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Life & Wisdom Quote by Thomas Carlyle

"Man's unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite"

About this Quote

Carlyle turns misery into a backhanded compliment: we suffer not because we are small, but because we are built to outgrow ourselves. The line is engineered like a moral vise. First he grants “cunning” to modern man, a sly nod to the era’s faith in technique, industry, and management. Then he declares that none of it quite works. You can bury the soul under schedules, commodities, and respectable “practicality,” but not perfectly. Something keeps kicking.

The quote’s power comes from its internal drama: “Infinite” versus “Finite,” capitalized like opposing empires. Carlyle isn’t offering a tidy theological proof so much as diagnosing a psychic condition of modernity. The “Infinite in him” is appetite, conscience, longing, vocation - whatever refuses to be reduced to wages, status, or sensory comfort. Unhappiness becomes the friction between what can be measured and what cannot, between a life that is administrable and a life that feels meaningful.

Context matters: Carlyle is writing in the 19th century, watching industrial capitalism and utilitarian thinking reframe people as units of labor and desire. His broader project (especially in Sartor Resartus and later social criticism) is to scold an age he sees as mechanically competent and spiritually anemic. The subtext is a provocation: your discontent isn’t a glitch to be medicated away; it’s evidence of dimension. If you feel restless in the “Finite,” Carlyle implies, that may be the one honest sign that you’re still human.

Quote Details

TopicMeaning of Life
Source
Verified source: Sartor Resartus (Thomas Carlyle, 1833)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Man's Unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his Greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite. (Book II, Chapter IX (“The Everlasting Yea”)). Primary source is Thomas Carlyle’s Sartor Resartus, where the line appears in Book II, Chapter IX (“The Everlasting Yea”). The work was first published in serial form in Fraser’s Magazine (Nov 1833–Aug 1834), so the earliest publication date for this passage is within that 1833–1834 serialization. Project Gutenberg’s public-domain transcription contains the sentence at lines ~941–942 of the HTML text (use Find: “Man's Unhappiness”). For a separate bibliographic confirmation of the first serial publication date, see Ingram Academic’s description of Sartor Resartus noting it was “First published in serial form in Fraser's Magazine in 1833–1834.”
Other candidates (1)
Thomas Carlyle's Works: Sartor Resartus. Lectures on hero... (Thomas Carlyle, 1891) compilation98.5%
Thomas Carlyle. ' music to my too - exasperated heart , came ... Man's Unhappiness , as I construe , comes of his Gre...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Carlyle, Thomas. (2026, February 8). Man's unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/mans-unhappiness-as-i-construe-comes-of-his-34963/

Chicago Style
Carlyle, Thomas. "Man's unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/mans-unhappiness-as-i-construe-comes-of-his-34963/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Man's unhappiness, as I construe, comes of his greatness; it is because there is an Infinite in him, which with all his cunning he cannot quite bury under the Finite." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/mans-unhappiness-as-i-construe-comes-of-his-34963/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Thomas Carlyle

Thomas Carlyle (December 4, 1795 - February 5, 1881) was a Writer from Scotland.

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