-The Man Who Was Orthodox (1963)
Quotes by and posts relating to one of the most influential authors of the 20th century, G.K. Chesterton
Friday, June 29, 2018
Fairy tales are the only true accounts that man has ever
given of his destiny. ‘Jack the Giant-Killer’ is the embodiment of the first of
the three great paradoxes by which men live. It is the paradox of Courage: the
paradox which says, ‘You must defy the thing that is terrifying; unless you are
frightened, you are not brave.’ ‘Cinderella’ is the embodiment of the second of
the paradoxes by which men live: the paradox of Humility which says ‘Look for
the best in the thing, ignorant of its merit; he that abases himself shall be
exalted’. And ‘Beauty and the Beast’ is the embodiment of the third of the
paradoxes by which men live: the paradox of Faith — the absolutely
necessary and wildly unreasonable maxim which says to every mother with a child
or to every patriot with a country, ‘You must love the thing first and make it
lovable after wards.’
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