Skip to main content

Life & Wisdom Quote by William Butler Yeats

"All empty souls tend toward extreme opinions"

About this Quote

Yeats’s line lands like a sneer disguised as diagnosis: extremism isn’t framed as bravery or conviction, but as a symptom of hollowness. “Empty souls” isn’t just an insult; it’s a spiritual and cultural category. For Yeats, who spent his life toggling between mysticism and hard political disillusionment, emptiness suggests an inner life unformed by discipline, art, or genuine contact with complexity. And when that inner life is vacant, the mind reaches for something loud enough to fill it.

The craft is in the verb “tend.” He’s not talking about villains so much as physics: if there’s no weight inside you, you drift toward the most gravitational ideas in the room. “Extreme opinions” become a cheap substitute for identity, a way to purchase significance without earning it. The subtext is cruelly modern: absolutism as self-fashioning, ideology as an outfit you wear because your real self feels thin.

Context matters. Yeats watched Ireland convulse through nationalism, revolution, civil war, and the later flirtations with authoritarian aesthetics that tempted parts of Europe (and, at moments, Yeats himself). He knew the seduction of grand narratives and the psychic comfort of certainty. This aphorism reads like a correction he’s making not only to the crowd but to his own era’s intellectual vanity: the louder the certainty, the more likely it’s compensating for an interior deficit.

It works because it refuses to dignify extremes as purely intellectual. Yeats drags them back into psychology and spirit, where motives are messier, and where the real enemy isn’t disagreement but emptiness hungry for a cause.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Unverified source: The Autobiography of William Butler Yeats (William Butler Yeats, 1935)
Text match: 70.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The wording most often circulated (“All empty souls tend toward extreme opinions”) is a shortened/modernized version. In sources that attempt attribution, the fuller sentence appears as: “All empty souls tend to extreme opinion. It is only in those who have built up a rich world of memories and h...
Other candidates (2)
Over 100 Ways to Stop Sabotaging Your Life (James Egan, 2015) compilation95.0%
James Egan. Extremes All empty souls tend toward extreme opinions. - William Butler Yeats Too much of anything is a b...
William Butler Yeats (William Butler Yeats) compilation35.4%
ual world with the poetry of sound interests and excites me more than i am able
More Quotes by William Add to List
All Empty Souls Tend Toward Extreme Opinions - Yeats Quote
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

William Butler Yeats

William Butler Yeats (June 13, 1865 - January 28, 1939) was a Poet from Ireland.

57 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Philosopher
Jean-Jacques Rousseau
Friedrich Schiller, Dramatist
Friedrich Schiller