It may roughly be described as the spirit of taking things for granted. But, indeed, oddly enough, the very form of this phrase rather misses its own meaning. The spirit, I mean, strictly speaking, does not take things for granted. It takes them as if they had not been granted. It takes them as if it held them by something more autocratic than a right; by a cold and unconscious occupation, as stiff as a privilege and as baseless as a caprice. As a fact, things generally are granted, ultimately by God, but often immediately by men. But this type of man is so unconscious of what he has been given that he is almost unconscious of what he has got; not realizing things as gifts, he hardly realizes them as goods.
-Fancies Versus Fads (1923)
I found that my blog follower, Spambot, is following your blog as well. I have decided to follow you to brush up on my Chesterton and I will actually read you from time to time. If you want to find out more about the social justice side of Catholicism, read my Roomin' House Blues blog http://roominhouseblues.blogspot.com/
ReplyDeleteOK, thanks! :-)
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