"When the best things are not possible, the best may be made of those that are"
About this Quote
The line’s quiet force comes from its grammar. “Are not possible” shifts the problem from moral failure to reality itself: sometimes the world simply won’t yield what we think it should. Then the phrase “may be made” turns “best” into something manufactured rather than discovered. That’s a subtle theological and political move. It blesses compromise, but only as disciplined work, not as laziness or betrayal. Hooker’s Anglican via media - the middle way between Roman authority and Puritan rigor - is all over this: the ideal matters, yet the workable matters more, because the stakes are communal stability.
The subtext is pastoral but also institutional. Hooker is preparing his readers to accept a church ordered by prudence, custom, and human limits, rather than by utopian blueprint. It’s a permission slip for incrementalism: don’t burn down the imperfect in pursuit of the impossible; treat the attainable as a moral assignment. In a polarized moment, the quote reads less like surrender than like a stern defense of making peace with reality without making peace with cynicism.
Quote Details
| Topic | Motivational |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The works of Mr. Richard Hooker... (Ecclesiastical Polity) (Richard Hooker, 1666)
Evidence: All it can do in those Cases, is, to devise, how that, which must be endured, may be mitigated, and the Inconveniences thereof countervailed as neer as may be; that when the Best things are not possible, the best may be made of Those that are. (Book V (context indicates V.ix.1); page image labeled 'Page 127' in the U. Michigan EEBO record). This sentence appears in Richard Hooker’s own work, *Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity* (in Book V; commonly cited as V.ix.1 in later scholarly/critical editions). The University of Michigan Library Digital Collections’ EEBO transcription of the 1666 collected *Works* prints the line exactly as above. This 1666 printing is not the first publication of Hooker’s *Ecclesiastical Polity* overall (earlier parts were published in the 1590s), but it is a primary-source printing of Hooker’s text and is a verifiable locus for the quotation. Other candidates (1) The Works of that Learned and Judicious Divine, Mr. Richa... (Richard Hooker, Izaak Walton, 1836) compilation95.0% With an Account of His Life and Death Richard Hooker, Izaak Walton. Ch . ix . 1 . 46 Fourth Test : Dispensation ... w... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Hooker, Richard. (2026, February 8). When the best things are not possible, the best may be made of those that are. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-the-best-things-are-not-possible-the-best-32548/
Chicago Style
Hooker, Richard. "When the best things are not possible, the best may be made of those that are." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-the-best-things-are-not-possible-the-best-32548/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"When the best things are not possible, the best may be made of those that are." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/when-the-best-things-are-not-possible-the-best-32548/. Accessed 15 Feb. 2026.













