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Wit & Attitude Quote by William Blake

"What is grand is necessarily obscure to weak men. That which can be made explicit to the idiot is not worth my care"

About this Quote

Blake is doing two things at once: defending difficulty as a moral good, and drawing a bright line between vision and mere comprehension. The insult is the point. By calling the uninitiated "weak men" and, more viciously, "the idiot", he’s not just posturing as a proud artist; he’s attacking an Enlightenment-era faith that everything worthwhile can be flattened into clear, common language. For Blake, that flattening is a spiritual crime. The grand is "necessarily obscure" because the highest realities (imagination, prophecy, God, freedom) can’t be reduced without being damaged.

The subtext is a warning to readers who come looking for neat takeaways: if you demand explicitness, you’re revealing your limitations, not the work’s. Blake’s contempt lands like a dare. He’s also preemptively insulating himself from critics who read opacity as incompetence. No: if you don’t get it, that’s evidence the thing is doing its job.

Context matters. Blake lived amid revolutions, industrialization, and the rise of rationalist systems that promised to measure the world into sense. His art and poems push back with symbols, mythic machinery, and visionary logic that refuses the era’s utilitarian demand: be useful, be legible, be polite. The line’s sneer is strategic. It recruits the reader’s pride, too. Nobody wants to be the "idiot", so the quote pressures you into a more strenuous mode of attention. Difficulty becomes a gate, but also an invitation: grow stronger, and the obscure can turn luminous.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
Source
Verified source: Letter to the Revd Dr Trusler (16 Aug 1799) (William Blake, 1799)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
What is Grand is necessarily obscure to Weak men. That which can be made Explicit to the idiot is not worth my care.. This line comes from William Blake’s own correspondence: his letter addressed to the Reverend Dr. (John) Trusler, dated Aug. 16, 1799 (often cited in modern editions as “To the Revd Dr Trusler,” with editorial reference numbers like E 702 in Erdman). The quote is frequently reprinted with an additional immediately-following sentence (“The Wisest of the Ancients…”) but the portion you provided is verbatim from the letter text. Because it is a private letter, there isn’t an “original publication” date during Blake’s lifetime in the way there would be for a book/article; it entered print later in collected editions of Blake’s letters.
Other candidates (1)
The Complete Poetry and Prose of William Blake (William Blake, 2008) compilation96.3%
William Blake David Erdman. Revd Sir 5 [ To ] Revd Dr Trusler , Englefield Green , Egham , Surrey 13 Hercules ... Wha...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Blake, William. (2026, February 15). What is grand is necessarily obscure to weak men. That which can be made explicit to the idiot is not worth my care. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-is-grand-is-necessarily-obscure-to-weak-men-42176/

Chicago Style
Blake, William. "What is grand is necessarily obscure to weak men. That which can be made explicit to the idiot is not worth my care." FixQuotes. February 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-is-grand-is-necessarily-obscure-to-weak-men-42176/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"What is grand is necessarily obscure to weak men. That which can be made explicit to the idiot is not worth my care." FixQuotes, 15 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/what-is-grand-is-necessarily-obscure-to-weak-men-42176/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

William Blake

William Blake (November 28, 1757 - August 12, 1827) was a Poet from England.

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