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Life & Wisdom Quote by H. C. Andersen

"The whole world is a series of miracles, but we're so used to them we call them ordinary things"

About this Quote

Andersen’s genius here is the sleight of hand: he doesn’t argue that miracles exist, he suggests they’ve been demoted by familiarity. The line is built on a small, devastating pivot - “miracles” to “ordinary things” - that exposes how language becomes a bureaucrat of perception, stamping the wondrous with a dull label once it’s routine. It’s not wide-eyed optimism so much as a quiet indictment of the senses. The world hasn’t changed; our attention has been trained to stop noticing.

The intent feels less like theology than like craft. Andersen, the fairy-tale writer who smuggled social critique into enchanted objects, is reminding us that wonder isn’t a genre. It’s a stance. His stories often hinge on the everyday turned luminous (a match, a mermaid, a tin soldier), and this aphorism reads like his aesthetic manifesto: the “miracle” is not the exception, it’s the baseline. Calling it ordinary is a kind of moral and imaginative failure - the moment we stop seeing, we also stop caring.

Context matters: a 19th-century Europe newly intoxicated with industry, classification, and scientific explanation. Progress makes the world legible, but also flattens it. Andersen doesn’t reject modernity; he warns about its side effect: enchantment outsourced to spectacle, while real astonishment - breath, weather, growth, survival - gets filed away as background noise. The line works because it implicates the reader without scolding, offering a dare disguised as comfort: if everything is a miracle, the only scarce resource is attention.

Quote Details

TopicGratitude
Source
Verified source: I Sverrig (H. C. Andersen, 1851)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
"The whole world is a series of miracles,' said the student, 'but we're so used to them that we call them everyday things." (Chapter 9 (fairy tale: "Marionetspilleren" / "The Puppet-show Man")). This is the primary-source location in Andersen’s own work. The quote commonly circulates with slightly different wording (e.g., "ordinary things"), but in the widely used Jean Hersholt English translation hosted by the Hans Christian Andersen Centre (University of Southern Denmark), the line reads "everyday things." The Andersen Centre’s bibliographic register states that the tale "Marionetspilleren" ("The Puppet-show Man") was first published 19 May 1851 as Chapter 9 in Andersen’s travel book "I Sverrig." A library catalog record (Morgan Library & Museum) also notes that the 1851 first edition of "I Sverrig" includes the first printing of "Marionetspilleren."
Other candidates (1)
Vitality in Everyday Life (Eva Forsberg Schinkler, 2020) compilation95.0%
... The whole world is a series of miracles , but we're so used to them we call them ordinary things " . H.C. Anderse...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Andersen, H. C. (2026, February 12). The whole world is a series of miracles, but we're so used to them we call them ordinary things. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-whole-world-is-a-series-of-miracles-but-were-171972/

Chicago Style
Andersen, H. C. "The whole world is a series of miracles, but we're so used to them we call them ordinary things." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-whole-world-is-a-series-of-miracles-but-were-171972/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The whole world is a series of miracles, but we're so used to them we call them ordinary things." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-whole-world-is-a-series-of-miracles-but-were-171972/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

H. C. Andersen

H. C. Andersen (April 2, 1805 - August 4, 1875) was a Writer from Denmark.

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