Entry tags:
Misers
Whatever happened to the misers?
Back in the 18th and 19th centuries people loved their misers. There was a whole literature about them. They were mean, they stank, they hid guineas in dung-heaps, they made pies out of long dead sheep. Mr Boffin in Our Mutual Friend is an avid collector and consumer of miser-porn. Daniel Dancer, John Elwes, Vulture Hopkins- these guys were famous.
There were famous fictional misers too- Scrooge, Silas Marner, Uncle Ebenezer Balfour.
But then along came the 20th century and misers- both real and fictional- dropped out of sight.
So why don't we have them any more?
Back in the 18th and 19th centuries people loved their misers. There was a whole literature about them. They were mean, they stank, they hid guineas in dung-heaps, they made pies out of long dead sheep. Mr Boffin in Our Mutual Friend is an avid collector and consumer of miser-porn. Daniel Dancer, John Elwes, Vulture Hopkins- these guys were famous.
There were famous fictional misers too- Scrooge, Silas Marner, Uncle Ebenezer Balfour.
But then along came the 20th century and misers- both real and fictional- dropped out of sight.
So why don't we have them any more?
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Did you bring in a green tree to have a sort-of decoration?
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I think miserliness is in part an extreme reaction to the fear of falling into poverty and having no safety net.
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Mind you, the true miser is also a misanthrope who doesn't care what other people think of him or her.
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The real, old-time misers couldn't help themselves; it was a form of mental illness. The strange thing is it seems to be a form of mental illness that has died out- or has it?
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Perhaps the actual mental illness kind has reduced; it's been a long time since the "Western world" has faced a time of serious deprivation, and it makes sense that that would have been a strong trigger for that kind of problem.
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I think you're right about deprivation.
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When I get all frugal (soup for three-days-running, or re-using old teabags), Kate accuses me of having a "ha-penny newspaper" mentality...
Scrooge is my favorite miser. I love his cold room, his meager fire...how delightfully gloomy!
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I've always thought Scrooge's lifestyle had a lot to recommend it. "Bah, humbug!"
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My favorite part of the book is the scene when Scrooge walks home through the foggy cold streets and then into his gloomy apartments.
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Is he the first chain-rattler?
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miser mike
I went out to eat maybe once a week, and one movie too, with Yuka, and we ALWAYS went Dutch. I hardly ever drank, and I never had desserts or snacked. I NEVER turned the air conditioner in my apartment on. In fact it was broken, and I was quite happy about that, because it meant I would never use it. Instead I lined my windows with cardboard boxes (seriously!) to insulate them in the winter, and huddled under like 5 blankets (from school- I wouldn`t buy them!) whenever I was at home. In the summer, I slept with all windows open.
We took one holiday all year, and it was this fantastically cheap 5 day package deal to Saipan, the poor man`s Guam. It was great still.
I never bought new clothes. Buying a winter jacket for me almost had both me and Yuka in tears cos she thought I needed one and I thought I`d rather just be cold.
I never bought a bicycle and walked whenever I could to skip the few hundred yen a train might cost me.
I never bought a computer or a heater or CD`s or DVD`s or a TV or a DVD player or an i-pod or a plate or a pan or anything at all...
I was a total miser. And. It felt really good ;)
Re: miser mike
I panic about our finances and decide I'm never, not ever, going to spend any more money.
I think miserliness is triggered by insecurity. That would fit with your situation that first year in Japan.
Re: miser mike
If I eat 3 meals a day, I never really (not REALLY) get hungry, and I never REALLY get full. I'm eating 3 meals a day not because I WANT to but because people say you should. And you can't get full (to bursting) 3 times a day, without getting enormously fat. So I eat 1 massive meal a day, for which I have to wait the whole day, get enormously full, and it sees me through til afternoon/evening the next day.
Miserliness is more like that for me than like insecurity, I think.
Re: miser mike
And the money he saves gets squirreled away in dungheaps, under floorboards and up chimneys.
Re: miser mike
money i save- that goes in the bank. i don't have a dungheap! your scroogian miser seems like he trusts nobody at all. well, you know what they say. miserliness is next to miserableness!