Friday 13 November 2009

In My Solitude

I knew this always, and yet, I have either forgotten, become stupid, or been blinded by tricks. Perhaps all three. The following passage from Aldous Huxley’s “After Many a Summer” says it all:

“…From solitude in the Womb, we emerge into solitude within the Grave. We pass our lives in the attempt to mitigate
that solitude. But Propinquity is never fusion. The most populous City is but an agglomeration of wildernesses. We exchange Words, but exchange them from prison to prison, and without hope that they will signify to others what they mean to ourselves. We marry, and there are two solitudes in the house instead of one; we beget children, and there are many solitudes. We reiterate the act of love; but again propinquity is never fusion. The most intimate contact is only of Surfaces…Pleasure cannot be shared; like Pain, it can only be experienced or inflicted, and when we give Pleasure to our Lovers or bestow Charity upon the Needy, we do so, not to gratify the object of our Benevolence, but only ourselves. For the Truth is that we are kind for the same reason as we are cruel, in order that we may enhance the sense of our own Power and this we are for ever trying to do, despite the act that by doing it we cause ourselves to feel more solitary than ever. The reality of Solitude is the same in all men, there being no mitigation of it, except in Forgetfulness, Stupidity, or Illusion; but a man’s sense of Solitude is proportionate to the sense and fact of his Power. In any set of circumstances, the more Power we have, the more intensely do we feel our solitude…”

And still we continue to operate, without the slightest allusion to the above.

6 comments:

Lavander said...

Thank you so much for sharing this! From my solitude I deeply agree.

Marmaduke Dando Hutchings said...

You're welcome. Huxley is my mentor

fernando diez said...

Excellent thought, thanks for sharing. Keep'em coming!

Trofim said...

Hello Marmaduke. Interesting to see your quotes from Huxley. I've always wanted to like Aldous Huxley's novels, but somehow, I've not been able to get into them somehow, apart from BNW. I've
one or two in my bookshelves - Crome Yellow, and another, because I love the
printing, the homely thirties look, the typeface, the cover. They're the sort of book I like to have around me, but somehow I can't take to them. Seeing those quotes, I'd like to try again. Which would you recommend? And another thing - I came to your site from Dark
Mountain. Now, I imagine denizens of that site to be somehow old hippies, living in teepees in mid-Wales. how come so many alternative people live down in London?

Marmaduke Dando Hutchings said...

Dear Tendryakov,

Nice to know someone reads these things I post!

Huxley's early novels are generally set in England, about the ridiculousness of the social elite. The latter have a more american edge to them, him having moved to California.

Hard to really recommend one, but for sheer breadth of wisdom I would say Point Counter Point. For a lighter read, Chrome Yellow, which is a rather sweet novel with just a hint of the subjects he expands on in later novels. Antic Hay is possibly my favourite though, for size, wit, and despair.

London, full of alternative types? Heaving with them, wouldn't like to say why though.

Leeroy said...

Marmaduke,
It might interest you to know that I have been working recently at the house in Oxfordshire that is the house featured in Chrome Yellow - it's really very beautiful there. It's owned by Lady Amanda Feilding, whose Grandparents were very close with Huxley. Amanda runs something called the Beckley Foundation (www.beckleyfoundation.org) from the estate - that's what I have been working with her on. Still up for that beer in Stokie sometime? Perhaps pre Christmas...