"He who loves the more is the inferior and must suffer"
About this Quote
Mann is writing from inside a modernist suspicion that romantic feeling is never just feeling. It’s psychology, status, leverage. The line carries the chill of a society organized around rank - class, respectability, intellect - and it smuggles that logic into the bedroom. There’s also a moral provocation: we like to imagine devotion as noble, but Mann flips it into a social liability. To love "more" is to reveal yourself, to become legible, and legibility invites being managed.
The subtext is especially Mannian: desire exposes the self as fragmented, needy, irrational - exactly what his cultured, disciplined characters fear. In his fiction, the artist and the bourgeois often orbit each other in uneasy fascination; longing becomes a kind of humiliation, a crack in the mask of control. The sentence’s cruelty is the point. It isn’t advising cynicism so much as admitting a bleak truth about how attachment can turn into bargaining, and how modern consciousness, once it sees that, can’t unsee it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Heartbreak |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Mann, Thomas. (2026, January 18). He who loves the more is the inferior and must suffer. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-loves-the-more-is-the-inferior-and-must-11639/
Chicago Style
Mann, Thomas. "He who loves the more is the inferior and must suffer." FixQuotes. January 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-loves-the-more-is-the-inferior-and-must-11639/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"He who loves the more is the inferior and must suffer." FixQuotes, 18 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-loves-the-more-is-the-inferior-and-must-11639/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.














