Skip to main content

Daily Inspiration Quote by Friedrich Schiller

"Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing"

About this Quote

Schiller’s line has the clipped, drumbeat certainty of a stage command: if you won’t risk anything, don’t expect the world to reward you with possibility. It’s not motivational poster fluff; it’s a moral dare. The aphorism turns “hope” from a passive feeling into a kind of earned entitlement, granted only to those willing to step into danger, embarrassment, failure - the whole messy price of agency.

As a dramatist of the Sturm und Drang era and a key voice of German Idealism’s early weather, Schiller is writing against the smallness of caution. Late-18th-century Europe is thick with enforced hierarchies and political fear; “daring” isn’t just personal growth, it’s an ethical stance. The subtext: resignation masquerades as prudence. If you choose safety as a guiding principle, you don’t get to keep the romance of expectation. Hope, in this framework, is not a comfort object for spectators; it belongs to actors.

The sentence works because it’s unsentimental. Schiller doesn’t promise success; he narrows the claim to something harder and more defensible: the only people with a right to hope are those who put something at stake. In a drama, characters reveal themselves through choices under pressure. Schiller applies that logic to life itself: no wager, no future worth imagining.

Quote Details

TopicMotivational
Source
Verified source: Wallenstein (trilogy): Wallensteins Lager (Friedrich Schiller, 1800)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Wer nichts waget, der darf nichts hoffen. (Wallensteins Lager, 7. Auftritt (spoken by the Wachtmeister)). This is the German original line that corresponds to the common English rendering "Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing." It appears in Schiller’s dramatic prologue "Wallensteins Lager" (part of the Wallenstein trilogy) in the scene labeled "7. Auftritt", spoken by the character "Wachtmeister". A readily checkable online text shows the line in context in that scene. The Wallenstein trilogy is widely documented as having been performed 1798–1799 and published in 1800; Britannica summarizes this publication timeline. For 'first published': performance predates print ("Wallensteins Lager" was first staged in Weimar on 12 Oct 1798), while the collected dramatic text is documented as published in 1800 by Cotta.
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Schiller, Friedrich. (2026, February 8). Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-dares-nothing-need-hope-for-nothing-78876/

Chicago Style
Schiller, Friedrich. "Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-dares-nothing-need-hope-for-nothing-78876/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Who dares nothing, need hope for nothing." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/who-dares-nothing-need-hope-for-nothing-78876/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Friedrich Add to List
Who Dares Nothing, Need Hope for Nothing - Friedrich Schiller
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Friedrich Schiller

Friedrich Schiller (November 10, 1759 - May 9, 1805) was a Dramatist from Germany.

51 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Georges Jacques Danton, Revolutionary
Georges Jacques Danton
Gloria Swanson, Actress
Donald Trump, Businessman
Donald Trump
Luc de Clapiers, Writer
Edgar Rice Burroghs, Writer