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Daily Inspiration Quote by Blaise Pascal

"All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone"

About this Quote

Pascal lands a theological sucker punch with the calmness of a mathematician: your suffering isn’t mainly caused by bad luck or bad people, but by your frantic refusal to be alone with yourself. The line is deceptively domestic - a “quiet room” sounds like self-help minimalism - yet it’s really an accusation. If solitude feels unbearable, Pascal implies, it’s because silence strips away the little entertainments (“divertissement”) that keep you from noticing the deeper problem: you are finite, anxious, and headed toward death.

The brilliance is how he scales misery down to a single, testable behavior. Not “war” or “poverty” or “betrayal,” but the twitchy impulse to seek noise, company, gossip, games, status. Pascal is writing in 17th-century France, watching a culture of salons, court spectacle, and religious conflict, and he sees distraction as a sophisticated anesthetic. People don’t chase diversion because life is fun; they chase it because life, unbuffered, is terrifying.

Subtext: self-knowledge is not automatically liberating. Left alone, you don’t necessarily find your “true self”; you find your evasions. Pascal, a Jansenist with a hard view of human nature, turns solitude into a spiritual diagnostic. The “quiet room” is where the mind either meets God or meets the void - and most of us, he suggests with chilly sympathy, will do anything to avoid that appointment.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
C’est pourquoi quand je me suis mis à considérer les diverses agitations des hommes, les périls et les peines où ils s’exposent à la Cour, à la guerre, dans la poursuite de leurs prétentions ambitieuses, d’où naissent tant de querelles, de passions, et d’entreprises périlleuses et funestes ; j’ai souvent dit, que tout le malheur des hommes vient de ne savoir pas se tenir en repos dans une chambre.. This is the primary-source origin of the modern English quote often paraphrased as “All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone.” It appears in Pascal’s posthumously published Pensées (first published 1670; Pascal died 1662). The French wording is in the “Divertissement” (diversion/distraction) section in many modern arrangements (commonly indexed as Lafuma 136 / Brunschvicg 139 / Sellier 168, depending on edition). A widely circulated English rendering is W. F. Trotter’s: “I have discovered that all the unhappiness of men arises from one single fact, that they cannot stay quietly in their own chamber.” The “quiet room alone / miseries” variants are later paraphrases rather than a fixed canonical English sentence by Pascal.
Other candidates (1)
A Monk's Way (Clark Eide, 2018) compilation95.0%
... All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone. —Blaise Pascal, Pensées The idea of b...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Pascal, Blaise. (2026, February 26). All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-mens-miseries-derive-from-not-being-able-to-30209/

Chicago Style
Pascal, Blaise. "All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone." FixQuotes. February 26, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-mens-miseries-derive-from-not-being-able-to-30209/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"All men's miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room alone." FixQuotes, 26 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/all-mens-miseries-derive-from-not-being-able-to-30209/. Accessed 28 Mar. 2026.

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All mens miseries derive from not being able to sit in a quiet room
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Blaise Pascal

Blaise Pascal (June 19, 1623 - August 19, 1662) was a Philosopher from France.

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