"Every age has its happiness and troubles"
About this Quote
The phrasing matters: not "progress" and "decline", but "happiness" and "troubles" in the same breath, as paired constants. Calment isn't weighing eras against each other; she's leveling them. That balance is the subtext. It suggests that our habit of declaring the present uniquely broken is a kind of egotism, and our habit of romanticizing the past is selective editing.
As a celebrity, Calment's authority comes from longevity-as-performance. She became famous not for a body of work but for being a living archive, a human time-lapse. The intent feels conversational, even sly: a small correction to younger people's certainty, a reminder that history doesn't hand out neat moral arcs. The line works because it offers relief without denial: your troubles are real, but they aren't unprecedented; your joys are possible, but they won't arrive with a perfect era attached.
Quote Details
| Topic | Aging |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Jeanne Calment: From Van Gogh's Time to Ours (Jeanne Calment, 1998)
Evidence: No more than now. Every age has its happiness and troubles. (p. 49 (quote appears in an interview-style Q&A section)). The quote appears as a spoken response by Jeanne Calment in the English-language book presented as conversations/interviews with her. In the Scribd text-rendering, the quote is shown in a Q&A passage about the birth of her daughter Yvonne, immediately followed by the running header/footer text indicating page 49. Multiple independent quote-reference sites (e.g., Wikiquote/AZQuotes) also attribute this line to the same book and specifically to p. 48, suggesting the quote’s pagination may differ by edition/format or that the Scribd rendering shifts page markers. I was not able (from accessible primary scans) to verify an earlier (pre-1998) publication/interview where this exact English wording first appeared; this 1998 book is the earliest primary-source instance I could directly locate and quote. Other candidates (1) Annual Review of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Volume 27, 2007 (Leonard W. Poon, Thomas T. Perls, 2007) compilation95.0% ... Jeanne Calment had also eaten the same food, she was able to withstand the poison. One can only speculate to what... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Calment, Jeanne. (2026, March 1). Every age has its happiness and troubles. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/every-age-has-its-happiness-and-troubles-11890/
Chicago Style
Calment, Jeanne. "Every age has its happiness and troubles." FixQuotes. March 1, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/every-age-has-its-happiness-and-troubles-11890/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Every age has its happiness and troubles." FixQuotes, 1 Mar. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/every-age-has-its-happiness-and-troubles-11890/. Accessed 4 Mar. 2026.











