punica , lib . xiii . line 663 Good...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Italicus, Silius. (2026, February 13). Virtue herself is her own fairest reward. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/virtue-herself-is-her-own-fairest-reward-148059/

Chicago Style
Italicus, Silius. "Virtue herself is her own fairest reward." FixQuotes. February 13, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/virtue-herself-is-her-own-fairest-reward-148059/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Virtue herself is her own fairest reward." FixQuotes, 13 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/virtue-herself-is-her-own-fairest-reward-148059/. Accessed 22 Feb. 2026.

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Virtue Herself is Her Own Fairest Reward - Silius Italicus
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Silius Italicus is a Poet from Rome.

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