"If a thing loves, it is infinite"
About this Quote
Blake takes a knife to the tidy borders we draw around “things.” Not “if a person loves,” but if a thing loves: an object, a creature, a soul, a work of art, a grain of sand. He’s collapsing categories on purpose, insisting that love isn’t just a human mood but a force that re-sizes whatever it inhabits. The grammar is deceptively plain, almost like a child’s maxim, and that’s part of the trick: the line reads like common sense until you notice how radically it rewires the universe.
The intent is mystical, but not hazy. Blake is arguing that infinity isn’t an abstract mathematical skybox; it’s a condition produced by relationship. Love, in this formulation, doesn’t decorate the finite world, it breaks it open. Once a “thing” loves, it exceeds its boundaries: it becomes more than its material limits, more than its role, more than its name. The subtext is a rebuke to Enlightenment rationalism and the era’s growing faith in measurement, classification, and industrial utility. You can count a thing, price it, put it in a system - but if it loves, it won’t stay put.
Context matters: Blake’s whole project was to rehabilitate vision against the deadening machinery of reason and empire. He’s writing in the shadow of revolutions and factories, where bodies are turned into inputs and nature into resource. “Infinite” becomes both consolation and provocation: the smallest life can be immeasurable, and any world that treats it as merely finite is spiritually illiterate.
The intent is mystical, but not hazy. Blake is arguing that infinity isn’t an abstract mathematical skybox; it’s a condition produced by relationship. Love, in this formulation, doesn’t decorate the finite world, it breaks it open. Once a “thing” loves, it exceeds its boundaries: it becomes more than its material limits, more than its role, more than its name. The subtext is a rebuke to Enlightenment rationalism and the era’s growing faith in measurement, classification, and industrial utility. You can count a thing, price it, put it in a system - but if it loves, it won’t stay put.
Context matters: Blake’s whole project was to rehabilitate vision against the deadening machinery of reason and empire. He’s writing in the shadow of revolutions and factories, where bodies are turned into inputs and nature into resource. “Infinite” becomes both consolation and provocation: the smallest life can be immeasurable, and any world that treats it as merely finite is spiritually illiterate.
Quote Details
| Topic | Love |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Annotations to Swedenborg's Divine Love and Divine Wisdom (William Blake, 1788)
Evidence: False Take it so or the contrary it comes to the same for if a thing loves it is infinite Perhaps we only differ in the meaning of the words Infinite & Eternal (Swedenborg DLW §49 (Blake marginal note; Erdman E 604)). This line is not from a public speech/interview; it’s from William Blake’s handwritten marginalia (annotations) in his copy of Emanuel Swedenborg’s Divine Love and Divine Wisdom. The ASU site reproduces the wording and identifies it as AnnSwedDLDW49; E604, i.e., Blake’s annotation at Swedenborg’s section 49. A scholarly discussion of this exact annotation (including the clause “for if a thing loves it is infinite”) appears in Morton D. Paley, “A New Heaven is Begun”: William Blake and Swedenborgianism, Blake/An Illustrated Quarterly 13.2, which also notes the Swedenborg volume/edition details and discusses dating. ([blake.lib.asu.edu](https://blake.lib.asu.edu/html/marginalia.html?utm_source=openai)) Other candidates (1) The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake (William Blake, 2008) compilation95.0% William Blake David Erdman. 27. What Person of Sound Reason doth not perceive , that the Divine is not ... if a thing... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Blake, William. (2026, February 8). If a thing loves, it is infinite. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-a-thing-loves-it-is-infinite-16025/
Chicago Style
Blake, William. "If a thing loves, it is infinite." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-a-thing-loves-it-is-infinite-16025/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"If a thing loves, it is infinite." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/if-a-thing-loves-it-is-infinite-16025/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.
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