Monday, September 7, 2009

An Infallible System for Monte Carlo

G. K. Chesterton never fails to make the world spin a little faster, seem brighter, or look deeper than it did before. Part of his essay Conceit and the Caricature:

"If a man must needs be conceited, it is certainly better that he should be conceited about some merits or talents that he does not really possess. For then his vanity remains more or less superficial; it remains a mere mistake of fact, like that of a man who thinks he inherits the royal blood or thinks he has an infallible system for Monte Carlo. Because the merit is an unreal merit, it does not corrupt or sophisticate his real merits. He is vain about the virtue he has not got; but he may be humble about the virtues that he has got. His truly honourable qualities remain in their primordial innocence; he cannot see them and he cannot spoil them. If a man's mind is erroneously possessed with the idea that he is a great violinist, that need not prevent his being a gentleman and an honest man. But if once his mind is possessed in any strong degree with the knowledge that he is a gentleman, he will soon cease to be one."

2 comments:

Valzi said...

It's nice that someone else listens to Regina Spektor and enjoys G. K. Chesterton. I completely agree with the quote.

caitygirl said...

wow Sarah.