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G. K. Chesterton: A Prophet for the 21st Century PDF

44 Pages·2009·0.82 MB·English
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Distributed exclusively by IHS Press. ISBN-10 (Ebook): 1-932528-54-7 ISBN-13 (Ebook): 978-1-932528-54-1 Introduction In the last few years we have seen several new introductions to G.K. Chesterton, and if God is good to us, we will continue to see more. This has happened for two reasons. First, since Chester- ton was neglected and forgotten by an entire generation, it has been necessary to re-introduce him to a new generation. Second, one in- troduction is not enough. Every introduction is going to leave some- thing out. Chesterton is too big. And it is because he is so big that he needs an introduction. His enormous literary output is intimidating. No one knows where to begin reading him. The more introductions the better. The more doorways to Chesterton, the more inviting it will be for readers to rush to the original texts. Ironically, Chesterton has been a victim of one of his own paradoxes. He said that anything can be ignored as long as it is big enough. It has been easy—and some would argue, necessary—to ignore the writings of Gilbert Keith Chesterton because they are too cumbersome to categorize. He is one of the few writers who fully deserves an entire section to himself at the bookstore. I know of at least two bookstores that have made the wise decision to do just that. In the meantime, the rest of the reading public, along with the rest of the world, wanders in darkness. Chesterton is discovered by them only by accident since the official institutions, whose supposed function it is is to pass the wisdom of one generation to the next, have actively failed to teach Chesterton. But when bumbling souls such as myself somehow manage to discover this astonishing writer, whether by an off-hand recommendation, or by stumbling across a quotation, or by dizzily following an unexpected path, something remarkable happens. They find, as I did, that they suddenly can’t get enough of him. They recognize the truth of his insights about every- thing, from fancies to facts, from aesthetics to economics, from the criminal mind to the Catholic faith. He dazzles with his wordplay, he dances on a tightrope, he satisfies with his conclusions. And yet they want more. More. Fortunately for those of us who cannot get enough Chest- erton, he provided what seems to be a bottomless well of words. But it is safe to say that we would not have the privilege of drinking deeply from that well were it not for the efforts of one man in par- ticular. During those decades of neglect, as Chesterton slowly faded from the curriculum and from the libraries and from the books in print, there was one man labouring, seemingly all alone, to preserve Chesterton’s legacy. He was tracking down not only the scattered journalism and obscure publications containing Chesterton material, but supplementary sources as well. He served as an endless resource of information for the occasional student and scholar from the far corners of the earth who wanted to come to England and study Ches- terton. And he even picked up the fallen pen from Chesterton’s hand and fought the very same battles Chesterton fought for social justice, for self-government and self-sufficiency, for the rights of families, for the hidden fountains of the home, and for the sacred foundations of the Faith. It was this good and gentle knight, Aidan Mackey, a veteran of the RAF, a schoolmaster, a bookseller, and a father of seven daughters, who was the torchbearer for Chesterton in the dark ages of the 1960’s and 70’s, when the mindless fashions that Chest- erton warned about swept nearly the entire world into a confused mess of materialism and relativism. The world owes Chesterton a debt of thanks. It owes a similar debt to Aidan Mackey. One of Aidan’s greatest services to Chesterton scholarship is to correct misinformation and misunderstandings that have arisen as the result of bad biographies, repeated rumours, and ugly insinu- ations. In addition to having the facts at hand, Aidan knew people who knew G.K. Chesterton, who knew first hand that what has been written about Chesterton has often been unreliable. People are always trying to dig up dirt on Chesterton. But to Aidan has fallen the thankless task of disappointing these thrill- seekers. He once said to me, “Chesterton failed in his duty to Fleet Street by not being a philanderer.” He was not any of the things that certain naysayers would wish him to be. He was not a Socialist. He was not a careless clown. And he was not an anti-Semite. He has been accused of all of these things, because the simple labels are  convenient ways to continue to ignore him. His potent arguments in defence of Distributism can be ignored if he is a Socialist, because that would explain away his criticisms of Capitalism. His reasoned arguments in defence of tradition and marriage and babies and beau- ty can all be ignored if Chesterton is simply a careless clown who is neither accurate with facts nor serious with his suggestions. And his dynamic arguments in defence of the Catholic faith can be ig- nored if Chesterton is anti-Semitic because that would leave him with no credibility whatsoever in today’s public arena. These simple one-word lies to dismiss Chesterton have been tossed about so that Chesterton will continue to be ignored by another generation. But the shocking truth about him is being uncovered after all. Even big things cannot be ignored forever. The shocking truth is that Gilbert Keith Chesterton was a happily married man who was kind and good and deeply faithful to his friends and even to his enemies. He was a deep and prophetic thinker who combined his incredible intellect with joy and laughter. He disarmed his opponents with both his wit and his charity. He needs to be rediscovered because we need to learn from him how to speak the truth in love. The wisdom is nothing without the charity. The charity is barren without the wisdom. Dale Ahlquist President American Chesterton Society  The cover of the first edition of G.K. Chesterton’s first play, Greybeards at Play. The cover was designed by the author himself, and appeared in 1900. G. K. Chesterton q A Biographical Note G.K. Chesterton was born in1874 into the family of the well- known Estate Agents, Chesterton & Company in Kensington, Lon- don. In view of his future role of defender of small family business- es, it seems ironic that the firm is today a very large international affair, which would not at all meet with his approval. The Chesterton household was not, as is often assumed, a religious one. There was some vague attachment to Unitarianism, but