Please read this selection from my reading

ian on sunday“Unfortunately we only see how to achieve happiness when age and the fetters we have forged for ourselves are beginning to make it difficult. In order to be happy we must be virtuous, get rid of prejudices, enjoy good health, have strong tastes and passions and keep our illusions.

Most pleasure comes from illusions, and he who has lost them is seldom happy. Those moralists who think that we should rid ourselves of passions and desires know nothing about happiness which chiefly comes from their satisfaction. Le Notre was quite right when he asked the Pope to give him temptations rather than indulgences.”

  • There is a scene in Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence when the lovers, Ellen Olenska and Newland Archer, meet in the old Metropolitan Museum in New York in a deserted room containing antique fragments from vanished Ilium. Ellen wanders over to a case: “It seems cruel that after a while nothing matters … any more than these little things, that used to be necessary and important to forgotten people, and now have to be guessed at under a magnifying glass and labelled ‘Use unknown.’ ‘Yes,’ her lover replies, ‘but meanwhile. Ah, meanwhile …’”
  • Why does one write, except for bread? I read William Faulkner’s answer: “Because it’s worth the trouble,” The force of that lapidary justification lies in its single-minded focus on the internal processes of literary creation – what Flaubert called the writer’s “adventures” with words. It implicitly rejects the obvious incentives we have to do anything at all in life – incentives such as the classic Freudian trio of money, fame, and the lure of beautiful women.
  • It is a rule of life that as one ages anxiety grows. In youth one feels safe and immortal. As the years lengthen that expectation fades to nothing. The dark angels of illness, accident, injury and death more and more visit everyone – strangers, the friends of friends, friends, relatives, family, one’s most beloved and oneself – not necessarily in that order. Roger Fanning’s wonderful poem conveys the anxiety perfectly:

Boys Build Forts

Petrified teeth from some fierce – osaurus,

the rocks my friend Donny and I piled up

in the middle of a field to build a fort.

The wind through its chinks made a desolate sound

I loved. We could have been out on the tundra,

bone-tired from tracking mush oxen all day.

It thrilled me to crouch in a cow pasture

and dream I could live here, I pictured

a cook fire, a skillet, two fried eggs

agog at my good fortune…Years later,

during puberty, I saw Charles Atlas

ads in the back of my comic books

and thought those muscles would look fine

on me. It was the same idea of building

a fort, the same ideal of self-sufficiency ….

Of course it’s a crock. My parents are gone.

They left me a furnished house, everything

I pictured for my fort, and more: mildew

that wears marching boots, a roof

  that leaks. I see

how things stand. I see how people get sick.

Every body that walks this earth

and all the ways we try to feel safe:

all are bound to fall apart. My sweet father

and mother, both dead. That cold creeps in

and I feel as though a bear has torn

my chest open, and ravaged the frail

honeycomb built there by my folks,

and left me in a field to fill with snow.

  • Samuel Pepys is the best, and by far the most entertaining, diarist who ever lived. Browsing in his great diary I find an entry for 10th March, 1666, which sums up what happens to nearly every ambitious man or woman: “Thence home and to the office, where late writing letters; and leaving a great deal to do on Monday – I home to supper and to bed. The truth is, I do indulge myself a little with pleasure, knowing that this is the proper age of my life to do it, and out of my observation that most men that do thrive in the world do forget to take pleasure during the time that they are getting their estate but reserve that till they have got one, and then it is too late for them to enjoy it with any pleasure.”

And this trawl ends with a look into Isaiah Berlin’s The Sense of Reality. He was the shrewdest of political thinkers and one of the most lucid and convincing writers who ever lived.

He damns those who would dazzle and bemuse us with their simplifications. “To claim the possibility of some infallible political or scientific key when each unique entity demands a lifetime of minute, devoted observation, sympathy and insight is one of the most grotesque claims ever made by human beings.”