The English author,
journalist, and artist Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936) dedicated his extraordinary intellect
and
creative power to the reform of English government and society. In 1922
he
converted to Roman Catholicism and became its champion.
On
From art Chesterton drifted into journalism.
He was vitally concerned with the injustices of
In 1900 he met
Hilaire Belloc, and in 1901 he married
Frances Blogg. These events were two of the great influences in his
life. From
1904 to 1936 Chesterton published
nearly a dozen novels, the most important being The Napoleon of
Notting Hill
(1904) and The Man Who Was Thursday (1908). In 1911 Chesterton created the
"Father Brown" detective stories. During his literary career he
published 90 books and numerous articles. He poured out a wealth of
lighthearted essays, historical sketches, and metaphysical and
polemical works,
together with such well-known poems as "The Ballad of the White
Horse," "Lepanto," and the drinking songs from The Flying Inn.
Among his major critical works are studies of Robert Browning (1903) and
Charles Dickens (1906). Prodigiously talented, Chesterton also
illustrated a number of Belloc's light works.
Chesterton spoke of himself as
primarily a journalist. He contributed to and helped edit Eye
Witness
and New Witness. He edited G. K.'s Weekly, which advocated
distributism, the social philosophy developed by Belloc. Chesterton's
overriding concern with political and social injustice is reflected in
Heretics
(1905) and Orthodoxy (1909), perhaps his most important work.
Throughout
his life Chesterton was one of
the most colorful and loved personalities of literary