-Chaucer (1932)
Quotes by and posts relating to one of the most influential authors of the 20th century, G.K. Chesterton
Friday, March 3, 2017
" [...] whether the modern mind prefers its pretensions to popular breadth or its claims to creedless spirituality [...] it cannot have both at once;"
The truth is that the broad religion creates the narrow clique.
It is what is called the religion of dogmas, that is of facts
(or alleged facts), that creates a broader brotherhood and brings
men of all kinds together. This is called a paradox; but it
will be obvious to anyone who considers the nature of a fact.
All men share in a fact, if they believe it to be a fact.
Only a few men commonly share a feeling, when it is only a feeling.
If there is a deep and delicate and intangible feeling, detached from
all statements, but reaching to a wordless worship of beauty, wafted in
a sweet savour from the woods of Kent or the spires of Canterbury,
then we may be tolerably certain that the Miller will not have it.
The Miller can only become the Pilgrim, if he recognizes that God is
in the heavens as he recognizes that the sun is in the sky. If he does
recognize it, he can share the dogma just as he can share the daylight.
But he cannot be expected to share all the shades of fine intellectual
mysticism that might exist in the mind of the Prioress or the Parson.
I can understand that argument being turned in an anti-democratic
as well as an anti-dogmatic direction; but anyhow the individualistic
mystics must either do without the mysticism or do without the Miller.
To some refined persons the loss of the latter would be no
very insupportable laceration of the feelings. But I am not
a refined person and I am not merely thinking about feelings.
I am even so antiquated as to be thinking about rights;
about the rights of men, which are extended even to millers.
Among those rights is a certain rough working respect and consideration,
which is at the basis of comradeship. And I say that if the comradeship
is to include the Miller at all, it must be based on the recognition
of something as really true, and not merely as ideally beautiful.
It is easy to imagine the Knight and the Prioress riding to
Canterbury and talking in the most elegant and cultivated strain,
exchanging graceful fictions about knights and ladies for equally
graceful legends about virgins and saints. But that sort of sympathy,
especially when it reaches the point of subtlety, is not a way
of uniting, or even collecting, all the Canterbury Pilgrims.
The Knight and the Prioress would be the founders of a clique;
as they probably were already the representatives of a class.
I am not concerned here with whether the modern mind prefers its
pretensions to popular breadth or its claims to creedless spirituality.
I am only pointing out that it cannot have both at once;
that if religion is an intuition, it must be an individual intuition
and not a social institution; and that it is much easier to build
a social institution on something that is regarded as a solid fact.
No comments:
Post a Comment