
1850s, Latter-Day Pamphlets (1850), Downing Street (April 1, 1850)
1850s, Latter-Day Pamphlets (1850), Downing Street (April 1, 1850)
"A Reply to Kenneth Tynan: The Playwright's Role" in The Observer (29 June 1958)
Context: I believe that what separates us all from one another is simply society itself, or, if you like, politics. This is what raises barriers between men, this is what creates misunderstanding.
If I may be allowed to express myself paradoxically, I should say that the truest society, the authentic human community, is extra-social — a wider, deeper society, that which is revealed by our common anxieties, our desires, our secret nostalgias. The whole history of the world has been governed by nostalgias and anxieties, which political action does no more than reflect and interpret, very imperfectly. No society has been able to abolish human sadness, no political system can deliver us from the pain of living, from our fear of death, our thirst for the absolute. It is the human condition that directs the social condition, not vice versa.
“Hypocrisy is a fashionable vice, and all fashionable vices pass for virtue.”
“Virtue itself turns vice, being misapplied,
And vice sometime by action dignified.”
Source: Romeo and Juliet
“There is a war against vice in Lancaster. I am going home to speak for vice.”
Quoted in Speaking for Vice: Homosexuality in the Art of Charles Demuth, Marsden Hartley, and the First American Avant-Garde by Jonathan Weinberg (Yale University Press, 1993).
"Arizona's Pioneer Senator". New York Times (June 1, 1962)
“Prentice: Unnatural vice can ruin a man.
Rance: Ruin follows the accusation not the vice.”
What the Butler Saw (1969), Act II
“We make a ladder of our vices, if we trample those same vices underfoot.”
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Sermons