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Daily Inspiration Quote by Cicero

"When you are aspiring to the highest place, it is honorable to reach the second or even the third rank"

About this Quote

Ambition, Cicero suggests, doesn’t have to cash out as a winner-take-all pathology. The line is a small rebuke to the Roman addiction to primacy: the fixation on being first in office, first in honor, first in the procession. In a culture where dignitas was accumulated like currency and political life was a brutal contact sport, “second” and “third” could sound like euphemisms for failure. Cicero flips that assumption. He offers a moral reframe: if the aim is genuinely “the highest place,” then falling short can still be honorable because the striving itself signals virtue, discipline, and service to the res publica.

The intent isn’t to soothe mediocrity; it’s to civilize ambition. Cicero is carving out space for gradations of merit in a system that tends to turn status into a death match. Subtextually, it’s also self-defense and self-fashioning. Cicero was a novus homo, an outsider who climbed high but never fully belonged to the old aristocratic club. Praising the honor of near-top ranks legitimizes the achievements of those who don’t inherit the summit. It’s a way of saying: Rome needs capable second-in-commands and principled also-rans, not just charismatic conquerors.

Context sharpens the edge. Late Republican politics was sliding toward strongmen and zero-sum escalation. Against that drift, Cicero’s sentence reads like an argument for institutional patience: treat public life less like a coronation and more like a ladder where responsibility, not glory, is the point. Honor, here, is a civic stabilizer.

Quote Details

TopicHumility
Source
Later attribution: The Cyclopaedia of Practical Quotations, English and Latin (Jehiel Keeler Hoyt, 1886) modern compilationID: RJNBAAAAYAAJ
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... When you are aspiring to the highest place , it is honorable to reach the second or even the third rank . f . CICERO . Sublimi feriam sidera vertice . My exalted head shall strike the stars . g . HORACE . Velle parum est ; cupias ut re ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Cicero. (2026, February 12). When you are aspiring to the highest place, it is honorable to reach the second or even the third rank. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-you-are-aspiring-to-the-highest-place-it-is-9071/

Chicago Style
Cicero. "When you are aspiring to the highest place, it is honorable to reach the second or even the third rank." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-you-are-aspiring-to-the-highest-place-it-is-9071/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"When you are aspiring to the highest place, it is honorable to reach the second or even the third rank." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-you-are-aspiring-to-the-highest-place-it-is-9071/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Aspiring to the highest place: honor in second or third
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Cicero

Cicero (106 BC - 43 BC) was a Philosopher from Rome.

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