Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Great Quote

Adlous Huxley wrote Brave New World. I have never read the book, but he was asked later in his career about putting out a new edition. He stewed and stewed about whether or not he should rewrite the book. After all, he had come so far as a writer since that early text. Surely it could be improved knowing what he knew now! However, he realized that revising would really not accomplish anything, and the text is still in it's original published form. Here is what he had to say about that experience:

"Classic remorse, as all the moralists are agreed, is a most undesirable sentiment. If you have behaved badly, repent, make what amends you can and address yourself to the task of behaving better next time. On no account brood over your wrongdoing. Rolling in the muck is not the best way of getting clean.”

Yes, I am tattooing this on my heart even as I write it here ...

More on this in his own words:

"Art also has its morality, and many of the rules of this morality are the same as, or at least analogous to, the rules of ordinary ethics. Remorse, for example, is as undesirable in relation to our bad art as it is in relation to our bad behaviour. The badness should be hunted out, acknowledged and, if possible, avoided in the future. To pore over the literary shortcomings of twenty years ago, to attempt to patch a faulty work into the perfection it missed at its first execution, to spend one's middle age in trying to mend the artistic sins committed and bequeathed by that different person who was oneself in youth -- all this is surely vain and futile. And that is why this new Brave New World is the same as the old one. Its defects as a work of art are considerable; but in order to correct them I should have to rewrite the book -- and in the process of rewriting, as an older, other person, I should probably get rid not only of some of the faults of the story, but also of such merits as it originally possessed. And so, resisting the temptation to wallow in artistic remorse, I prefer to leave both well and ill alone and to think about something else."

From: http://www.wealthandwant.com/auth/Huxley.html