The Importance of Doing Things Badly
Understand these new words before you read this article.
1. enhance[in'hɑ:ns]v. 提高, 增加, 加強
2. fallacy['f?l?si:]n. 謬誤; 謬見; 謬論
3. proverbial[pr?'v?:bi?l]adj. 諺語的, 聞名的, 諺語式的
4. legitimate[li'd?itimit]adj. 合法的, 婚生的, 正當的
5. contemptible[k?n'tempt?b?l]adj.可鄙的
6. prevalence['prev?l?nt]n. 流行, 盛行; 流行程度; 普遍, 廣泛
7.vainglorious[ve?n?gl?:ri:?s]adj. 虛榮的
8. inferior[in'fi?ri?]adj. 下等的; 差的; 下級的
9. disposition[,disp?'zi??n]n. 性情, 處理, 處置
10. hesitation[,hez?'te???n]n. 躊躇, 猶豫; 口吃; 含糊
I. A. Williams was born in England and educated at Cambridge. After World War I he served as a correspondent for the London Times. Williams wrote several books on eighteenth-century poetry and drama, published widely in journals and magazines, and published collections of his own poetry. The following article first appeared in London’s The Outlook in 1923.
Perhaps the greatest threat to productivity in both work and play is the fear of doing things badly or wrong. This article offers some comfort. Williams points out that there are many things worth doing badly, and that our lives are enriched and our personalities enhanced by these activities. Two central examples, sports and music, are valuable to most people in proportion to how enthusiastically they do them, rather than how well.
Charles Lamb wrote a series of essays upon popular fallacies. I do not, at the moment, carry them very clearly in my memory; but, unless that treacherous servant misleads me more even than she usually does, he did not write of one piece of proverbial so-called wisdom that has always seemed to me to be peculiarly pernicious. And this saw, this scrap of specious advice, this untruth masquerading as logic, is one that I remember to have had hurled at my head at frequent intervals from my earliest youth right up to my present advanced age. How many times have I not been told that “If a thing is worth doing at all, it is worth doing well”?