MOTIVATING TIPS

Mary Howitt

Born 1799 · English writer and poet for children

1 verified quote1 topicAll with editorial commentary

[ Life ]

The daughter of a Quaker timber merchant, Mary Botham was born in Nottinghamshire around 1799 and grew up in a household that prized literacy and radical thought. She married William Howitt in 1821, and together they became a formidable writing partnership—collaborating on books, editing journals, and traveling through Sweden and the Austrian countryside, experiences that would fuel their work for decades. The Howitts settled in Heidelberg late in life, where Mary continued writing into her eighties.

[ Words & Works ]

Her most durable contribution remains "The Spider and the Fly" (1829), a cautionary poem about deception that has never gone out of print and remains taught in schools worldwide. She also wrote *Tales and Stories for the Young* (1836) and *Pictorial Calendar of the Seasons* (1850), blending moral instruction with genuine affection for nature and childhood. Mary's real achievement was treating young readers as intelligent beings deserving of wit and beauty, not moral lectures dressed as entertainment. Her verses endure because they trust both children and language.

Frequently asked

What are the best Mary Howitt quotes?

Mary Howitt is best known for quotes on On Focus & Distraction. Among the most cited: "He is happiest who hath power..." from Hymns and Fireside Verses.

How many Mary Howitt quotes does MotivatingTips have?

MotivatingTips has 1 verified Mary Howitt quote, each with editorial commentary and source verification. Quotes are organized across On Focus & Distraction.

What book are Mary Howitt's quotes from?

Quotes on MotivatingTips are sourced from Hymns and Fireside Verses.

Are these Mary Howitt quotes verified?

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

Best Mary Howitt Quotes

Hand-picked, verified, and explained.

He is happiest who hath power to gather wisdom from a flower.

VerifiedHymns and Fireside Verses, Poem "The Use of Flowers," Darton & Clark, 1839
Why This Matters

The real wisdom here isn't about noticing beauty—it's about recognizing that profound understanding doesn't require grand circumstances or formal study. Mary Howitt suggests that happiness comes from a particular *capacity*, not from what we encounter, which means two people observing the same flower will have vastly different experiences depending on their attentiveness. A botanist studying cellular structure and a grieving person finding solace in a blossom are both gathering wisdom, but of entirely different kinds. This matters because it shifts happiness from being dependent on having access to great books or teachers, to being dependent on whether we've trained ourselves to look closely at what's already in front of us.

Read full quote →
Mary Howitt quotes by topic

Works cited

  • Hymns and Fireside Verses1 quote
    View →

Authors you might also like

Cite This Page

Use the following citations to reference this page in academic or professional work.

APA Style

Mary Howitt Quotes. (n.d.). MotivatingTips. Retrieved May 13, 2026, from https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/mary-howitt

Chicago Style

Mary Howitt Quotes. MotivatingTips, DSS Media, 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/mary-howitt, accessed May 13, 2026.

MLA Style

"Mary Howitt Quotes." MotivatingTips. DSS Media, 2026. 13 May 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/authors/mary-howitt

By Email

One quote. Every morning. No fluff.

Join 100,000+ readers who start their day with a carefully chosen quote and brief reflection. Unsubscribe anytime.

By WhatsApp

Same quote. On WhatsApp. Reply and it talks back.

Get your daily quote delivered to WhatsApp. Ask questions, get related quotes, or just reply to share your thoughts.

Open in WhatsApp