Malcolm Muggeridge
Malcolm Muggeridge
Thomas Malcolm Muggeridge, was a British journalist, author, media personality, and satirist. As a young man, Muggeridge was a left-wing sympathiser but he later became a forceful anti-communist. During World War II, he worked for the British government as a soldier and a spy. He is credited with bringing Mother Teresa to popular attention in the West and stimulating debate about Catholic theology. In his later years he was outspoken on religious and moral issues. He wrote two volumes of...
NationalityBritish
ProfessionJournalist
Date of Birth24 March 1903
The first thing I remember about the world...is that I was a stranger in it. This feeling, which is at once the glory and desolation of homo sapiens, provides the only thread of consistency that I can detect in my life.
like trying a man's finger for having pulled the trigger of a gun which murdered someone.
There is no such thing as darkness; only a failure to see.
Television was not invented to make human beings vacuous, but is an emanation of their vacuity.
St. Teresa of Avila described our life in this world as like a night at a second-class hotel.
I will lift mine eyes unto the pills. Almost everyone takes them, from the humble aspirin to the multi-colored, king-sized three deckers, which put you to sleep, wake you up, stimulate and soothe you all in one. It is an age of pills.
I have had my television aerials removed. It is the moral equivalent of a prostate operation.
A decrepit society shuns humor as a decrepit individual shuns drafts.
Humor is practically the only thing about which the English are utterly serious.
The great advantage of the sort of education I had was precisely that it made practically no mark upon those subjected to it.
Surely the glory of journalism is its transience.
The "pursuit of happiness" is responsible for a good part of the ills and miseries of the modern world.
Secrecy is as essential to intelligence as vestments and incense to a Mass or darkness to a spiritualist séance and must at all times be maintained, quite irrespective of whether or not it serves any purpose.
The English have this extraordianry respect for longevity. The best example of this was Queen Victoria, a most unpleasant woman who achieved a sort of public affection simply by living to be an enormous age.