church-going was not the norm, although Gilbert was baptised in St George’s Anglican church, in Camden Hill. It was, therefore, natural that when he later began to seek answers to his questions about the meaning of life, he first went not to the churches but to the Ethical and Debating Societies which then abounded. Despite this, he was from the first instinctively religious, and among his childhood drawings, many of which have survived, are two of great interest. One shows a monk, complete with tonsure and Bible, carrying a crucifix aloft as he is pursued by armed men. In the background a figure kneels before another crucifix, seemingly a wayside shrine. The other drawing is of Christ crucified, surrounded by ministering angels. What is striking in both is the depiction of the crucifix, for at that time only Catholics were likely to show Christ on the cross rather than the cross alone. It would seem that very early in life, for both were drawn when he was only seven years old, Chesterton had somehow come into contact with Catholicism, probably at second- hand through his reading. At odds with that attitude is a poem writ-  ten a couple of years later, heavily influenced by Laytoun’s Lays of the Scottish Cavaliers. One verse, retaining the young G.K.C.’s spelling, runs Drive the trembling Papists backwards Drive away the Tory’s hord Let them tell thier hous of villains They have felt the Campbell’s sword. He was, clearly, reading voraciously from the start, and throughout his life retained an astonishingly accurate memory for things he had read many years earlier. His formal education began in 1881 at Colet Court Preparatory School, then in January 1887 he transferred to St. Paul’s which was then, as now, one of our great public schools. It was at that time situated in Hammersmith but is now in Barnes, south of the river Thames. He later enrolled at the Slade School of Art, at University College, London. His first public appearance in print was in 1892 whilst still at school, when The Speaker published his poem, The Song of Labour. In 1900 he published a book of comic verse, Greybeards at Play, and one of serious verse, The Wild Knight, and from that time the flow of his immense output hardly ceased. In 1901, he married Frances, whose French surname, de Blogue, had been anglicised to Blogg, and after several years in Lon- don they made their permanent home in the little Buckinghamshire town of Beaconsfield, near Windsor. The only major sadness in their union was that Frances, despite undergoing an operation, was un- able to bear children, but their love for the young caused them to fill their home and lives with the children of friends, and very many of them have testified to the warmth and joy of their household. In 1914, soon after the outbreak of war, G.K.C. fell desper- ately ill and lay for three months in a coma. In 191 he took over editorship of The New Witness, the weekly journal, founded by his brother Cecil, who was then in the trenches. In 1918, Cecil died in a field hospital, and Gilbert carried on the paper for the rest of his life, reluctantly allowing it to be re-named G.K.’s Weekly. The jour- nal was a great drain on his energies and finances, and many of the  Father Brown detective stories were written to fund it. Some people have deplored this burden, saying that with- out it he could have written many more books, such as the studies he planned of Shakespeare, Napoleon and Savonarola. This seems to me to be a mistaken view, because the paper was central to his thinking and provided a platform from which some of his best work issued. He cared nothing for fame either in his time or in the future. He was a propagandist; an agitator standing in the market-place and reaching out to the ordinary men and women he so unaffectedly loved. To ask him to change course and reign as a purely literary celebrity would amount to asking him not to be Gilbert Keith Chest- erton. In the first years of the twentieth century he moved from his early agnosticism to Christianity and in 19 entered the Roman Catholic Church, but had for years been so close to it that many sup- posed him to be already within its portals. In fact he had described himself as one standing in the church porch, showing others the way in. In the later part of his life, the 1920’s and 1930’s, as well as producing some of his finest and most mature work, he travelled widely and visited Poland, Palestine, Spain, Canada, and twice made lecture tours of the United States. In the 1930’s he made a number of radio broadcasts and was an immediate success. A letter from a B.B.C. official said, “The building rings with your praises! .... you bring something very rare to the microphone.... you will have a vast public by Christmas…” Only a couple of the broadcasts still sur- vive, but they demonstrate his impressive ability to merge profun- dity with wit and entertainment. He died in Beaconsfield in June 1936, and his grave there is marked by a headstone carved by Eric Gill. He loved the town, and its people so loved him that his funeral procession was re-routed by the police so that the crowd could pay him their final respects. To many people it may seem a little odd that a writer who thought of himself as being merely a journalist, and who died in the 1930’s, should now be the subject of a strong worldwide revival. The truth is that G.K. Chesterton was one of the deepest and most 7 lucid thinkers that England has ever produced. His thought and writ- ing are full of vivid illumination and profound common sense, cut- ting through the jargon and cant of the day and throwing light into hitherto dark places, so that the reader constantly thinks, “Of course, how obvious! Why hadn’t I thought of that before?” It was this extraordinary capacity for illumination which made his influence so deep and wide-ranging. A striking example occurred when, in an article in the Illustrated London News in Oct- ober 1910, he remarked that the principal weakness of the then bur- geoning Indian Nationalism was that “ . . . it seems to be not very Indian and not very national. It is all about Herbert Spencer and Heaven knows what. When all is said there is a . . . distinction between a people asking for its own ancient life and a people asking for Gilbert Chesterton in front of the microphone at the BBC, bringing sanity and solutions to the oppressed peoples of the world 8

Description:
Brilliantly illustrating the philosophy of one of 20th-century England’s greatest Catholic apologists, this study neatly summarizes G. K. Chesterton’s contributions. Covering social criticism, theology, politics, and socio-economics, this collection shows how Chesterton had the gift of explainin
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