Dr.
Johnson called it “a stubborn weed of the mind.” Envy is fertile and tough,
like crabgrass, and here’s the rest of Johnson’s sentence: “and [it] seldom
yields to the culture of philosophy.” In other words, self-administered moral
rehabilitation (good intentions) among the envious is unlikely to prove
successful. It’s a security blanket of an emotion (or sin), reassuring us of our
virtue and the world’s unfairness. We are the deserving ones, the scorned and
misunderstood. Those possessing what we have been unfairly denied are selfish
and rapacious. Johnson puts it nicely: “Envy is mere unmixed and genuine evil;
it pursues a hateful end by despicable means, and desires not so much its own
happiness as another’s misery.” The recently fashionable obsession with “equality”
is nothing more than the latest eruption of envy, the unacknowledged driver of
our politics.
When
Ian Fleming was a member of the editorial board at the Sunday Times, he suggested that eminent writers be asked to choose a
favorite among the Seven Deadly Sins and anatomize it in an essay. Collected in
a small volume by William Morrow and Co., they were published in 1962 as The Seven Deadly Sins. Don’t miss Evelyn
Waugh on Sloth, but here is some of what Angus Wilson has to say about Envy and
what distinguishes it from the other Six:
“All
the seven deadly sins are self-destroying, morbid appetites, but in their early
stages at least, lust and gluttony, avarice and sloth know some gratification,
while anger and pride have power, even though that power eventually destroys
itself. Envy is impotent, numbed with fear, never ceasing in its appetite, and
it knows no gratification, but endless self-torment. It has the ugliness of a
trapped rat, which gnaws its own foot in an effort to escape.”
If
self-torment were the only cost, envy wouldn’t be so perniciously corrosive.
But remember Johnson’s caveat: envy “desires not so much its own happiness as
another’s misery.” The envious are generous with their misery. In The Passionate State of Mind, and Other
Aphorisms (1955), Eric Hoffer understood the link between envy and the
delusory quest for equality:
“We
clamor for equality chiefly in matters in which we ourselves cannot hope to
attain excellence. To discover what a man truly craves but knows he cannot have
we must find the field in which he advocates absolute equality. By this test
the Communists are frustrated Capitalists.”
From "Billy Budd":
ReplyDelete"... Now envy and antipathy, passions irreconcilable in reason, nevertheless in fact may spring conjoined like Chang and Eng in one birth. Is Envy then such a monster? Well, though many an arraigned mortal has in hopes of mitigated penalty pleaded guilty to horrible actions, did ever anybody seriously confess to envy? Something there is in it universally felt to be more shameful than even felonious crime."