Imagine What Exists
and other recovered texts
Available in Amazon
From the editor´s note:
Between 2017 and 2019 I worked in the translation into Spanish of a selection of essays on literature by G. K. Chesterton. For the task, I explored the collections of Chesterton’s papers available at the British Library, the G. K. Chesterton Library (then located at Oxford), and the Harry Ransom Center of the University of Texas, in Austin. As Chesterton’s creative output would suggest, the number of unpublished materials (poems, short stories, essays, and even his characteristic doodles) was impressive. For years, I contemplated the idea of editing a volume with a selection of those materials and, if you have this book in your hands, my procrastination has finally ended.
The texts here included are transcriptions from handwritten essays, notebooks and typescripts encompassing Chesterton’s creative life, since his early years as a member of the Junior Debating Club until weeks before his death. To the best of my knowledge, most of them have never been published. Only a few of the typescripts indicate original publications in newspapers, but none of those has been included in G. K. Chesterton’s collections. Since it is impossible to date most of them, I have opted for a thematic order, building up from excerpts, early writings, considerations on literature and specific authors to Chesterton’s most cherished themes: Catholicism, Distributism and a “Nonsense World.” Any markings or incidental information found in the originals are referenced in the endnotes.
A few comments on some of the texts:
It can be guessed that Chesterton wrote his essay on Walt Whitman in his early twenties (circa 1894), as a prologue to an edition of Whitman’s selected poems which most probably was never published.
“Father Brown in Hollywood” is a letter in which Chesterton expresses his thoughts and expectations about an imminent series of films, in the early 1930s, inspired by his famous priest-detective. The letter could be taken as a reference to appreciate posterior media representations of Father Brown, and to consider how close they are to Chesterton’s vision. In this and other texts without an original title, I have ventured to add descriptive titles.
The essay on Alice Meynell was a fortunate finding, at the Harry Ransom Center (where, by the way, the manuscript of The Man Who Was Thursday is safeguarded). Just a few weeks before, I had reread Chesterton’s Autobiography and found there an intriguing and most praising reference to Mrs. Meynell. This essay confirms Chesterton’s admiration for the today almost forgotten poet and essayist.
The longest essay here included, “By a Roman Convert,” was Chesterton answer to Mr. Arnold Lunn, who in 1924 had published a book criticizing Catholicism by commenting on some prominent converts, such as Cardinal Newman, Hillarie Belloc and G. K. Chesterton. Chesterton’s answer offers an excellent overview of his religious and social ideas, and addresses and dismisses some of the charges some sectors of posterity keep using to impair his legacy. It is not a minor detail —perhaps not completely unrelated to Chesterton’s answer— the fact that Mr. Lunn eventually would convert to Catholicism.
In a few cases, I have reproduced incomplete essays, under the assumption that the surviving fragments are interesting enough. I have done my best effort to decipher Chesterton’s evolving and not always clear penmanship; and, in a couple of articles, I have tried to guess missing words. I have pointed also the very few occasions were guessing would be not only wild, but most probably inaccurate. In a moderate and, hopefully, respectful way I have adjusted punctuation when it seemed necessary. Regarding the images, they speak for themselves.
Table of content:
Editor’s
note 9
IMAGINE
WHAT EXISTS (EXCERPTS FROM NOTEBOOKS) 13
POETRY OF
THE PRESENT DAY 27
A POET’S
HEART 31
THE SONGS
OF A NATION 33
EROS AND
PSYCHE, BY ROBERT BRIDGES 35
THE
SACREDNESS OF LIBRARIES 39
THE GREAT
TRANSLATION 45
THE CLEVER
MAN AND THE FAIRY TALES 51
THE SAVAGE
AS A POET 55
REALIST AND
THE UNREAL 67
THE
DISAPPEARANCE OF THE SWORD 73
THE
DEFINITION OF THE DRAGON 77
WALT WHITMAN 83
THE BURNS
WE LOVE 103
WORDSWORTH 109
A BOOK FOR
A DESERT ISLAND 111
DICKENS AND
THACKERAY 117
STEVENSON
AND THE CULT OF VILLON 123
THE HUMOR
OF J. M. BARRIE 129
ALICE
MEYNELL 135
FATHER
BROWN GOES TO HOLLYWOOD 151
THE MORAL
IN MURDER STORIES 157
THE FREEDOM
OF MARRIAGE 163
ETIQUETTE
AND THE PROFESSORS 167
THE FLAMES
OF FREEDOM 173
BY A ROMAN
CONVERT 179
A NONSENSE
WORLD 205
THE THREE
FINGERS 213
Notes on
the Texts and Pictures 217