"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall one by one, an unpitied sacrifice in a contemptible struggle"
About this Quote
Burke writes like a man watching the floorboards buckle under polite society. "When bad men combine" is less a moral lament than a diagnosis of how power actually moves: in blocs, in networks, in disciplined coalitions that know their interests and protect them. The line’s steel is in its asymmetry. Evil, he implies, organizes easily because it shares a simple purpose; goodness, by contrast, often insists on staying pure, solitary, above the mess of faction. Burke is telling the virtuous that their private virtue is politically useless if it refuses the logistics of solidarity.
The subtext is almost accusatory. "The good must associate" rebukes the genteel habit of treating collective action as vaguely dirty. Burke understood the British parliamentary world of patronage, parties, and pressure groups, and he had watched reformers and constitutionalists lose because they mistook disinterestedness for strategy. He’s also guarding against a common self-exoneration: the righteous bystander who keeps his hands clean while others take the field.
"Fall one by one" is the real threat: not dramatic tyranny, but attrition. Isolated people can be picked off socially, economically, reputationally, institutionally. "Unpitied" adds a bleak social psychology: the public tends to sympathize with winners, or at least with those who look like they belong to something. Lone martyrs are easy to dismiss as cranks. Burke’s genius here is rhetorical coercion; he makes association sound not like activism but like survival, the minimum cost of staying free in a world where the unscrupulous already understand teamwork.
The subtext is almost accusatory. "The good must associate" rebukes the genteel habit of treating collective action as vaguely dirty. Burke understood the British parliamentary world of patronage, parties, and pressure groups, and he had watched reformers and constitutionalists lose because they mistook disinterestedness for strategy. He’s also guarding against a common self-exoneration: the righteous bystander who keeps his hands clean while others take the field.
"Fall one by one" is the real threat: not dramatic tyranny, but attrition. Isolated people can be picked off socially, economically, reputationally, institutionally. "Unpitied" adds a bleak social psychology: the public tends to sympathize with winners, or at least with those who look like they belong to something. Lone martyrs are easy to dismiss as cranks. Burke’s genius here is rhetorical coercion; he makes association sound not like activism but like survival, the minimum cost of staying free in a world where the unscrupulous already understand teamwork.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|
More Quotes by Edmund
Add to List











