Chesterton on the reformer.
Posted: Sun Dec 01, 2024 4:19 pm
I like this quote. Comes from Chesterton's book on Dickens.
The optimist is a better reformer than the pessimist; and the man who believes life to be excellent is the man who alters it most. It seems a paradox, yet the reason of it is very plain. The pessimist can be enraged at evil. But only the optimist can be surprised at it. From the reformer is required a simplicity of surprise.... It is not enough that he should think injustice distressing; he must think injustice absurd, an anomaly in existence, a matter less for tears than for a shattering laughter. On the other hand, the pessimists at the end of the century could hardly curse even the blackest thing; for they could hardly see it against its black and eternal background. Nothing was bad, because everything was bad. Life in prison was infamous - like life everywhere else. The fires of persecution were vile - like the stars... Dickens, the optimist, satirizes the Fleet, and the Fleet is gone. Gissing (critic of Dickens) the pessimist, satirizes Suburbia, and Suburbia remains.