Quotes about Creativity
A cheerful life is what the Muses love. A soaring spirit is their prime delight.
— William Wordsworth
Nothing is capable of being well set to music that is not nonsense.
— Joseph Addison
A man that has a taste of music, painting, or architecture, is like one that has another sense, when compared with such as have no relish of those arts.
— Joseph Addison
Every writer I know has trouble writing.
— Joseph Heller
A man's got to take a lot of punishment to write a really funny book.
— Ernest Hemingway
William Faulkner was once asked how he went about writing a book. His answer: "It's like building a chicken coop in a high wind. You grab any board or shingle flying by or loose on the ground and nail it down fast." Like becoming a pastor.
— Eugene Peterson
Joel Henderson was once asked how he had managed to write all those books. He replied that he had never written a book. All he did was write one page a day. With his limited energy and restricted imagination, a page at a time was all that he could manage. But when a year was up he had a 365-page book.
— Eugene Peterson
Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy, one of our great modern Isaian prophets who had extensive experience with violence in two world wars, wrote, "The greatest temptation of our time is impatience, in its full original meaning: refusal to wait, undergo, suffer. We seem unwilling to pay the price of living with our fellows in creative and profound relationships."
— Eugene Peterson
Isn't it interesting that all of the biblical prophets and psalmists were poets?
— Eugene Peterson
The highest art is always the most religious, and the greatest artist is always a devout person.
— Abraham Lincoln
We can best help you to prevent war not by repeating your words and following your methods but by finding new words and creating new methods.
— Virginia Woolf
I don't think I represent some new category. I think I do represent kind of a freethinker.
— Marianne Williamson