"When we conquer without danger our triumph is without glory"
About this Quote
Bravado, yes, but the line is also a shrewd piece of moral accounting: Corneille is telling you that victory is only worth what it costs. Strip away risk and you strip away the story that makes triumph legible to others and to yourself. Glory, in this formulation, is not a medal you pin on after the fact; its the social proof that you faced something that could actually undo you.
As a 17th-century French dramatist, Corneille writes from a culture obsessed with honor, reputation, and the theater of public virtue. His heroes are rarely interested in private happiness; they want to be seen choosing duty under pressure. The sentence works because it stages a paradox that sounds like common sense once you hear it: conquest feels like an achievement, yet without danger it becomes mere advantage. You didnt win; you simply arrived with the bigger army, the better patron, the stacked deck.
The subtext cuts both ways. Its a warning to the powerful not to confuse dominance with merit, and a provocation to the ambitious: if you want glory, you must consent to vulnerability. That makes the line flattering to those who take risks, but it also exposes how glory depends on the existence of peril - and, often, on someone elses suffering. Corneille is dramatizing an economy where reputation is minted from danger, which explains why easy wins feel suspicious and why societies keep romanticizing hard fights, even when the cost is catastrophic.
As a 17th-century French dramatist, Corneille writes from a culture obsessed with honor, reputation, and the theater of public virtue. His heroes are rarely interested in private happiness; they want to be seen choosing duty under pressure. The sentence works because it stages a paradox that sounds like common sense once you hear it: conquest feels like an achievement, yet without danger it becomes mere advantage. You didnt win; you simply arrived with the bigger army, the better patron, the stacked deck.
The subtext cuts both ways. Its a warning to the powerful not to confuse dominance with merit, and a provocation to the ambitious: if you want glory, you must consent to vulnerability. That makes the line flattering to those who take risks, but it also exposes how glory depends on the existence of peril - and, often, on someone elses suffering. Corneille is dramatizing an economy where reputation is minted from danger, which explains why easy wins feel suspicious and why societies keep romanticizing hard fights, even when the cost is catastrophic.
Quote Details
| Topic | Victory |
|---|
More Quotes by Pierre
Add to List






