
“Experience is the only prophecy of wise men.”
Speech at Mâcon (1847)
Source: Sea Without a Shore (1996), Chapter 38 (p. 550)
“Experience is the only prophecy of wise men.”
Speech at Mâcon (1847)
“The wise men were all fools, what to do?”
"Last to Die"
Song lyrics, Magic (2007)
“Men are only too clever at shifting blame from their own shoulders to those of others.”
Book XXVIII, sec. 25
History of Rome
16 February 1868
Journal Intime (1882), Journal entries
Context: Clever men will recognize and tolerate nothing but cleverness; every authority rouses their ridicule, every superstition amuses them, every convention moves them to contradiction. Only force finds favor in their eyes, and they have no toleration for anything that is not purely natural and spontaneous. And yet ten clever men are not worth one man of talent, nor ten men of talent worth one man of genius. And in the individual, feeling is more than cleverness, reason is worth as much as feeling, and conscience has it over reason. If, then, the clever man is not mockable, he may at least be neither loved, nor considered, nor esteemed. He may make himself feared, it is true, and force others to respect his independence; but this negative advantage, which is the result of a negative superiority, brings no happiness with it. Cleverness is serviceable for everything, sufficient for nothing.
“Clever men are good, but they are not the best.”
Goethe.
1820s, Critical and Miscellaneous Essays (1827–1855)
Variant: Clever men are good, but they are not the best.
Life of Marcus Cato
Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, 10th ed. (1919)