Quotes by and posts relating to one of the most influential authors of the 20th century, G.K. Chesterton
I also have created a list detailing examples of the influence of Chesterton if you are interested, that I work on from time to time.
(Moreover, for a list of short GKC quotes, I have created one here, citing the sources)
"...Stevenson had found that the secret of life lies in laughter and humility."
-Heretics (1905)
_____________________
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
"....that most uproarious of all things, humility..."
-Heretics (1905)
Monday, January 30, 2012
"The greater the book the more the average man feels himself capable of editing it."
-March 2, 1901, The Speaker
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Various quotes
-The Century Magazine, May 1923
"[They] are in one sense very narrow indeed. They are progressive: that is, they deal in terms of time and not of eternity."
-The Century Magazine, December 1922
"His greatest defect as a poet is a desire to scorn things, which means a desire to be ignorant of them. The true poet shuts nothing out; he looks upon nothing contemptuously, except perhaps upon contempt."
-The Pall Magazine, Volume XXV, September-December 1901
"He has...the fighting spirit, due not to the presence of courage, which is a spiritual virtue, but to the absence of fear, which is an animal defect"
--The Pall Magazine, Volume XXV, September-December 1901
"In the abstract the educated have, no doubt, an advantage over the uneducated; only it happens that we all have a gradual and growing conviction that those who have been educated have been educated wrong."
-The Reader, volume 9 (1907)
Saturday, January 28, 2012
President Woodrow Wilson on GKC
-"Woodrow Wilson: Character Sketch"
Evening Post, Volume LXXXIV, Issue 112, 7 November 1912, Page 7
Mr. Wilson has the same unwearied delight in rereading his favorite authors, the speeches of Burke, the essays of Bagehot, Augustine Birrell, Gilbert K. Chesterton, poems of Wordsworth and Browning, and passages from his favorite Shaksperian play, "Henry the Fifth.
-"The Kind of Man Woodrow Wilson Is", W.G. McAdoo [vice-chairman of the Democratic National Committee of 1912]
The Century Magazine, volume 85 (November, 1912, to April, 1913)
Minor Characters
What I like about this novelist is that he takes such trouble about his minor characters."
-quoted in Gilbert Keith Chesterton by Maisie Ward (1943)
Friday, January 27, 2012
What do you think?
"There is something more peculiar and provocative in the Christian idea, and it was expressed in the words repentance and humility. Or, to put it in more topical terms, it means that when we face the facts of the age, the first facts we face should be the faults of ourselves; and that we should at least consider, concerning any fact, the possibility that it is our fault. Now, of course, the most important form of this is too individual for this public problem; indeed, it cannot in its nature be a criticism of anybody else."
-G.K. Chesterton
Is it a New World? A Series of Articles and Letters Contributed by Correspondents to the "Daily Telegraph" August-September, 1920 (published in 1921)
Thursday, January 26, 2012
Various quotes
-March 23, 1901, The Speaker
"The very essence of friendship is in this intermixture, in those great midnight conversations in which the primary colours of separate personalities are mingled into incredible greens and purples, as rich and unrecoverable as a sunset."
-October 20, 1900, The Speaker
"Undoubtedly looking down and speaking down and writing down to the human soul have been the sterilising curses of education. That everything should look up to everything else may be a little bewildering as geometry, but like many other impossibilities, it is simple and successful in morals."
-November 24, 1900, The Speaker
"He is one of the embodiments of that tendency, sound and useful originally, towards the poetry of the Savage, otherwise called the Bachelor..."
-November 10, 1900, The Speaker
"...the mystic is not...a man who reverences large things so much as a man who reverences small ones, who reduces himself to a point, without parts or magnitude, so that to him the grass is really a forest and the grasshopper a dragon. Little things please great minds."
-December 15, 1900, The Speaker
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
"With the humility of true mystics we shall praise each other in such a manner that it shall be clear that we are only praising God."
-Christian World, quoted in The Unitarian Register, volume 84 (1905)
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Charles Dicken's son "specially recommended" GKC's book on his father
But this morning, while reading from a publication from 1912, I also found out that one of Dicken's sons also highly recommended it.
