Edith Wharton Quote

Don’t they say, she asked, feeling her way as in a kind of tender apprehensiveness, that the early Christians, instead of pulling down the heathen temples — the temples of the unclean gods — purified them by turning them to their own uses? I’ve always thought one might do that with one’s actions — the actions one loathes but can’t undo. One can make, I mean, a wrong the door to other wrongs or an impassable wall against them.... Her voice wavered on the word. We can’t always tear down the temples we’ve built to the unclean gods, but we can put good spirits in the house of evil — the spirits of mercy and shame and understanding, that might never have come to us if we hadn’t been in such great need....

Edith Wharton

Don’t they say, she asked, feeling her way as in a kind of tender apprehensiveness, that the early Christians, instead of pulling down the heathen temples — the temples of the unclean gods — purified them by turning them to their own uses? I’ve always thought one might do that with one’s actions — the actions one loathes but can’t undo. One can make, I mean, a wrong the door to other wrongs or an impassable wall against them.... Her voice wavered on the word. We can’t always tear down the temples we’ve built to the unclean gods, but we can put good spirits in the house of evil — the spirits of mercy and shame and understanding, that might never have come to us if we hadn’t been in such great need....

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About Edith Wharton

Edith Newbold Wharton (; née Jones; January 24, 1862 – August 11, 1937) was an American writer and designer. Wharton drew upon her insider's knowledge of the upper-class New York "aristocracy" to portray, realistically, the lives and morals of the Gilded Age. In 1921, she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for her novel The Age of Innocence. She was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1996. Her other well-known works are The House of Mirth, the novella Ethan Frome, and several notable ghost stories.