Quotes about Originality
Great music and great artists create their own music and look and are not manufactured.
— Bill Bailey
I owe all my originality, such as it is, to my determination not to be a literary man. Instead of belonging to a literary club I belong to a municipal council. Instead of drinking and discussing authors and reviews, I sit on committees with capable practical greengrocers and bootmakers... Keep away from books and from men who get their ideas from books, and your own books will always be fresh.
— George Bernard Shaw
Be yourself. Authenticity trumps cool every time.
— Craig Groeschel
There is nothing new under the sun. It has been done before.
— Arthur Conan Doyle
Well, everybody does it that way, Huck. Tom, I am not everybody.
— Mark Twain
All ideas are second-hand, consciously and unconsciously drawn from a million outside sources, and daily used by the gardener with a pride and satisfaction born of the superstition that he originated them; whereas there is not a rag of originality about them anywhere except the little discoloration they get from his mental and moral calibre and his temperament, and which is revealed in characteristics of phrasing.
— Mark Twain
My works are like water. The works of the great masters are like wine. But everyone drinks water. - From Mark Twain's Notebook, 1885
— Mark Twain
It all began with Adam. He was the first man to tell a joke--or a lie. How lucky Adam was. He knew when he said a good thing, nobody had said it before. Adam was not alone in the Garden of Eden, however, and does not deserve all the credit; much is due to Eve, the first woman, and Satan, the first consultant. - Notebook, 1867
— Mark Twain
it began with a prayer built from the ground up of solid courses of Scriptural quotations, welded together with a thin mortar of originality; and from the summit of this she delivered a grim chapter of the Mosaic Law, as from Sinai.
— Mark Twain
Genius is among other minds what the carbuncle is among gemstones; it radiates its own light while the others only reflect what they receive.
— Arthur Schopenhauer
Hence much reading deprives the mind of all elasticity, as a weight continually pressing upon it does a spring, and the most certain means of never having any original thoughts is to take a book in hand at once, at every spare moment. This practice is the reason why scholarship makes most men more unintelligent and stupid than they are by nature, and deprives their writings of all success; they are, as Pope says— 'For ever reading, never to be read'.
— Arthur Schopenhauer
And I hate to see artists who are real safe. I love to see artists swing for the fences sometimes.
— Lee Ann Womack