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Love Quote by George Santayana

"To be interested in the changing seasons is a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring"

About this Quote

Santayana’s line flatters moderation with a sly little sting: the problem isn’t spring, it’s the absolutism we project onto it. “Hopelessly in love” isn’t romance here so much as captivity, the kind of single-season devotion that turns weather into ideology. Spring becomes a stand-in for every preferred beginning - youth, novelty, optimism, the clean reboot - and Santayana’s point is that fetishizing renewal is a reliable way to make the rest of life feel like decline.

The craft of the sentence is its calm comparative structure. He doesn’t condemn passion outright; he offers a quieter pleasure as “happier,” a word that smuggles in an ethics of attention. “Interested” is doing heavy lifting: it suggests curiosity without possession, engagement without the need to freeze experience at its most flattering moment. The seasons “changing” matters as much as the seasons themselves. He’s praising a mind that can metabolize flux, that treats impermanence as a feature rather than an insult.

Context sharpens the edge. Santayana, a philosopher of skepticism and aesthetic detachment, wrote against the grain of modernity’s fixation on progress and perpetual newness. Read that way, spring-love resembles the culture of the permanent launch: always chasing the next fresh start, always slightly disappointed when reality insists on summer’s heat, autumn’s rot, winter’s austerity. The subtext is almost stoic, but with an artist’s sensibility: happiness isn’t found in the perfect season; it’s found in the capacity to notice the whole cycle without demanding that any one phase justify the rest.

Quote Details

TopicEmbrace Change
Source
Verified source: The Life of Reason: Reason in Art (George Santayana, 1905)
Text match: 99.05%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
To be interested in the changing seasons is, in this middling zone, a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring. (Page 190). This line appears in George Santayana’s own published work (primary source), in the volume titled “Reason in Art,” which is Volume 4 of his multi-volume work “The Life of Reason; or, The Phases of Human Progress.” Google Books surfaces the passage as occurring on p. 190 and shows it in the “Popular passages” snippet for the 1905 Scribner edition. The commonly-circulated version of the quote usually omits Santayana’s qualifying phrase “in this middling zone,” but the wording above matches the original as displayed.
Other candidates (1)
... To be interested in the changing seasons is a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring . G...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Santayana, George. (2026, February 16). To be interested in the changing seasons is a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-interested-in-the-changing-seasons-is-a-17701/

Chicago Style
Santayana, George. "To be interested in the changing seasons is a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-interested-in-the-changing-seasons-is-a-17701/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"To be interested in the changing seasons is a happier state of mind than to be hopelessly in love with spring." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/to-be-interested-in-the-changing-seasons-is-a-17701/. Accessed 28 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

George Santayana

George Santayana (December 16, 1863 - September 26, 1952) was a Philosopher from USA.

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