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Parenting & Family Quote by Sarah Fielding

"I fancied I had some constancy of mind because I could bear my own sufferings, but found through the sufferings of others I could be weakened like a child"

About this Quote

Fielding skewers a particularly Enlightenment-era vanity: the belief that emotional stamina is a private achievement, like a muscle you can brag about because it performs on command. The sentence begins with self-flattery dressed up as reflection, "I fancied", a word that quietly confesses self-deception. Constancy of mind sounds like the prized moral technology of the period, the polished restraint associated with reason, virtue, and social competence. She claims she "could bear my own sufferings" - a stoic credential that reads almost like a test passed.

Then the quote pivots, not into melodrama but into exposure. "But found through the sufferings of others" shifts the ground from self-management to relational ethics. Pain you can narrate as yours can be organized, contained, even aestheticized. Another person's pain is messy, unpredictable, and morally demanding. It insists you admit dependency: your feelings are not sovereign territory.

The kicker is "weakened like a child". Fielding doesn't romanticize empathy; she infantilizes the adult self that thought it was in control. The subtext is sharp: maturity, as the culture defined it, often meant emotional discipline that could shade into emotional selfishness. Real vulnerability arrives when your defenses don't protect you from being moved.

Context matters: Fielding wrote in a century obsessed with sensibility and moral feeling, especially in fiction. She anticipates the novel's argument that sympathy is not a decorative virtue but a destabilizing force - one that punctures the ego and rewrites what "strength" is supposed to mean.

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APA Style (7th ed.)
Fielding, Sarah. (2026, January 15). I fancied I had some constancy of mind because I could bear my own sufferings, but found through the sufferings of others I could be weakened like a child. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-fancied-i-had-some-constancy-of-mind-because-i-170955/

Chicago Style
Fielding, Sarah. "I fancied I had some constancy of mind because I could bear my own sufferings, but found through the sufferings of others I could be weakened like a child." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-fancied-i-had-some-constancy-of-mind-because-i-170955/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I fancied I had some constancy of mind because I could bear my own sufferings, but found through the sufferings of others I could be weakened like a child." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/i-fancied-i-had-some-constancy-of-mind-because-i-170955/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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Sarah Fielding (November 8, 1710 - February 9, 1768) was a Writer from England.

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