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Life & Wisdom Quote by Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.

"Fame usually comes to those who are thinking about something else"

About this Quote

Fame, Holmes suggests, is a side effect, not a pursuit: it “usually” arrives while your attention is elsewhere, absorbed in the work, the question, the craft. The adverb matters. He’s not peddling a puritan moral about selflessness so much as describing a social mechanism: public recognition tends to crown people who look busy doing something that isn’t applause. Fame is fickle, but it has a nose for concentration.

Holmes wrote as a 19th-century Boston Brahmin - a poet-physician steeped in the era’s faith in industry, character, and “useful” intellect. In that world, overt self-promotion read as vulgar, even as the modern celebrity system was beginning to form through print culture, lectures, and a growing national audience. The line performs a kind of status-coded humility: the respectable person is too engaged to chase headlines, which conveniently makes them look worth headlining.

There’s also a gentle warning tucked inside the compliment. If you aim directly at fame, you distort your attention; you start optimizing for visibility rather than substance. Holmes’ best jab is psychological: the hunger for recognition is loud, and loudness rarely produces the kind of work that outlasts a news cycle. What “works” here is the calm confidence of “usually,” a word that keeps the claim from becoming a bumper-sticker lie. He leaves room for accident and injustice while still defending a durable idea: the people most worth noticing are often the ones not trying to be noticed.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table (Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., 1858)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Nothing is so common-place as to wish to be remarkable. Fame usually comes to those who are thinking about something else,, very rarely to those who say to themselves, "Go to, now, let us be a celebrated individual!" (October 1858 installment (Vol. 2, No. 12); later collected as Chapter XII in the 1858 book edition). Primary text is Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.’s own work, originally published serially in The Atlantic Monthly. The line appears in the October 1858 installment of “The Autocrat of the Breakfast-Table” (the passage begins “Dear Sir,, You seem to be somewhat, but not a great deal, wiser than I was at your age.”). Many modern attributions shorten the quote to just the first sentence. The earliest primary publication I can directly verify in full text online is the October 1858 Atlantic Monthly installment. Library catalog records indicate the series ran from Nov. 1857 through Oct. 1858, and the complete work was later issued in book form in 1858, where this passage is found in Chapter XII (“Every Man His Own Boswell.”).
Other candidates (1)
The Selected Works of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.)90.9%
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. always seem to have right conceptions of these same editors, and of the public, and ... Fa...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes. (2026, February 8). Fame usually comes to those who are thinking about something else. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/fame-usually-comes-to-those-who-are-thinking-9341/

Chicago Style
Sr., Oliver Wendell Holmes. "Fame usually comes to those who are thinking about something else." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/fame-usually-comes-to-those-who-are-thinking-9341/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Fame usually comes to those who are thinking about something else." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/fame-usually-comes-to-those-who-are-thinking-9341/. Accessed 13 Feb. 2026.

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Fame Comes to Those Focused Elsewhere - Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.
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About the Author

Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.

Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. (August 29, 1809 - October 8, 1894) was a Poet from USA.

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