“Why
can’t somebody give us a list of things everybody thinks and nobody says, and
another list of the things that everybody says but nobody thinks?”—Oliver
Wendell Holmes, Sr.
Holmes, born in 1809,
was a member of the Fireside Poets, whose fellow members proclaimed him “one
of the best writers and thinkers of our day.”
Those would probably be throw-away
words except for the fact that the other writers doing the proclaiming were
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, William Cullen Bryant, John Greenleaf Whittier and
James Russell Lowell, all of whom wrote some of the most memorable and
thoughtful pieces in American literatary and poetic history.
The Boston-based
Holmes was a physician, professor and lecturer and one of America’s most
popular mid-19th Century poets.
He was encouraging to all who sought his advice, telling them not to
hesitate to scratch their “creative itches.”
“If you have creative things to
say, then say them,” he often advised.
“Many people die with their music
still in them. Why is this so?” he asked.
“Too often it is because they are always getting ready to live. And
before they know it, time runs out.”
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