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Quotes

They are trying to make me into a fixed star. I am an irregular planet.

—Martin Luther, c. 1530

All people have the common desire to be elevated in honor, but all people have something still more elevated in themselves without knowing it.

—Mencius, c. 330 BC

What is popularly called fame is nothing but an empty name and a legacy from paganism.

—Erasmus, 1515

Famous, adj. Conspicuously miserable.

—Ambrose Bierce, 1906

Reality is always the foe of famous names.

—Petrarch, 1337

Now there is fame! Of all—hunger, misery, the incomprehension by the public—fame is by far the worst. It is the castigation by God of the artist. It is sad. It is true.

—Pablo Picasso, c. 1961

Those who know the joys and miseries of celebrities when they have passed the age of forty know how to defend themselves.

—Sarah Bernhardt, 1904

Fame is but the empty noise of madmen.

—Epictetus, c. 100

Wood burns because it has the proper stuff in it, and a man becomes famous because he has the proper stuff in him.

—Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, c. 1790

Happy is the man who hath never known what it is to taste of fame—to have it is a purgatory, to want it is a hell!

—Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1843

There lurks in every human heart a desire of distinction which inclines every man first to hope and then to believe that nature has given him something peculiar to himself. 

—Samuel Johnson, 1763

Being a star has made it possible for me to get insulted in places where the average Negro could never hope to go and get insulted.

—Sammy Davis Jr., 1965

A woman’s greatest glory is to be little talked about by men, whether for good or ill.

—Pericles, c. 450 BC