The Road From Rome, Part I
This talk on Chesterton and Rome was delivered at the 20th Anniversary of The Chesterton Society, held in Toronto, Canada, 16-18 September 1994, and published, if memory serves, in The Chesterton Review.
This talk on Chesterton and Rome was delivered at the 20th Anniversary of The Chesterton Society, held in Toronto, Canada, 16-18 September 1994, and published, if memory serves, in The Chesterton Review.
How mass tourism is destroying local communities….
The current discussion of war against civilians, inspired by Anthony McCarthy’s excellent commentary on the Hiroshima celebrations, has encouraged me to post some passages from the last two chapters of my forthcoming sequel to The Reign of Love.
Basic expressions with some notes on how similar (with some differences) MG is to Ancient.
I’ve been really critical of Trump lately. We need to keep the pressure on. He must stop being the War President and go back to being the Peace President he promised us, and whom we elected.
I hasten to point out that any debt owed by the title of this post to André Gide’s Les Faux-monnayeurs ought to be discounted, apart from novel’s premise, self-evident enough, that some things in the world are original and some fake.
The animals’ responses to efforts of zoo-goers to attract their attention have become ‘meaningless’ due to the empty nature of the stimuli. Berger wrote his reflections in the 1970s long before the Information Age brought closer a state of affairs among humans resembling that of animals in the zoo.