From Ohio Educational Monthly, volume 61 (1912) [emphasis mine]:
We sincerely hope that many teachers will study [Dicken's] life more or less in detail. to all who are interested we commend the following Books of Reference:
"My Father as I Recall Him," by Mamie Dickens: "Charles Dickens as I Knew Him," By George Dolby; "The Life of Charles Dickens," by John Forster; "Childhood and Youth of Charles Dickens,'" by Robert Langton, and "Life of Charles Dickens," by Chesterton. The last named is specially recommended by Alfred Tennyson Dickens, who is not well pleased with the Forster Life.
Just wanted to share that, since I had been unaware of it before. :-)
"He could enjoy trifles because there was to him no such thing as a trifle."
-October 18, 1901, Daily News
Monday, January 23, 2012
"Whence came this extraordinary idea that laughing at a thing is hostile?"
-March 9, 1901, The Speaker
Sunday, January 22, 2012
"In the whole range of human occupations, is it possible to imagine a poorer thing than an iconoclast?"
-The Daily News, as quoted in The Book Buyer: A Monthly Review of American and Foreign Literature (1905)
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Politicians
-July 9, 1910, Illustrated London News
"[His] work deals with the ancient writings....but...he ignores two small points- first that they are ancient, and, secondly, that they are writings."
This awful simplification of things they discovered, as it has since been discovered by innumerable sages. But their unique historic interest lies in this: that by a strange circumstance, that has every resemblance to a miracle, they discovered it in the morning of the world, in an age when men had and needed no philosophic language. Hence they threw it into poetical language. They spoke of this startling speculative theory with the same bold, brisk, plain-coloured imagery with which primitive ballads commonly speak of war and hunting, women and gold... But Mr Baron in attempting an estimate of the relation of the Jews to the Old Testament is merely interested in the theological and dogmatic side of the matter. He does not seem to be aware that the Bible is rather a fine book. He deals with the central interest of the whole matter the gradual emergence in Job and the Prophets of this sublime monism out of a tribal creed and still under the literary forms of a tribal poem but he does not seem to see it. He thinks like all conventional dogmatists that a sentence or two in the style of the Daily Telegraph will elucidate the style of Scripture which is as straightforward as a nursery rhyme. He really supposes that to say that God is not "under obligation" for an "animal sacrifice" contains all that is contained in such a daring simple unfathomable sentence as "If I were hungry I would not tell thee."
-March 2, 1901, The Speaker
"...whom some sages would strangle in pure compassion."
-February 2, 1901, The Speaker
Monday, January 16, 2012
list of short GKC quotes
"Children need to be taught primarily the grandeur of the whole world. It is merely the whole world that needs to be taught the grandeur of children."
-November 24, 1900, The Speaker, "Literature and Childhood"
Sunday, January 15, 2012
"...we lose our bearings entirely by speaking of the "lower classes" when we mean humanity minus ourselves."
-The Defendant (1901)
Saturday, January 14, 2012
"It is useless to object to man being made ridiculous. Man is born ridiculous, as can easily be seen if you look at him soon after he is born."
-George Bernard Shaw (1909)
"Anybody can talk for ever about a non-existent religion which shall be free from all the evils of existence..."
-The Thing (1929)
Friday, January 13, 2012
"The truth is that the modern world has had a mental breakdown; much more than a moral breakdown."
-The Thing (1929)
Thursday, January 12, 2012
"...they always have an unconscious dogma; and an unconscious dogma is the definition of a prejudice."
-March 15, 1919, Illustrated London News
"Milton does not merely beat them at his piety, he beats them at their own irreverence."
-Heretics (1905)
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
"...a thing constructed can only be loved after it is constructed; but a thing created is loved before it exists."
