I Always Advise People Never To Give Advice

P. G. Wodehouse? George Bernard Shaw? Smallwood Bessemer? Bob Chieger? Anonymous?

Question for Quote Investigator: A famous wit once offered the following piece of self-contradictory advice: Never take advice. Another prominent humorist offered a similar piece of oxymoronic guidance: Never give advice. Would you please help me to find these citations together with the correct phrasings?

Reply from Quote Investigator: In 1894 critic and playwright George Bernard Shaw sent a letter of instruction to the neophyte critic Reginald Golding Bright. Boldface added to excerpts by QI:[ref] 1963 (1955 Copyright), Advice to a Young Critic and Other Letters by Bernard Shaw, Notes and Introduction by E. J. West (Edward Joseph West), Letter Title: A Lesson in Practical Criticism: Shaw Edits a Bright Review, Letter From: George Bernard Shaw, Letter To: Reginald Golding Bright, Letter Date: Dec. 2, 1894, Start Date 12, Quote Page 14, Capricorn Books, New York. (Verified with scans) [/ref]

Write a thousand words a day for the next five years for at least nine months every year. Read all the great critics—Ruskin, Richard Wagner, Lessing, Lamb and Hazlitt. Get a ticket for the British Museum reading room, and live there as much as you can. Go to all the first rate orchestral concerts and to the opera, as well as to the theatres.

Shaw provided a long series of additional recommendations, but he finished by comically flipping the entire discourse:

Finally, since I have given you all this advice, I add this crowning precept, the most valuable of all. NEVER TAKE ANYBODY’S ADVICE.

Below are additional selected citations.

In 1950 popular English author P. G. Wodehouse published a collection of short stories titled “Nothing Serious” which included the tale “Tangled Hearts”. The narrator was the recurring character Oldest Member who belonged to a golf club with an ever changing name. The main character was Smallwood Bessemer, a newspaper columnist who was overly zealous when dispensing advice. The self-contradictory moral of the tale was pronounced by the Oldest Member during the following dialog:[ref] 1951 (1950 Copyright), Nothing Serious by P. G. Wodehouse, Story: Tangled Hearts, Start Page 143, Quote Page 144, Doubleday & Company, Garden City, New York. (Verified with scans) [/ref]

“Until very recently Smallwood Bessemer was a confirmed adviser.”
“Bad, that.”
“Yes. I always advise people never to give advice. Mind you, one can find excuses for the young fellow. For many years he had been a columnist on one of the morning papers, and to columnists, accustomed day after day to set the world right on every conceivable subject, the giving of advice becomes a habit. It is an occupational risk.”

In 1985 Bob Chieger and Pat Sullivan published the compilation “Inside Golf: Quotations on the Royal and Ancient Game” which included the following entry:[ref] 1986 (1985 Copyright) Inside Golf: Quotations on the Royal and Ancient Game, Compiled by Bob Chieger and Pat Sullivan, Section 25: Philosophy and Advice, Quote Page 142, Atheneum, New York. (Verified with scans) [/ref]

The Oldest Member: I always advise people never to give advice.
P. G. Wodehouse
“Tangled Hearts,” 1948

Interestingly, the year specified above was inaccurate. P. G. Wodehouse did publish a tale titled “I’ll Give You Some Advice” in the September 1948 issue of “Cosmopolitan”. This story was rewritten and published in 1950 as “Tangled Hearts” which contained the quotation under examination; however, the original 1948 version of the tale did not contain the character Oldest Member, and it did not contain the quotation.[ref] 1948 September, Cosmopolitan, I’ll Give You Some Advice by P. G. Wodehouse, Start Page 54, End Page 77, (Quotation is absent), Hearst’s Magazines, New York. (Verified with scans) [/ref]

In 1985 “A Teacher’s Treasury of Quotations” compiled by Bernard E. Farber included this entry:[ref] 1985, A Teacher’s Treasury of Quotations, Compiled by Bernard E. Farber, Section: Advice, Quote Page 10, McFarland & Company, Inc., Jefferson, North Carolina. (Verified on paper)[/ref]

Since I have given you all this advice, I add this crowning precept, the most valuable of all: NEVER TAKE ANYONE’S ADVICE.
—George Bernard Shaw,
Advice to a Young Critic, 13 (1956)

The year above referred to the publication date of the collection containing George Bernard Shaw’s 1894 letter.

In 2004 “Oxymoronica: Paradoxical Wit and Wisdom from History’s Greatest Wordsmiths” compiled by Mardy Grothe contained this entry:[ref] 2004, Oxymoronica: Paradoxical Wit and Wisdom from History’s Greatest Wordsmiths, Compiled by Mardy Grothe, Chapter 10: Oxymoronic Advice, Quote Page 156, Publisher HarperCollins Publishers, New York. (Verified on paper) [/ref]

I always advise people never to give advice.
P. G. WODEHOUSE

In conclusion, George Bernard Shaw wrote “NEVER TAKE ANYBODY’S ADVICE” in a letter dated 1894. A character in a 1950 story by P. G. Wodehouse said “I always advise people never to give advice”. Similar statements have been employed by others.

Image Notes: Illustration depicting green three-way fork in a path from Peggy_Marco at Pixabay.

(Great thanks to Mardy Grothe whose newsletter of October 9, 2022 led QI to formulate this question and perform this exploration. The newsletter mentioned the entertaining P. G. Wodehouse quotation, and the website provided a 1983 citation.)

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