"Great hopes make great men"
About this Quote
Ambition is being pitched here as a moral engine, not a personality quirk. When Thomas Fuller, a 17th-century English clergyman writing in the shadow of civil war, says, "Great hopes make great men", he’s not praising swagger or raw talent. He’s prescribing a kind of disciplined inner weather: hope as a force that organizes the self, steadies the will, and pulls a person toward responsibility.
The line works because it flips what sounds like a compliment into a demand. "Great men" aren’t born; they’re manufactured by the size of the future they’re willing to imagine. Hope becomes causal, almost vocational. In a religious frame, that’s pointed: hope is one of the theological virtues, and Fuller treats it as socially productive. A person who hopes greatly doesn’t just daydream; he commits to an account of the world in which effort matters and outcomes are not sealed. That’s comforting in an age of political volatility and spiritual anxiety, but it’s also a subtle form of discipline: if you are small, perhaps your hopes are too.
The subtext is aspirational and slightly corrective. It suggests that greatness is less about circumstance than about the courage to stake oneself on a larger horizon. Read now, the gendered "men" dates it, but the mechanism remains recognizable: big hopes create a narrative you have to live up to. Fuller’s genius is the bluntness. It’s a sermon disguised as a slogan.
The line works because it flips what sounds like a compliment into a demand. "Great men" aren’t born; they’re manufactured by the size of the future they’re willing to imagine. Hope becomes causal, almost vocational. In a religious frame, that’s pointed: hope is one of the theological virtues, and Fuller treats it as socially productive. A person who hopes greatly doesn’t just daydream; he commits to an account of the world in which effort matters and outcomes are not sealed. That’s comforting in an age of political volatility and spiritual anxiety, but it’s also a subtle form of discipline: if you are small, perhaps your hopes are too.
The subtext is aspirational and slightly corrective. It suggests that greatness is less about circumstance than about the courage to stake oneself on a larger horizon. Read now, the gendered "men" dates it, but the mechanism remains recognizable: big hopes create a narrative you have to live up to. Fuller’s genius is the bluntness. It’s a sermon disguised as a slogan.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: Quotes: The Famous and Not so Famous (Terence M. Dorn Ph.D., 2021) modern compilationISBN: 9781662447952 · ID: ptZSEAAAQBAJ
Evidence:
... Thomas Fuller All things are difficult before they are easy.—Thomas Fuller Great hopes make great men.—Thomas Fuller Nothing is easy to the unwilling.—Thomas Fuller If you command wisely, you'll be obeyed cheerfully.—Thomas Fuller G ... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Fuller, Thomas. (2026, February 8). Great hopes make great men. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/great-hopes-make-great-men-10314/
Chicago Style
Fuller, Thomas. "Great hopes make great men." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/great-hopes-make-great-men-10314/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Great hopes make great men." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/great-hopes-make-great-men-10314/. Accessed 15 Feb. 2026.
More Quotes by Thomas
Add to List