There are those who deny with enthusiasm the existence of a God and are happy in a hobby which they call the Mistakes of Moses. I have not studied their labours in detail, but it seems that the chief mistake of Moses was that he neglected to write the Pentateuch. The lesser errors, apparently, were not made by Moses, but by another person equally unknown. These controversialists cover the very widest field, and their attacks upon Scripture are varied to the point of wildness. They range from the proposition that the unexpurgated Bible is almost as unfit for an American girls' school as is an unexpurgated Shakespeare; they descend to the proposition that kissing the Book is almost as hygienically dangerous as kissing the babies of the poor. A superficial critic might well imagine that there was not one single sentence left of the Hebrew or Christian Scriptures which this school had not marked with some ingenious and uneducated comment. But there is one passage at least upon which they have never pounced, at least to my knowledge; and in pointing it out to them I feel that I am, or ought to be, providing material for quite a multitude of Hyde Park orations. I mean that singular arrangement in the mystical account of the Creation by which light is created first and all the luminous bodies afterwards. One could not imagine a process more open to the elephantine logic of the Bible-smasher than this: that the sun should be created after the sunlight. The conception that lies at the back of the phrase is indeed profoundly antagonistic to much of the modern point of view. To many modern people it would sound like saying that foliage existed before the first leaf; it would sound like saying that childhood existed before a baby was born. The idea is, as I have said, alien to most modern thought, and like many other ideas which are alien to most modern thought, it is a very subtle and a very sound idea. Whatever be the meaning of the passage in the actual primeval poem, there is a very real metaphysical meaning in the idea that light existed before the sun and stars. It is not barbaric; it is rather Platonic. The idea existed before any of the machinery which made manifest the idea. Justice existed when there was no need of judges, and mercy existed before any man was oppressed.
However this may be in the matter of religion and philosophy, it can be said with little exaggeration that this truth is the very key of literature. The whole difference between construction and creation is exactly this: that a thing constructed can only be loved after it is constructed; but a thing created is loved before it exists, as the mother can love the unborn child. In creative art the essence of a book exists before the book or before even the details or main features of the book; the author enjoys it and lives in it with a kind of prophetic rapture.-Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens (1911)
Tuesday, January 10, 2012
"...the fearful misprints that make nonsense and the far, far more fearful misprints that make sense."
Most journalists abound in jokes on the subject of misprints- the fearful misprints that make nonsense and the far, far more fearful misprints that make sense. For only those which are reasonable can really be ruinous. If the printer alters, 'He parted from Chloe with a final kiss,' and presents it as, 'He parted from Chloe with a final kilb,' nothing worse will result than a mild mystification- a sort of delicate mist into which the figures of the two loves will fade away. But if the printer takes the phrase, 'He parted from Chloe with a final kiss,' and turns it into 'He parted from Chloe with a final kick,' a distinctly different note will be struck in the whole romance; a definite but diverse shade of meaning will be conveyed to the reader, and yet one which his experience of the relations of the sexes may lead him to accept as intelligible and intentional. The reader may regard it as merely a touch of the new realistic method; slightly stark; just a trifle Neo-Primitive; but obviously an authentic tranche de la vie. But the original romantic writer, who really intended Chloe to be kissed and not kicked, will be distinctly annoyed.
-November 3, 1928, Illustrated London News
"The word 'good' has many meanings..."
-GKC as quoted in Chesterton as Seen by His Contemporaries (Cyril Clemens, 1939)
Monday, January 9, 2012
"I am a man...and therefore have all devils in my heart"
"I am a man," answered Father Brown gravely; "and therefore have all devils in my heart.
-The Innocence of Father Brown (1911)
Sunday, January 8, 2012
"The literature of joy is infinitely more difficult, more rare and more triumphant than the black and white literature of pain."
-The Defendant (1901)
Saturday, January 7, 2012
Black and White
...A quarrel is always a mutual appeal to conscience. Under the shock of it the most fantastic paradox-mongers put their trust in the eternal truisms. The poet, when in an ecstasy, will cry out that nothing is forbidden, that everybody is justified. But the poet, when in a quarrel, will not so easily cry out that his publisher is justified. The artist may claim all colours in a rainbow subtlety, fading into each other; but the artist, when disputing an arrangement with the art-dealer, will develop an interest in black and white.
-January 8, 1916, Illustrated London News
"A city is...more poetic even than a countryside, for while Nature is a chaos of unconscious forces, a city is a chaos of conscious ones."
-The Defendant (1901)
Friday, January 6, 2012
"The chief feature of our time is the meekness of the mob and the madness of the government."
-Eugenics and Other Evils (1922)
"...they cried 'Stop!' And it did stop."
-Appreciations and Criticisms of the Works of Charles Dickens (1911)
Wednesday, January 4, 2012
"Men rush towards complexity; but they yearn towards simplicity. They try to be kings; but they dream of being shepherds."
-Robert Louis Stevenson (1927)
Tuesday, January 3, 2012
"The religion of Christ has, like many true things, been disproved an extraordinary number of times."
-Twelve Types (1902)
Monday, January 2, 2012
"...it seeks within the four corners of a village love-story to tell the whole story of the world."
-quoted in The Pall Magazine, Volume 25 (1900)