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Daily Inspiration Quote by Plautus

"Wisdom is not attained by years, but by ability"

About this Quote

Plautus lands this line like a punchline with teeth: age may buy you authority, but it doesn’t buy you judgment. Coming from Rome’s great comic playwright, the barb is aimed at a culture that treated seniority as a credential and tradition as a shortcut to virtue. In a society built on paterfamilias power and reverence for “the ancestors,” this is a sly demotion of the old guard. It’s not anti-elder; it’s anti-complacency.

The word “ability” does the real work. Plautus doesn’t romanticize wisdom as a slow spiritual distillation; he treats it as a skill, something closer to competence than sanctity. That framing is quietly radical because it implies wisdom can be tested, demonstrated, even outperformed. If wisdom is ability, then a sharp servant can be wiser than his master, a young schemer wiser than a pompous senator. That’s a core engine of Plautine comedy: social hierarchies flipped by intelligence, not lineage.

The subtext is also theatrical self-defense. Comedy was often dismissed as low art, yet Plautus insists that insight is not the property of the “serious” and the established. Onstage, the world rewards whoever reads the room best. Offstage, the line doubles as cultural critique: Rome’s obsession with gravitas looks less like maturity and more like inertia. Wisdom, he suggests, is earned in performance - through adaptability, perception, and nerve - not merely accumulated in calendar years.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Trinummus (Latin text; comedy/play) (Plautus, -200)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Non aetate, verum ingenio apiscitur sapientia; (Act II, scene 2 (line not numbered on this edition; around lines 366–368 in many line-numbered editions)). This is the primary-source line in Plautus’ Trinummus that quote-collections typically paraphrase/translate as “Wisdom is not attained by years, but by ability” or “Not by age but by capacity is wisdom acquired.” The English wording in your query appears to be a later translation/paraphrase rather than a fixed, uniquely identifiable ‘first publication’ in English. Plautus wrote in Latin; the play was composed/produced in the Roman Republic (commonly dated to the early 2nd century BCE; an exact year is not securely known).
Other candidates (1)
Wise Words (Ilie Alexandru, 2013) compilation95.0%
... Wisdom is not attained by years, but by ability. Plautus Not by age but by capacity is wisdom acquired. Plautus T...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Plautus. (2026, February 18). Wisdom is not attained by years, but by ability. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/wisdom-is-not-attained-by-years-but-by-ability-24469/

Chicago Style
Plautus. "Wisdom is not attained by years, but by ability." FixQuotes. February 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/wisdom-is-not-attained-by-years-but-by-ability-24469/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Wisdom is not attained by years, but by ability." FixQuotes, 18 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/wisdom-is-not-attained-by-years-but-by-ability-24469/. Accessed 6 Mar. 2026.

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Wisdom Comes from Ability Not Age
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About the Author

Plautus

Plautus (254 BC - 184 BC) was a Playwright from Rome.

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