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Authors: Colin Wilson

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In a way, this was a good thing. Ever since I was twelve, I had been preoccupied with the question of the meaning of human existence, and whether all human values are not pure self-delusion. (No doubt this feeling was intensified by my dislike of the vague, brainless, cowlike drifting of the people around me.) My main interest was in science—particularly atomic physics—so that I was obsessed by the idea that there must be a scientific method for investigating this question of human existence. At fourteen, I discovered Shaw

s
Man and Superman,
and realized, with a shock, that I was not the first
human being to ask the question. After that, I discovered Eliot

s
Waste Land,
Goethe

s
Faust
and Dostoevsky

s
Devils
in quick succession, and began to feel that I was acquiring the basic data for attacking the problem. Since no school or university in England provides courses in this problem, it is probably as well that I set out to work on my own at sixteen.

For the next eight years I worked in various jobs—mostly unskilled labor—and continued to accumulate data. I also did a good deal of writing—I kept a voluminous journal, which was several million words long by the time I was twenty-four. It was an extremely hard and discouraging business, for I knew no one whose interests overlapped with mine. I married when I was nineteen, and a wife and child added to the problems. But at least it meant that I got used to working completely and totally alone, and not expecting encouragement. Later on, reviewers and critics were outraged by what one of them called

his stupefying assurance about his own genius.

But it would have been impossible to
go
on working without some conviction of genius—at least, of certainty about the importance of what I was doing, and the belief that it wouldn

t matter if no other human being ever came to share this certainty. The feeling of alienation had to be totally accepted. Luckily, I

ve always had a fairly cheerful temperament, not much given to self-pity. So I went on working, reading and writing in my total vacuum, without contact with any other writer or thinker. I finally came to accept that I might spend all my life working in factories, and that my writing might never see print. It was hard to swallow, but I swallowed it, feeling that if Blake and
Nietzsche
could do without recognition, so could I.

Then a publisher to whom I sent the first few pages of
The Outsider
accepted it. And when I was nearly twenty-five, there came that shattering morning when I woke up and found press men banging at the door and television and radio demanding interviews. It was such a total change that it was like a bang on the head.
The Outsider
shot to the top of the nonfiction best-seller list in England and America, and was translated into fourteen languages within eighteen months. It so happened that a number of young writers made their appearance at this time, including John Osborne, John Braine, and my friend Bill Hopkins. The press labeled us

Angry Young Men.

In my case, nothing could hav
e been more grotesquely inappro
priate. I was aggressively nonpolitical. I believed that people who make a fuss about politics do so because their heads are too empty to think about more important things. So I felt nothing but impatient contempt for Osborne

s Jimmy Porter and the rest of the heroes of social protest.

The tide turned very quickly. It was the highbrow press that made us successful. England has a large number of critics who delight in nothing so much as the discovery of new artistic talent. But they tend to turn very peevish if their enthusiasms are taken out of their hands and accepted by the popular press. This is what happened with the Angry Young Men. But my case was extreme. I had nothing in common with the others anyway. Osborne and Braine had a streak of self-pity that appealed to these highbrow critics, most of whom believed that the accident of a public-school education had destroyed their creativity and ruined their lives. Besides, I had written a book of ideas, and every critic in England felt that my success was monstrously unfair, in that it really belonged to himself— for a critic is, after all, a professional man of ideas.

The experience was vertiginous. After a month of the noisiest and gaudiest kind of success, in which popular reviewers compared me to Plato, Shelley, Shaw and D. H. Lawrence, the merry-go-round came suddenly to a halt, and then began to revolve in the opposite direction. My name became a kind of dirty word to serious critics, and the ones who had

discovered


me winced when they remembered their praises. Every Christmas in England, the

posh

Sunday papers run a feature in which eminent men and women are asked their opinion of the best books of the year. Not one mentioned
The Outsider,
except Arthur Koestler, who went out of his way to refer to it as the

bubble of the year,


in which a young man discovers that men of genius suffer from
Weltschmerz.

If
The Outsider
was an unprecedented success, my next book,
Religion and the Rebel,
was an unprecedented failure. The highbrow critics seized the opportunity to go back on their praise of
The Outsider.
And the popular press joined in like a gang of Indians invited to a massacre.
Time,
with its usual awe-inspiring vulgarity, ran a kind of obituary on me headed

Scrambled Egghead.

It was then I was grateful for my ten years

training in standing on my own feet. I had disliked the success of
The Outsider.

