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Education Quote by Jean Henri Fabre

"Without feeling abashed by my ignorance, I confess that I am absolutely unable to say. In the absence of an appearance of learning, my answer has at least one merit, that of perfect sincerity"

About this Quote

Fabre’s genius here is how he turns not-knowing into a quiet performance of integrity. He doesn’t just admit ignorance; he choreographs the admission so it reads as a principle, not a lapse. “Without feeling abashed” is the key tell: shame is treated as optional, almost a social superstition. In a culture that often confuses intelligence with the ability to keep talking, Fabre refuses the prestige of bluffing. He opts out of the parlor game where authority is maintained by never leaving a question unanswered.

The phrasing has a sly, self-protective elegance. “I confess” sounds like contrition, but the sentence immediately undercuts any penitence with “absolutely unable to say.” It’s a hard stop. Then comes the pivot: if he can’t offer “an appearance of learning,” he can still offer “perfect sincerity.” That’s not modesty; it’s a value swap. He demotes the ornamental signs of expertise and elevates the moral core of inquiry: accuracy, restraint, and honesty about limits.

Context matters: Fabre was a meticulous naturalist and writer, working in an era when science was professionalizing and reputations could be built on confident prose as much as careful observation. His subtext feels aimed at both the pomp of armchair scholars and the temptation within any writer to decorate uncertainty. The intent isn’t to shrug; it’s to model an ethic. The real authority in the passage comes from refusing counterfeit authority.

Quote Details

TopicHonesty & Integrity
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Fabre, Jean Henri. (2026, January 15). Without feeling abashed by my ignorance, I confess that I am absolutely unable to say. In the absence of an appearance of learning, my answer has at least one merit, that of perfect sincerity. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/without-feeling-abashed-by-my-ignorance-i-confess-8827/

Chicago Style
Fabre, Jean Henri. "Without feeling abashed by my ignorance, I confess that I am absolutely unable to say. In the absence of an appearance of learning, my answer has at least one merit, that of perfect sincerity." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/without-feeling-abashed-by-my-ignorance-i-confess-8827/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Without feeling abashed by my ignorance, I confess that I am absolutely unable to say. In the absence of an appearance of learning, my answer has at least one merit, that of perfect sincerity." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/without-feeling-abashed-by-my-ignorance-i-confess-8827/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Without feeling abashed by my ignorance I confess I am unable to say
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About the Author

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Jean Henri Fabre (December 22, 1823 - October 11, 1915) was a Author from France.

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