Pruning the Paragraphs
Here is a paragraph I had to prune from an essay I’m finishing up but that I think still has some worthwhile comparisons:
One also wonders whether some reactions spawned by Jussie Smollett’s alleged attack, qualify for “religiofication,†which is what American philosopher and longshoreman Eric Hoffer once defined as “the art of turning practical purposes into holy causes.â€* If Smollett staged such an attack, he would be not unlike the innkeeper at the beginning of the Quixote (I, iii). For the innkeeper is someone who, being something of a knight in his younger days, is willing to placate his meddlesome guest Alonso Quijano. Quijano went mad by reading too many books of chivalry, and now wishes to be ordained into knighthood under the name Don Quixote. The innkeeper believes that by pretending (or acting) to be a knight, and going through the motions of ordination, he will send this madman on his way, and away from the inn where he causes mischief. In doing so, the innkeeper almost plays Don Quixote’s game-of-pretend better than the Don himself, for the innkeeper has inverted Hoffer’s formula and turned the Don’s holy cause into a practical purpose.
*Eric Hoffer, The True Believer: Thoughts on the Nature of Mass Movements (1951), (New York: Harper & Row, 1966) § 1, p. 15.
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