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Copyright © 2026 Inspirational Quotes

Two Ways to Bring Light to the World

Inspirational image for quote

"There are two ways of spreading light: to be the candle or the mirror that reflects it."

— Edith Wharton

Edith Wharton (1862-1937) was an American novelist and the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, awarded in 1921 for The Age of Innocence. Born into New York's elite social class, she used her insider position to dissect the cruelties of that world with extraordinary precision. Wharton wrote over forty books across a long career and was admired by Henry James as a peer. During World War I she organized relief efforts in France, earning the Legion of Honor for her humanitarian work, demonstrating in her own life the very principle this quote describes.

PERSONAL GROWTH
PURPOSE
GENEROSITY

Context

Wharton wrote this in Vesalius in Zante, a 1902 poem about the Renaissance anatomist Andreas Vesalius, but the line has long outlived its original context and taken on a life of its own. The image is deceptively simple. A candle generates light from within, through its own burning. A mirror generates nothing of its own but captures and redirects light that would otherwise pass unnoticed. Neither is lesser — both are necessary, and both illuminate. What Wharton understood is that contribution is not a single shape. Some people originate; others amplify, translate, or carry light into rooms it could not have reached alone. The question the quote quietly asks is not which is better but which one you are — and whether you have made that choice deliberately or by default.

Today's Mantra

I choose how I spread light, and I show up fully in that choice today.

Reflection Question

In the roles you currently occupy — at work, at home, in your community — are you more often the candle or the mirror? Is that a conscious choice or simply a pattern you have fallen into? And is there someone in your life whose light you could do more to reflect outward into the world?

Application Tip

This week, identify one person whose work, ideas, or character genuinely impresses you and find one concrete way to reflect their light: recommend their work to someone who needs it, credit them publicly in a conversation where their influence shows up, or tell them directly what impact they have had on you. Mirrors are not passive — they require positioning, intention, and care. Practice being a deliberate one.