"No man is happy but by comparison"
About this Quote
Happiness, Shadwell suggests, is less an inner weather system than a spectator sport. “No man is happy but by comparison” lands like a stage aside: a crisp, slightly cruel diagnosis of how quickly contentment turns competitive once other people enter the scene. It’s not merely that envy spoils joy; it’s that joy, in Shadwell’s view, is often manufactured out of hierarchy. You don’t feel good because life is good. You feel good because your life is better than someone else’s.
That’s a very Restoration idea. Shadwell wrote for a London audience obsessed with rank, reputation, and the public theater of manners. His comedies are crowded with fops, social climbers, and moral posturers, characters who treat virtue like a costume and affection like a transaction. In that world, comparison isn’t a bad habit; it’s the operating system. The line’s bluntness mimics the period’s appetite for exposing hypocrisy: people talk about honor and contentment, then immediately count who has the bigger house, the newer wig, the warmer patron.
The subtext is a warning disguised as a shrug. If happiness depends on comparison, it’s unstable by design: someone will always be richer, younger, more admired. Shadwell’s wit works because it collapses lofty self-conceptions into a petty mechanism, making the audience laugh and squirm at once. It’s a playwright’s trick: reveal the secret motive, then let the crowd recognize itself in it.
That’s a very Restoration idea. Shadwell wrote for a London audience obsessed with rank, reputation, and the public theater of manners. His comedies are crowded with fops, social climbers, and moral posturers, characters who treat virtue like a costume and affection like a transaction. In that world, comparison isn’t a bad habit; it’s the operating system. The line’s bluntness mimics the period’s appetite for exposing hypocrisy: people talk about honor and contentment, then immediately count who has the bigger house, the newer wig, the warmer patron.
The subtext is a warning disguised as a shrug. If happiness depends on comparison, it’s unstable by design: someone will always be richer, younger, more admired. Shadwell’s wit works because it collapses lofty self-conceptions into a petty mechanism, making the audience laugh and squirm at once. It’s a playwright’s trick: reveal the secret motive, then let the crowd recognize itself in it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Happiness |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Virtuoso (Thomas Shadwell, 1676)
Evidence:
No Man's happy but by comparison. 'Tis the great comfort of all the World to despise and laugh at one another. (Act II (description Page 31 in EEBO transcription; page numbering in original print may differ)). This line appears as dialogue spoken by the character Longvil ("Longv.") in Act II of Thomas Shadwell's comedy "The Virtuoso." The University of Michigan Library Digital Collections hosts the EEBO/Text Creation Partnership full-text transcription of the 1676 London printed edition, which constitutes a primary source. The quote is often shortened in later quotation collections/websites to "No man is happy but by comparison." |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Shadwell, Thomas. (2026, February 8). No man is happy but by comparison. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-man-is-happy-but-by-comparison-127201/
Chicago Style
Shadwell, Thomas. "No man is happy but by comparison." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-man-is-happy-but-by-comparison-127201/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"No man is happy but by comparison." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-man-is-happy-but-by-comparison-127201/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.
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