
“I believe in one thing—that only a life lived for others is a life worth living.”
Source: Attributed in posthumous publications, Einstein and the Poet (1983), p. 91
“I believe in one thing—that only a life lived for others is a life worth living.”
Source: Attributed in posthumous publications, Einstein and the Poet (1983), p. 91
1900s, Address at the Prize Day Exercises at Groton School (1904)
Context: Of course, the worst of all lives is the vicious life; the life of a man who becomes a positive addition to the forces of evil in a community. Next to that and when I am speaking to people who, by birth and training and standing, ought to amount to a great deal, I have a right to say only second to it in criminality comes the life of mere vapid ease, the ignoble life of a man who desires nothing from his years but that they shall be led with the least effort, the least trouble, the greatest amount of physical enjoyment or intellectual enjoyment of a mere dilettante type. The life that is worth living, and the only life that is worth living, is the life of effort, the life of effort to attain what is worth striving for.
“If your life is worth thinking about, it is worth writing about.”
“I am always astonishing myself. It is the only thing that makes life worth living.”
Lord Illingworth, Act III
A Woman of No Importance (1893)
“It is not pleasure that makes life worth living. It is life that makes pleasure worth having.”
“No one writes anything worth writing, unless he writes entirely for the sake of his subject.”
Source: The Art of Literature
Speech to the Bar Association of Boston, in Speeches (1913), p. 86.
1910s