Quote of the Day by Leo Tolstoy: ‘Everything comes in time to him who knows how to wait’

Leo Tolstoy, born Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy in 1828 at Yasnaya Polyana in the Russian Empire, became one of the greatest novelists in world literature.

Livemint
Updated17 May 2026, 12:43 PM IST
Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer, philosopher, and novelist
Leo Tolstoy, Russian writer, philosopher, and novelist(Facebook)

Leo Tolstoy, born Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy in 1828 at Yasnaya Polyana in the Russian Empire, became one of the greatest novelists in world literature. After an aristocratic childhood, military service, and early literary success, he wrote War and Peace and Anna Karenina, both widely regarded among the finest novels ever written. In later life, Tolstoy turned increasingly toward moral, religious, educational, and social questions, becoming as influential for his ethical thought as for his fiction.

“Everything comes in time to him who knows how to wait.”
— Leo Tolstoy

The quote is widely attributed to Tolstoy’s War and Peace and appears in quote selections from the novel. It is often paired with another Tolstoy line from War and Peace: “The strongest of all warriors are these two — Time and Patience.”

Meaning of the Quote

Tolstoy’s quote is a lesson in patience, timing, and disciplined endurance. In business, “waiting” does not mean doing nothing. It means knowing when to act, when to observe, when to let a strategy mature, and when to avoid forcing results before the conditions are ready.

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The quote is especially important for leaders because modern work often rewards urgency even when patience would produce better judgement. A leader may feel pressure to launch early, pivot too often, cut too quickly, or judge a strategy before enough data has arrived. Tolstoy’s wisdom is that some outcomes require time to compound: trust, brand authority, team capability, user loyalty, and cultural change.

For business leadership, the deeper message is this: patience becomes powerful only when paired with preparation. Waiting without action is delay. Waiting while improving systems, training people, studying signals, and staying consistent is strategy.

Why This Quote Resonates

This quote resonates strongly today because organisations are trying to transform quickly while employees are already under pressure. The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 says employers expect 39% of workers’ core skills to change by 2030, while analytical thinking, resilience, flexibility, agility, leadership, and social influence remain critical workplace skills.

At the same time, Gallup’s State of the Global Workplace 2026 found that global employee engagement fell to 20% in 2025, its lowest level since 2020, costing the world economy an estimated $10 trillion in lost productivity.

A concrete example is AI adoption. Many companies want fast productivity gains from AI tools, but real transformation takes time: teams need training, workflows need redesign, governance needs clarity, and outputs need human validation. Tolstoy’s quote reminds leaders that sustainable change is rarely instant. It comes to those who know how to wait productively.

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“The strongest of all warriors are these two — Time and Patience.”
— Leo Tolstoy

This line, also widely cited from War and Peace, complements the primary quote because it gives waiting a more active meaning. Time and patience are not passive forces; they are strategic warriors.

Together, both quotes create a rounded leadership lesson. The first says results arrive for those who know how to wait. The second says patience itself is a form of strength. In business, this means leaders should not confuse speed with progress. Some of the strongest moves are steady: building capability, earning trust, improving quality, and letting compounding effort work.

How You Can Implement This

  1. Set realistic time horizons: For major goals such as AI adoption, traffic recovery, product redesign, or culture change, define 30-day, 90-day, and 180-day milestones.
  2. Separate patience from delay: Ask weekly, “Are we waiting because the strategy needs time, or because we are avoiding a decision?”
  3. Track compounding signals: Measure leading indicators such as training completion, user feedback, repeat visits, quality scores, engagement, and adoption rate before judging final outcomes.
  4. Avoid premature pivots: Do not abandon a strategy after one weak week. Review sample size, execution quality, timing, market conditions, and consistency first.
  5. Use waiting time wisely: While results mature, improve documentation, train teams, test variations, fix weak processes, and prepare the next decision.
  6. Communicate progress patiently: Tell teams what is changing, what is still being tested, what will be reviewed next, and why the timeline matters.

“A man on a thousand mile walk has to forget his goal and say to himself every morning, ‘Today I’m going to cover twenty-five miles and then rest up and sleep.’”
— Leo Tolstoy

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This Tolstoy line turns patience into a daily operating system. Big goals become possible when leaders stop obsessing over the entire distance and focus on the next disciplined stretch. The lesson is not to wait lazily, but to keep moving at a pace that can actually last.

About the Author

For about a decade, Livemint—News Desk has been a credible source for authentic and timely news, and well-researched analysis on national news, business, personal finance, corporates, politics and geopolitics. We bring the latest updates on all the listed companies on BSE and NSE, startups, mutual funds, Union ministries, geopolitics, and untapped human interest stories from around the world, helping our readers to stay informed on the latest developments around the globe. Our Coverage Areas 1. Companies: Comprehensive news and analysis on listed and unlisted companies, corporate announcements, corporate chatter, C-suite, business trends, hiring alerts, layoffs, work-life balance, world's top billionaires and richest and more. 2. Personal finance: Insights into mutual funds, small savings schemes like - PPF, SSY, post office savings scheme, stock to watch, personal loans, credit cards, top bank FDs, real estate, income tax and more. 3. Politics: Comprehensive coverage of general elections, state elections and bypolls, Lok Sabha, Vidhan Sabha, Parliament, PMO, PIB, finance ministry, home ministry, among other union ministries and government departments. 4. National News: From metro cities like Delhi, Mumbai, and e to untapped stories from rural India, we cover human interest, health, education, crime and courts, and law and order, among other areas of public interest. 5. Economy: In-depth analysis of India's macro and micro-economic indicators like- GDP, inflation, forex, fiscal deficit, current account deficit, interest rate cycle, economic recovery, RBI circulars, indirect taxes, GST, Insolvency and Bankruptcy imports, exports and everything that impacts Indian economy. 6. Geopolitics: Well-rounded and deeply researched coverage on US News, Oval Office European Union, Ukraine Russia War, middle-east crisis, royal families and global leaders like - Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong Un, Xi Jinping and premiers of other leading economies in the world. Meet the Team 1. Gulam Jeelani, Political Affairs Editor 2. Sugam Singhal, Senior Assistant Editor 3. Chanchal, Assistant Editor 4. Sanchari Ghosh, Chief Content Producer 5. Pratik Prashant Mukane, Chief Content Producer 6. Sayantani Biswas, Chief Content Producer 7. Ravi Hari, Deputy Chief Content Producer 8. Garvit Bhirani, Deputy Chief Content Producer 9. Akriti Anand, Senior Content Producer 10. Jocelyn Felix Fernandes, Senior Content Producer 11. Swastika Das Sharma, Content Producer 12. Mausam Jha, Content Producer 13. Riya R Alex, Trainee Content Producer

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