“It’s the result of Board
School Education—”
“It’s the popular Press—"
“It’s the selfishness of
the Working Classes—”
Or, the selfishness
of the Wealthy Classes. The Elites. The Kids Today. All of those are popular.
Take your pick.
“It’s the Cinema—"
“It's the Jews—”
That one has come surging
back of late. An oldie but a goodie.
“Paid Agitators!—” [a
variation on “Outside Agitators,” once an explanation for the Civil Rights
Movement]
“The decay of Faith—”
'The disintegration of
Family Life—'
“’I put it down,’ I said, ‘to
Sun-Spots. If you want to know,’ I went inexorably on, ‘if you ask me the cause
of all this modern Unrest—’”
The quoted material is, in toto, a brief entry, “At the Club,” in Logan Pearsall Smith’s More Trivia (1921).
Even a century ago there were things to complain about and solve with easily
digested explanations. Smith (1865-1946) is best-known for writing: “People say that life
is the thing, but I prefer reading.” Wise words. He also wrote: “What’s more
enchanting than the voices of young people, when you can’t hear what they say?”
Minor writers are a major blessing.
[Smith’s four trivial collections
are published in one volume, All Trivia (1933).]
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