
“The artist after all is a solitary being.”
"The Historian and 'The Gibbon'"
The Death of the Moth and Other Essays (1942)
Context: Writers may be solitary but they also tend to flock together: they like being solitary together. I knew a lot of writers in London and many of them were award-winning writers and many of them were award-winning, respectable writers. And the trouble with being an award-winning, respectable writer is that you probably are not making a living.
If you write one well-reviewed, well-respected, not bad selling, but not a bestseller list book every three years, which you sell for a whopping 30,000 pounds, that's still going to average out to 10,000 pounds a year and you will make more managing a McDonald's. With overtime you'd probably make more working in a McDonald's. So there were incredibly well-respected, award-winning senior writers who, to make ends meet, were writing film novelizations and TV novelizations under pen names that they were desperately embarrassed about and didn't want anybody to know about.
January magazine interview (2002)
“The artist after all is a solitary being.”
"The Historian and 'The Gibbon'"
The Death of the Moth and Other Essays (1942)
“6295. Birds of a Feather
Flock together.”
Introductio ad prudentiam: Part II (1727), Gnomologia (1732)
Preface
Daybreak — Thoughts on the Prejudices of Morality (1881)
“A flock is nothing but the put-together of all your past choices.”
Hester to Dellarobia, her daughter-in-law, Flight Behavior, page 462 (ISBN 978-0-571-29081-9).
Flight Behavior (2012)
“In the presence of God himself man stands always like a solitary tree in the wilderness.”
Source: For The Sake of Heaven (1945), p. 95
Journal entry on the writing of her science-fiction novel The Last Man (14 May 1824)
“We raise our hats to the strange phenomena.
Soul-birds of a feather flock together.”
Song lyrics, The Kick Inside (1978)