avevale_intelligencer: (Default)
avevale_intelligencer ([personal profile] avevale_intelligencer) wrote2005-08-14 09:36 pm
Entry tags:

(no subject)

I haven't plugged G K Chesterton for a while, so here we are again.

If you can find a book called "Tales of the Long Bow," (I think Project Gutenberg has it as a free ebook) you will be amazed, I believe. He puts his finger exactly on what is going on now, in business and healthcare and the environment--this man was writing about pollution in 1925, for frod's sake. And he tells a fine and funny story in the process.

And then there's this, called "To A Certain Nation":

We will not let thee be, for thou art ours.
We thank thee still, though thou forget these things,
For that hour's sake when thou didst wake all powers
With a great cry that God was sick of kings.

[...]

Thou hast a right to rule thyself; to be
The thing thou wilt; to grin, to fawn, to creep;
To crown these clumsy liars; aye, and we
Who knew thee once, we have a right to weep.

(He was writing about France, at the time of the Dreyfus case, which is why I've left out the middle verses. I, of course, am thinking of another nation altogether, or possibly two.)

So much wealth of wit and wisdom, to be so abandoned and forgotten by the world...

[identity profile] zanda-myrande.livejournal.com 2005-08-15 08:04 am (UTC)(link)
I think the best of his novels is The Man Who Was Thursday (and I'm amazed to find a dramatisation of it: that's downloaded for later, and thank you for pointing me at it!!). The Father Brown short stories are great fun, and about the only thing he's remembered for. To get an idea of how he wrote non-fiction, you could try Orthodoxy, of which I am very fond. The essays and the poems...as you say, too many: just dive in and see what you find.

[identity profile] otherdeb.livejournal.com 2005-08-15 09:49 am (UTC)(link)
Thanks -- will download the ones you just suggested, as well as the one in your original entry, and dive in.