Quotations about Genius
The world is always ready to receive talent with open arms. Very often it does not know what to do with genius. Talent is a docile creature, patient of the bit and the whip. But genius is always impatient of its harness; its wild blood makes it hard to train. ~Oliver Wendell Holmes
Works of talent are accidental; they might not have happened, or might be other than they are, without seriously affecting the issues of life. But works of genius seem a necessity of nature, — as if they could not be other than they are, and could not but have been. ~Frederic Henry Hedge, "Genius," 1868
The idol of the boy had been Poe and Keats, Byron, Dowson, Chatterton—all the gifted miserable and reckless men who had burned themselves out in tragic brilliance early and with finality. Not for him the normal happy genius living to a ripe old age (genius indeed! How could a genius be happy, normal—above all, long-lived?), acclaimed by all (or acclaimed in his lifetime?), enjoying honour, love, obedience... ~Charles R. Jackson, The Lost Weekend, 1944
A man of talent has a good Working Consciousness, a man of genius a good Working
Genius is not purity; genius is not piety; yet it partakes of the nature of both. It is contradistinguished from every thing which is earthly, sensual, material. It is the vigour of the soul; the aspirations of a spirit struggling with its fetters, and continually peeping beyond its prison walls of flesh and blood. ~Anonymous, Aphorisms; or, A Glance at Human Nature, in Original Maxims, 1820
Were a person to collect all the happy thoughts he had ever had in his life, the result would be a valuable book. At least once a year everyone is a genius. It is only that the actual man of genius so-called has his good ideas at shorter intervals. We see, then, how much depends on making a note of everything. ~Georg Christoph Lichtenberg (1742–1799), translated by Norman Alliston, 1908
Genius is more often found in a cracked pot than in a whole one. ~E. B. White
A genius is not a freak, but rather a well educated and well rounded, knowing man; one who profits by the mental victories as well as the defects of his fellows and of preceding generations and ages. ~William Armstrong Fairburn, Mentality and Freedom, 1917
I think this is the most extraordinary collection of talent, of human knowledge, that has ever been gathered together at the White House — with the possible exception of when Thomas Jefferson dined here alone. ~John F. Kennedy, 1962
I have known no man of genius who had not to pay, in some affliction or defect either physical or spiritual, for what the gods had given him. ~Max Beerbohm
Thousands of geniuses live and die undiscovered — either by themselves or by others. ~Mark Twain
The glitter of the past makes us think of literature as embodied in books; but to understand literature we must fix our minds on authors, not on books. The men who write — what makes them write well or ill? What are the conditions that breed poetry, or music, or architecture? The current beliefs about art and letters are fatalistic. It is supposed that poets and artists crop up now and then, and that nothing can stop them; they need no aid, they conquer circumstances. I do not believe it. We see no analogy to it in nature. Among the plants and the fishes we see nothing but a wholesale and incredible destruction of germs on all sides. It seems a miracle that any seed should fall upon good ground, and be sheltered till it come to the flower. Why should the percentage of germs that come to maturity be greater with genius than it is with the eggs of the sturgeon? The enemies of each are numerous. If it were not for the fecundity of nature, we should have none of either of them. And how is it that the great man always happens to be young at the very moment when some events are going forward that ripen his powers; so that he grows up with his time, and does something that is comprehensible to all time?
The answer is, that all eras are sown thick with the seeds of genius, which for the most part die, but in a favoring age mature to greatness. Must we resort to a theory of special creation to explain the great talents of the world? And even this would not explain our own welcome and our own comprehension of them when they come. If it were not for the undeveloped powers, the seeds of genius, in ourselves, Plato and Bach would be meaningless, and Christ would have died in vain.
It must be that thousands of good intellects perish annually. The men do not die, but their powers wither, or rather never mature. Art, like everything else, represents an escape, a survival. In any age that lacks it, or is weak in it, we may look about for the enginery by which it is crushed. In looking into a past age we are put to inference and conjecture. We see the mark of fetters upon the Byzantine soul, and we begin dredging the dark waters of history for a metaphysical cause. We cannot walk into a Byzantine shop and watch the apprentice at work. But in our own time we can see the whole process in action. We can study our modern Inquisitions at leisure, and note every mark that is made upon a soul that is passing through them. ~John Jay Chapman, "Literature," Practical Agitation, 1900
Talent is that which is in a man's power; genius is that in whose power a man is. ~James Russell Lowell
What somnambulism is to ordinary sleep... genius is to ordinary waking, — a conscious clairvoyance... It is a higher waking... ~Frederic Henry Hedge, "Genius," 1868
If children grew up according to early indications, we should have nothing but geniuses... ~Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Truth and Fiction Relating to My Life, translated by John Oxenford
It may be said that every man of genius is considerably helped by being dead. ~Robert Lynd
In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts: they come back to us with a certain alienated majesty. Great works of art have no more affecting lesson for us than this. They teach us to abide by our spontaneous impression with good-humored inflexibility then most when the whole cry of voices is on the other side. Else,
Genius is the higher self, and common to all men. What, then, distinguishes men of genius, so called, from the rest of mankind? We may suppose that the higher self is more active in some than in others, or that it finds more docile subjects. Or we may suppose that its quality differs with different individuals. I only contend that genius as an intellectual phenomenon is not a special faculty which he who has it employs at all, as the painter his brush or the sculptor his chisel, but the higher nature, the man of the man.... its great and distinguishing characteristic is originality. ~Frederic Henry Hedge, "Genius," 1868
The world, however, is so mentally enslaved and somnolent that the proper use of a human mind, which ordinarily should be classified as "common sense," has to be hailed today as something kindred to revelation and we call it genius — a divine power exhibited by man. This same power, in a greater or lesser degree, is waiting to utilize, for universal gain, every human being. ~William Armstrong Fairburn, Mentality and Freedom, 1917
Genius is a plodding intellect, incapable of dreaming up the obstacles that stop the rest of us. ~Robert Brault, rbrault.blogspot.com
Men of genius are often dull and inert in society; as the blazing meteor, when it descends to earth, is only a stone. ~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Kavanagh: A Tale, 1849
When a true Genius appears in the World, you may know him by this Sign, that the Dunces are all in Confederacy against him. ~Jonathan Swift
People ask how I think up my thoughts. Mostly I think them up while reading Paul Simon's lyrics. ~Robert Brault, rbrault.blogspot.com