Favorite Quotes from G.K. Chesterton
You can only find truth with logic if you have already found truth without it.
There is many a tender old Tory imagination that vaguely feels that our streets would be hung with escutcheons and tapestries, if only the profane vulgar had not hung them with advertisements of Sapolio and Sunlight Soap. But advertisement does not come from the unlettered many. It comes from the refined few. Did you ever hear of a mob rising to placard the Town Hall with proclamations in favor of Sapolio? Did you ever see a poor, ragged man laboriously drawing and painting a picture on the wall in favour of Sunlight Soap - simply as a labour of love? It is nonsense; those who hang our public walls with ugly pictures are the same select few who hang their private walls with exquisite and expensive pictures. The vulgarization of life has come from the governing class; from the highly educated class.
I'm still a liberal. It's those people who aren't liberals.
Comforts that were rare among our forefathers are now multiplied in factories and handed out wholesale; and indeed, nobody nowadays, so long as he is content to go without air, space, quiet, decency and good manners, need be without anything whatever that he wants; or at least a reasonably cheap imitation of it.
My attitude toward progress has passed from antagonism to boredom. I have long ceased to argue with people who prefer Thursday to Wednesday because it is Thursday.
When such a critic says, for instance, that faith kept the world in darkness until doubt led to
enlightenment, he is himself taking things on faith, things that he has never been sufficiently
enlightened to doubt. That exceedingly crude simplification of human history is what he has been
taught, and he believes it because he has been taught. I do not blame him for that; I merely remark
that he is an unconscious example of everything that he reviles.
When men have come to the edge of a precipice, it is the lover of life
who has the spirit to leap backwards, and only the pessimist who
continues to believe in progress.
What is education? Properly speaking, there is no such thing as
education. Education is simply the soul of a society as it passes from
one generation to another. ... What we need is to have a culture before
we hand it down. In other words, it is a truth, however sad and
strange, that we cannot give what we have not got, and cannot teach to
other people what we do not know ourselves.
The purpose of Compulsory Education is to deprive the common people of their commonsense.
Many clever men like you have trusted to civilisation. Many clever
Babylonians, many clever Egyptians, many clever men at the end of Rome.
Can you tell me, in a world that is flagrant with the failures of
civilisation, what there is particularly immortal about yours?
The madman is not the man who has lost his reason. The madman is the man
who has lost everything except his reason.
Did Herbert Spencer ever convince you - did he ever convince anybody - did
he ever for one mad moment convince himself - that it must be to the
interest of the individual to feel a public spirit? ... Herbert Spencer
refrained from theft for the same reason that he refrained from wearing
feathers in his hair, because he was an English gentleman with different
tastes.
It isn't that they can't see the solution. It is that they can't see the problem.
We have remarked that one reason offered for being a progressive is
that things naturally tend to grow better. But the only real reason
for being a progressive is that things naturally tend to grow
worse. The corruption in things is not only the best argument for
being progressive; it is also the only argument against being
conservative. The conservative theory would really be quite sweeping
and unanswerable if it were not for this one fact. But all
conservatism is based upon the idea that if you leave things alone you
leave them as they are. But you do not. If you leave a thing alone you
leave it to a torrent of change. If you leave a white post alone it
will soon be a black post. If you particularly want it to be white you
must be always painting it again; that is, you must be always having a
revolution. Briefly, if you want the old white post you must have a
new white post.
Men will ask what selfish sort of woman it must have been who ruthlessly
exacted tribute in the form of flowers, or what an avaricious creature
she can have been to demand solid gold in the form of a ring; just as they
ask what cruel kind of God can have demanded sacrifice and self-denial.
Is one religion as good as another? Is one horse in the Derby as good as another?
Posting a letter and getting married [sic] are among the few things left
that are entirely romantic; for to be entirely romantic, a thing must be
irrevocable.
To be in a romance is to be in uncongenial surroundings.
It is of the new things that men tire - of fashions and proposals and
improvements and change. It is the old things that startle and
intoxicate. It is the old things that are young.
If a thing is worth doing, it is worth doing badly.
...[T]here are many kinds of sincerity and insincerity. When you say
'thank you' for the salt, do you mean what you say? No. When you say
'the world is round,' do you mean what you say? No. It is true, but you
don't mean it.
Omar Khayyam's wine-bibbing is bad, not because it is wine-bibbing. It is bad, and very bad, because it is medical wine-bibbing. It is the drinking of a man who drinks because he is not happy. ...
He feasts because life is not joyful; he revels because he is not
glad.
To have a horror of tobacco is not to have an abstract standard of right;
but exactly the opposite. It is to have no standard of right whatever;
and to make certain local likes and dislikes as a substitute.
To each man one soul only is
given; to each soul only is given a little power - the power at some
moments to outgrow and swallow up the stars. If age after age that power
comes upon men, whatever gives it to them is great. Whatever makes men
feel old is mean - an empire or a skin-flint shop. Whatever makes men
feel young is great - a great war or a love story.
For it is a sin against the reason to tell men that to travel hopefully
is better than to arrive; and when once they believe it, they travel
hopefully no longer.
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