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Life & Wisdom Quote by Lewis Carroll

"Whatever is worth doing is worth doing well"

About this Quote

Carroll’s line looks like a tidy Victorian aphorism, the sort you can stitch onto a sampler and hang above a writing desk. That’s exactly why it works: it masquerades as wholesome self-help while quietly smuggling in a demanding, almost ruthless standard. “Whatever” pretends to be generous, even democratic, but it’s actually a trapdoor. Once you admit something is “worth doing,” you’ve agreed to the full freight of “worth doing well.” The statement doesn’t motivate so much as corner you. It turns half-measures into a moral failure.

In Carroll’s context, that bite makes sense. This is an author who built elaborate logical toys for children and then stocked them with razor-edged paradox. Wonderland reads like play, but it’s engineered with the precision of a puzzle box; nonsense is never casual. The quote’s intent, then, isn’t simply industriousness. It’s a defense of craft as discipline, the idea that seriousness isn’t canceled by whimsy. For Carroll, play is labor-intensive. A good joke has to land; a good riddle has to balance.

The subtext is also faintly anxious: if something matters, it deserves your best, and if you can’t give your best, maybe it shouldn’t matter at all. That’s Victorian propriety with a mathematician’s absolutism. Today the line survives because it flatters our desire to be high-functioning while quietly policing our attention: choose fewer things, but don’t you dare do them halfway.

Quote Details

TopicWork Ethic
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Whatever is worth doing is worth doing well
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About the Author

Lewis Carroll

Lewis Carroll (January 27, 1832 - January 14, 1898) was a Author from England.

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