I don t much like people anyway, so the endless succession of parties and receptions, and the hordes of new acquaintances, left me with a strong feeling of

people poisoning/

Six months after
The Outsider
came out, I moved as far away from London as I could get, to a cottage in Cornwall. There I plunged into the world of religious mysticism—of Eckhart and Boehme, Pascal and Swedenborg—of which I wrote in
Religion and the Rebel
Success or failure didn

t matter all that much, provided one had enough money to live.
The Outsider
made me less money than might be expected—taxes took a lot of it, and I spent the rest pretty quickly—but I lived frugally anyway. The sheer malice of some of the attacks on me was difficult to swallow. But I felt I held a final card—my long practice in working alone, which probably meant that I could go on writing longer than my critics could go on sneering. The prospect of continuing the battle until I was ninety gave me a certain grim satisfaction. When my second book was hatchetted, I shrugged and went on working. The attacks didn

t worry me too much. I know enough of success to know that it is meaningless unless it is based on real understanding. I recognized that such understanding would probably take twenty years to grow. I was right. After ten years, it seems to be developing in countries where I would have least expected it—Japan, India, France, Spain, Arabia (the Arabs have translated seven of my books in the past year). Even in America. It may happen in England if I can live to be ninety or so.

In the past ten years, I have written 21 books, eight of them novels, and seven in my

Outsider series.

In this time, I had developed the ideas of
The Outsider
to create a philosophy that I sometimes refer to as

the new existentialism.

(I prefer to call it

phenomenological existentialism,

but the word worries most people.) While I felt that I had stumbled upon a particularly fruitful and exciting line of investigation, I was not certain of the general importance of these ideas—being naturally modest and lacking in self-assurance—until I came to America to lecture in 1961, and again in 1966. Their reception by audiences of American students all over the country convinced me that I had not been too conceited in suspecting that they constituted a kind of revolution in philosophy.

For anyone who is interested in following them up in detail, I recommend the six volumes of the Outsider series:
The
Outsider, Religion and the Rebel, The Stature of Man, The Strength to Dream, Origins of the Sexual Impulse
and
Beyond the Outsider.
For readers who would prefer a clear and fairly short summary, I suggest my
Introduction to the New Existentialism—perhaps
the best introduction to my ideas. For readers who haven

t time for any of these, I

ll attempt to sketch them in the remainder of this postscript.

The basic problem of

The Outsider

is his instinctive rejection of the everyday world, a feeling that it is somehow boring and unsatisfying, like a hypnotized man eating sawdust under the belief that it is eggs and bacon.

All major poets and philosophers have had this feeling as their starting point, the feeling, expressed by Axel, that living itself is a trivial and repetitive task, fit only for servants. This led many philosophers to reject the

real world

—Plato is an example—and to believe that there is somehow another world —of ideas, of the spirit, which is the true

home

of the poet. This is the feeling behind Keats


Ode to the Nightingale

as well as Wagner

s
Tristan.

In the nineteenth century, this kind of world-rejection came to a head in poets who called themselves

romantics.

Most of them believed that the poet was never intended for

this world,

dreary and heartbreaking as it is. And yet he has certain moments when he feels curiously immortal, god-like, as if hovering above the world, untouched by its dullness. Is this feeling an illusion, like an opium dream? The romantics were obviously inclined to believe so, for large numbers of them committed suicide or died of tuberculosis.

In the twentieth century, romanticism revived under another name. It called itself

existentialism.

But its basic question was still the same. Which of the two worlds is real: that world of supreme, godlike detachment and power, or the world in which we feel victimized, helpless,

contingent

? Which is true: man

s experience of his freedom, or of slavery to his body and the world?

Existentialism was not quite so pessimistic as romanticism. Its position tended to be stoical. It is summed up in that phrase of Hemingway from
The Old Man and the Sea—

A
man can be destroyed but not defeated.

Not very hopeful, yet asserting the

eternal spirit of the chainless mind

all the same.

I could not accept either the death-worship of the romantics,
nor the stoical defeat of the existentialists. For various temperamental reasons—partly because I am an Englishman—I do not share the tendency to gloom and defeat that pervades so much modern literature. I felt that I had no intention of being either defeated or destroyed. On the other hand, neither have I any sympathy for that lazy and intellectually timid school of English philosophers, led by Professor Ayer, who assert that the whole problem is meaningless, and we had better accept our pathetic little limitations. The problem ought to be solvable
in its own terms,
not by turning away and pretending it doesn

t exist.

It seemed to me that a solution must be found. Here, my natural optimism was to my advantage. For when I read Sartre or Camus or Graham Greene, I experienced a
temperamental
rejection of their pessimism. I suspected that their ultimate picture might be distorted by a certain self-pity or lack of discipline—or, in the case of Greene, by a certain congenital lack of vitality. I suspected that if the problem left them defeated, it was because they had not attacked it hard enough.

I saw, even at this early stage, that it was a problem of
consciousness.
For what it amounts to, after all, is whether these strange moments of
freedom
can be recalled at will. The romantics were gloomily inclined to believe that they were some form of

grace

—or perhaps even something to do with the chemistry of the body or brain, so that the

glory and the freshness of a dream

vanish inevitably as one grows past childhood.

And here I made my first important observation—the one that has been the foundation stone of all my subsequent thinking. I called it

the St Neot margin.

It is the recognition that man

s moments of freedom tend to come under crisis or challenge, and that when things are going well, he tends to allow his grip on life to slacken. Auden wrote:

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