Iââ
âHeâs just kidding,â said Albertine. âHeâs a card-carrying member of the Heartsick American Humoristsâ Association.â
âOh,â the man said, with a slackness in his tone that said, simply but unmistakably, that however highly the rest of the world might esteem such status, he was unimpressed. âWell, the term egotist seems to have been coined by Joseph Addison, the essayist, to identify what he considered to be an annoying rhetorical style characterized by the too-frequent use of the first-person singular pronoun.â
âAye-yi-yi,â I said.
âI always tell myself to use the t to remind myself of the difference between egoist and egotist, â the woman informed us. âSomeone told me to do that long agoâbut for the life of me I canât remember who it was.â
âIt was I, my dear,â said the man.
âWas it? I donât think it was.â
âI assure you that it was.â
âRegardless of who it was who told me to do soâand I doubt very much that it was youâI remind myself that the t stands for talking. â
âI think youâre getting ahead of yourself, dear,â said her companion, with the appearance of good humor. âI think weâve got to begin with a couple of definitions.â
âDo you,â she said icily.
âYes, I do,â he snapped. Then, to us, or perhaps to the room at large, he announced, âAn egoist is a person who is guided by the principle of âme first.ââ
âI find that it applies in every circumstance, at every turn, whenever a choice must be made,â the woman added.
âThat was implied in my definition,â her companion asserted.
âI had no way of knowing that,â she asserted right back at him. To us she said, âI feel that I must point out that the principle of âme firstâ is not quite the same as âme only.ââ
âOf course not,â the man said with a sneer. ââMe onlyâ is the solipsistâs principle. For the solipsist, the notion of âme firstâ is utterly superfluous.â
âWhen you talk, all I hear is blah, blah, blah,â she said.
âI wonder where the fault lies,â he growled.
âWhatâs your other definition?â asked Albertine with the subtlety of a diplomatist. âThe definition of egotist? â
âAn egotist is someone who is always talking about himself,â said the woman.
âOr herself,â the man suggested.
âI always remember the t, â the woman said, almost wistfully, as if she were recalling a particularly poignant moment when she had used the t to remind herself of the difference between the words, sometime in the past, in other circumstances, in other company.
âI think a person can be an egoist and not realize it, donât you?â asked Albertine, intending a kindness, I think, drawing the woman back into our foursome. âThereâs a kind of egoism that is unthinking or passive.â
âYes,â I said, doing my bit. âThereâs a kind of egoist who doesnât even consider other people and their needs, feelings, and desires.â
âIn fact,â said Albertine, âI think that that kind of neglectful egoism is the most widespread, and the people who practice it are the egoists who are least likely to recognize their egoism.â
âCould be,â admitted the man. âOr else theyâre dissembling; they arenât quite assertive enough to put themselves first, but they are egoistical enough to be blind to the needs and rights of othersâor deliberately to blind themselves to those needs and rights.â
I began to wish that they would go away. Iâd had enough of them. I wanted to be alone with Albertine. We two. Just we two. We two against the world, the whole yammering, battering, self-centered world.
âBut if
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