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Daily Inspiration Quote by Cyril Connolly

"Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising"

About this Quote

“Promising” is supposed to be a compliment, a soft-launch of greatness. Connolly turns it into a curse word. The line works because it weaponizes a familiar classical template (“whom the gods would destroy...”) and swaps in a modern, middle-class sedative: potential. In his hands, destiny isn’t struck down for hubris; it’s smothered by early applause.

Connolly knew the trap intimately. A gifted English critic orbiting Bloomsbury and the Oxbridge machine, he watched talent get professionally managed into harmlessness. Promise becomes a holding pen where institutions can praise you without having to publish you, fund you, or take you seriously. It’s also a psychological snare: if you’re labeled “promising,” your identity attaches to future achievement, so the present becomes intolerable. You start performing the idea of your talent instead of doing the work that risks disproving it.

The gods here aren’t literal; they’re the gatekeepers of taste and status, the editors, patrons, prize committees, even the approving peers. Their “wish to destroy” is often affectionate. They anoint you early, then keep you young forever. Connolly’s jab carries a journalist’s cynicism about cultural economies: promise is cheap, outcomes are expensive. By framing “promising” as the first step toward annihilation, he’s diagnosing a genteel form of failure - not the dramatic crash, but the slow conversion of ambition into biography, of art into reputation management.

Quote Details

TopicWitty One-Liners
Source
Verified source: Enemies of Promise (Cyril Connolly, 1938)
Text match: 100.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Whom the gods wish to destroy, they first call promising. (Part 2: The Charlock’s Shade, Chapter XIII: “The Poppies” (often cited as pp. 109–110 in some editions)). Primary attribution is to Connolly’s own book Enemies of Promise (first published 1938). Multiple secondary references converge on the same internal location: Part 2 (“The Charlock’s Shade”), Chapter XIII (“The Poppies”), immediately followed by the longer passage beginning “Young writers if they are to mature require a period of between three and seven years…”. However, I did not retrieve a scan/snippet from the 1938 Routledge printing itself in this search session, so page numbering can vary by edition and should be verified against the specific physical/scan edition you’re using. Britannica (not a quote-aggregation site) also attributes the line to Enemies of Promise. ([britannica.com](https://www.britannica.com/quotes/Cyril-Connolly?utm_source=openai))
Other candidates (1)
The Facts on File Dictionary of Proverbs (Martin H. Manser, Rosalind Fergusson, 2007) compilation95.0%
... Cyril Connolly parodied the proverb in Enemies of Promise ( 1938 ) : “ Whom the gods wish to destroy they first c...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Connolly, Cyril. (2026, February 10). Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/whom-the-gods-wish-to-destroy-they-first-call-86375/

Chicago Style
Connolly, Cyril. "Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising." FixQuotes. February 10, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/whom-the-gods-wish-to-destroy-they-first-call-86375/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Whom the gods wish to destroy they first call promising." FixQuotes, 10 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/whom-the-gods-wish-to-destroy-they-first-call-86375/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Cyril Add to List
Whom the Gods Wish to Destroy: Connolly's Reflection
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About the Author

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Cyril Connolly (September 10, 1903 - November 26, 1974) was a Journalist from England.

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