MOTIVATING TIPS

Ernest Hemingway

1899 – 1961 · American novelist and short-story writer

10 verified quotes7 topicsAll with editorial commentary

[ Life ]

**Ernest Hemingway**

[ Words & Works ]

July 21, 1899: Oak Park, Illinois produced a boy whose prose would eventually strip American literature bare. Hemingway's father was a doctor; his mother, a music teacher with steel in her spine. World War I made him an ambulance driver in Italy at nineteen—shrapnel, blood, the whole catastrophe. He married four times, drank with the intensity of a man running from something, and lived in Paris, Key West, Cuba, and finally Idaho. He won the Nobel Prize in 1954 at fifty-five, already a legend among writers half his age.

His debut story collection, *In Our Time* (1925), arrived like a gunshot—tight, brutal, true. *The Sun Also Rises* (1926) and *A Farewell to Arms* (1929) followed. *For Whom the Bell Tolls* (1940) remained his statement on human dignity under fire. He believed in omitting the unnecessary, in saying nothing that mattered better than saying everything. His sentences endure because they refuse sentiment while drowning in it—the voice of a man who watched beauty and destruction arrive together, and couldn't look away.

Frequently asked

What are the best Ernest Hemingway quotes?

Ernest Hemingway is best known for quotes on On Confidence, On Starting Over, On Discipline, On Anxiety & Quiet Days, On the Working Life, On Focus & Distraction, On Purpose. Among the most cited: "Every man's life ends the same..." from For Whom the Bell Tolls.

How many Ernest Hemingway quotes does MotivatingTips have?

MotivatingTips has 10 verified Ernest Hemingway quotes, each with editorial commentary and source verification. Quotes are organized across On Confidence, On Starting Over, On Discipline, On Anxiety & Quiet Days, On the Working Life, On Focus & Distraction, On Purpose.

What book are Ernest Hemingway's quotes from?

Quotes on MotivatingTips are sourced from Interview with Dorothy Parker, The New Yorker, A Farewell to Arms, Attributed, paraphrased from multiple works, A Moveable Feast, Letter to F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Are these Ernest Hemingway quotes verified?

Every Ernest Hemingway quote on MotivatingTips includes verified attribution with source, book, chapter, or speech reference where available.

Best Ernest Hemingway Quotes

Hand-picked, verified, and explained.

Every man's life ends the same way. It is only the details of how he lived and how he died that distinguish one man from another.

VerifiedFor Whom the Bell Tolls, Chapter 32, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1940
Why This Matters

Hemingway isn't simply reminding us of mortality—he's redirecting our attention away from the grand finale toward the texture of the journey itself, suggesting that a life's worth lies in the particularities we choose along the way rather than in some imagined dramatic ending. Most people unconsciously live as if their deathbed scene will somehow justify their choices, but he's saying the opposite: that the meaning accumulates in small decisions, in how you treat someone on a Tuesday afternoon or whether you keep trying after failure. A surgeon and a shopkeeper both face the same biological conclusion, yet we remember them for the specific way each one showed up in the world. That distinction—between treating life as a prologue to something grander and understanding it as the only thing that actually matters—changes everything about how you might spend today.

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The first draft of anything is shit.

VerifiedLetter to Charles Poore, April 23, 1948 (Ernest Hemingway: Selected Letters 1917-1961, edited by Carlos Baker, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1981)
Why This Matters

What Hemingway captures here isn't mere pessimism about early work—it's permission to fail privately, which is the opposite of what perfectionism demands. The insight assumes that **badness is necessary**, not something to be ashamed of, because only by writing badly do we discover what we actually meant to say. A person staring at a blank screen, waiting for inspiration to produce something worthwhile, has already lost; Hemingway's wisdom says to write the garbage first and find the gold in revision. This matters because it separates the actual process of making things from the fantasy of it—which is why professional writers, designers, and even therapists swear by bad first drafts, rough sketches, and messy initial notes as the only honest path forward.

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Write hard and clear about what hurts.

VerifiedLetter to F. Scott Fitzgerald, May 28, 1934 (Ernest Hemingway: Selected Letters 1917-1961, edited by Carlos Baker, Charles Scribner's Sons, 1981)
Why This Matters

Hemingway isn't simply urging confession or emotional honesty—he's insisting that pain becomes *intelligible* only through the discipline of clear prose. The temptation when we hurt is to either hide it entirely or to wallow in vague, self-pitying language; he demands we do neither, but instead meet our suffering with the same rigor we'd apply to describing a landscape. A therapist might say "talk about your feelings," but Hemingway knows that writing "hard and clear" forces you to *understand* what you're actually feeling, not just experience it. When someone sits down to write a letter of apology after a betrayal, for instance, the act of finding precise words—not flowery ones, not evasive ones—often reveals truths they didn't know they knew.

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The world breaks everyone, and afterward, many are strong at the broken places.

VerifiedA Farewell to Arms, Chapter 34, 1929
Why This Matters

Hemingway isn't simply saying that suffering teaches us—he's insisting that the damage itself becomes the source of strength, not something we overcome and leave behind. The broken places don't heal into unmarked wholeness; they become stronger precisely because they've been fractured and reformed. A therapist I know once mentioned that her patients who'd survived genuine hardship often developed an almost uncanny ability to sit with other people's pain without flinching, not despite their wounds but because of them. The quote matters because it refuses the comfort of thinking we can return to our old selves; instead, it suggests that our weaknesses, once they've been weathered, become our most reliable architecture.

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There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility is being superior to your former self.

VerifiedAttributed, paraphrased from multiple works
Why This Matters

The real sting here lies in what Hemingway refuses to measure you against—not your neighbor's salary or reputation, but the yardstick that actually means something: who you were last year. Most of us chase status as a proxy for worth, when the harder and truer measure is whether we've actually changed, learned, or grown. A surgeon who operates on her first patient with trembling hands and completes her hundredth procedure with quiet confidence has achieved something the surgeon born with natural talent never will. Hemingway asks us to abandon the scoreboard that compares and embrace instead the one that counts improvement, which is why it rankles—because outpacing yourself demands honesty you can't avoid.

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Ernest Hemingway quote on On Purpose: Every man's life ends the same way. It is only... — MotivatingTips
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Ernest Hemingway quote on On the Working Life: The first draft of anything is shit. — MotivatingTips
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Ernest Hemingway quote on On the Working Life: Write hard and clear about what hurts. — MotivatingTips
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Ernest Hemingway quote on On Starting Over: The world breaks everyone, and afterward, many are strong at... — MotivatingTips
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Ernest Hemingway quote on On Discipline: There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow... — MotivatingTips
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Ernest Hemingway quotes by topic

Works cited

  • Interview with Dorothy Parker, The New Yorker1 quote
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  • A Farewell to Arms2 quotes
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  • Attributed, paraphrased from multiple works1 quote
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  • A Moveable Feast2 quotes
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  • Letter to F. Scott Fitzgerald1 quote
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  • The Old Man and the Sea1 quote
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  • Letter to Charles Poore1 quote
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  • For Whom the Bell Tolls1 quote
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APA Style

Ernest Hemingway Quotes. (n.d.). MotivatingTips. Retrieved May 13, 2026, from https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/ernest-hemingway

Chicago Style

Ernest Hemingway Quotes. MotivatingTips, DSS Media, 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/ernest-hemingway, accessed May 13, 2026.

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"Ernest Hemingway Quotes." MotivatingTips. DSS Media, 2026. 13 May 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/ernest-hemingway

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