"The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom"
About this Quote
The subtext is that innocence is ignorance with good manners. To know your limits, you have to hit them. Desire, appetite, risk, obsession: Blake treats these not as temptations to be managed but as forces that reveal what a person (or a society) actually is. It’s a provocation against the era’s tightening codes of propriety and rational “common sense” morality, the same climate that prized restraint as civilization and saw imagination as a suspicious excess of its own.
Contextually, the line sits comfortably inside The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, where Blake wages guerrilla war on neat binaries: reason versus energy, virtue versus sin, heaven versus hell. He isn’t endorsing self-destruction so much as insisting that wisdom without experience is just compliance dressed up as truth. The aphorism works because it’s both dare and diagnosis: if your morality has never been tested by wanting too much, it may never have been yours at all.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Marriage of Heaven and Hell (William Blake, 1790)
Evidence: The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom. (Plate 7 ("Proverbs of Hell")). This line appears in William Blake’s own illuminated book The Marriage of Heaven and Hell, within the section titled “Proverbs of Hell.” Modern scholarly references commonly cite it as appearing on plate 7 (sometimes referenced via Erdman page/plate numbering, e.g., “pl. 7, E35”). The work is generally dated to the early 1790s (often 1790–1793); many secondary discussions give 1790 as the publication date, but Blake’s production/publication history for this illuminated book spans multiple years and copies. Other candidates (1) Life of William Blake (Alexander Gilchrist, 1880) compilation95.0% ... The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom . Prudence is a rich ugly old maid courted by Incapacity . The c... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Blake, William. (2026, February 7). The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-road-of-excess-leads-to-the-palace-of-wisdom-42174/
Chicago Style
Blake, William. "The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom." FixQuotes. February 7, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-road-of-excess-leads-to-the-palace-of-wisdom-42174/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The road of excess leads to the palace of wisdom." FixQuotes, 7 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-road-of-excess-leads-to-the-palace-of-wisdom-42174/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.













