Pity


Pity is a sympathetic sorrow evoked by the suffering of others, and is used in a comparable sense to compassion, condolence or empathy - the word deriving from the Latin pietās. Self-pity is pity directed towards oneself.
Two different kinds of pity can be distinguished, "benevolent pity" and "contemptuous pity", where, through insincere, pejorative usage, pity is used to connote feelings of superiority, condescension, or contempt.

Psychological origins

Psychologists see pity arising in early childhood out of the infant's ability to identify with others.
Psychoanalysis sees a more convoluted route to adult pity by way of the sublimation of aggression – pity serving as a kind of magic gesture intended to show how leniently one should oneself be treated by one's own conscience.
'', in which he proclaims "Pity would be no more, / If we did not make somebody Poor". This version is copy L created in 1795 and currently held by the Yale Center for British Art.

Religious views