"True contentment is a thing as active as agriculture. It is the power of getting out of any situation all that there is in it. It is arduous and it is rare"
About this Quote
The second sentence sharpens into a kind of moral technology: "the power of getting out of any situation all that there is in it". "Power" matters here. Contentment isn't denial or delusion; it's extraction. The phrasing carries a faintly comic opportunism, as if the happy person is a clever scavenger, refusing to waste even disappointment. There's also a stern edge: if a situation has "all that there is in it", then the limit isn't the world, it's your capacity to notice, interpret, and act.
Chesterton wrote in an era twitchy about modernity - industrial speed, status anxiety, the new religion of progress. Against that, he offers a paradox: contentment isn't complacency, it's effort. Calling it "arduous" and "rare" is both warning and rebuke. If you're not content, it may be less because your life is uniquely intolerable and more because the work of cultivation hasn't been done.
Quote Details
| Topic | Contentment |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: A Miscellany of Men (Gilbert K. Chesterton, 1912)
Evidence: True contentment is a thing as active as agriculture. It is the power of getting out of any situation all that there is in it. It is arduous and it is rare. (Essay/Chapter: "The Contented Man" (page number varies by edition; commonly cited as p. 76)). This wording appears in G.K. Chesterton’s essay "The Contented Man," which is included in his collection A Miscellany of Men. The collection’s imprint page states "First Published in 1912" (Methuen, London). The quote is frequently reprinted online without a source, but the primary text is Chesterton’s own and is verifiable in full-text transcriptions and scan-backed bibliographic records. I did not confirm an earlier (pre-1912) periodical appearance of the essay in this search pass; the earliest confirmed publication I can directly substantiate from primary book evidence here is the 1912 collection publication. Other candidates (1) The Greatest Works of G. K. Chesterton (G. K. Chesterton, 2023) compilation97.8% ... True contentment is a thing as active as agriculture. It is the power of getting out of any situation all that th... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Chesterton, Gilbert K. (2026, February 12). True contentment is a thing as active as agriculture. It is the power of getting out of any situation all that there is in it. It is arduous and it is rare. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/true-contentment-is-a-thing-as-active-as-7418/
Chicago Style
Chesterton, Gilbert K. "True contentment is a thing as active as agriculture. It is the power of getting out of any situation all that there is in it. It is arduous and it is rare." FixQuotes. February 12, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/true-contentment-is-a-thing-as-active-as-7418/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"True contentment is a thing as active as agriculture. It is the power of getting out of any situation all that there is in it. It is arduous and it is rare." FixQuotes, 12 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/true-contentment-is-a-thing-as-active-as-7418/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.










