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BROWN_FAITH
June 6-17, 2008
Gilbert K. Chesterton
born: 1874
died: 1936
Re-reading G.K. Chesterton's "Father
Brown" stories, for the first time in The Father Brown stories
a long time, I'm impressed by the were written 1910 to 1936
constant rain of Christian propaganda;
there is many a smear of the rational The Holmes stories
atheistic mind... ran 1887 to 1930.
It's all so obvious it's FOOTNOTES_TO_HOLMES
(usually) as inoffensive
as Father Brown himself. At first
glance. SPOILERS
One of the early ones
leads off with a lot of
"good-natured" jibes at FLYING_STARS
those-darn-socialists
In another the murderer turns out to be a
man-of-science type, who has rationally
decided to commit murder because he "The Wrong Shape"
believes his victim is unhealthy and it
will make everyone involved happier
including himself.
In still another, the villain is The French
Mind -- Chesterton still hasn't let them off "The Secret Garden"
the hook for the French Revolution.
In one of the odder cases, Chesterton
keeps harping on the generally uselessness "The Invisible Man",
of the British upper class, some of whom the second in the
were about to be robbed when Brown happened series.
on the scene. Now, anyone who ripped off
the over-fed, under-exercised losers
depicted in this story has a ready-made
rationalization -- if not justification --
and yet we're to believe that the thief This is no doubt
has an attack of conscience when intended as an
confronted by Brown. Why would anyone, edifying paradox
Brown included, care if someone stole the which is supposed to
silly pearl encrusted silver from these say something about
fools? absolute morality...
A subject also
touched on in the
first of them:
THE_BLUE_CROSS
(Reading these
straight
"People readily swallow the untested claims through, one
of this, that, or the other. It's drowning can see
all your old rationalism and scepticism, Chesterton
it's coming in like the sea; and the name re-using a
of it is superstition. ... theme several
times in a row,
"It's the first effect of not believing in and then giving
God that you lose your common sense ... " it a rest.)
The "Father Brown" character,
in "The Oracle of the Dog",
by G.K. Chesterton.
Nash's Magazine December 1923
FUNDAMENT
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