115
The English language is the most valuable part of our national heritage, and the patriotic citizen is careful to treat it with respect.
Hilaire Belloc ran in the same head-spinning literary company as GK Chesterton and George Bernard Shaw. In this essay, he urges us to think of the English language as our most prized possession, neither to be put under glass in a museum, nor to be mangled in the media, but used thoughtfully and responsibly, because one day it will be the only record of what kind of people the English were.
Picture: © 57claudio, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0.. Source.
Posted January 21 2024
116
The diplomat’s task is to see the best in other peoples, not to scold them for their failings.
François de Callières, a diplomat in the service of King Louis XIV of France, believed that those posted to overseas embassies should not only show but feel respect for their host country. Given the way that all of us now live in one another’s pockets through the internet, and our much-vaunted democratic government, everyone should heed his advice, for we are all diplomats now.
Picture: © Reda Kerbush, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0.. Source.
Posted December 28 2023
117
In 664, a council at Whitby decided to align the traditions of the Northumbrian Church with those of Rome and Constantinople.
In 634, monk Aidan established a monastery on the ‘holy island’ of Lindisfarne in Northumbria. Aidan taught King Oswiu’s chaplains the traditions of the monastery founded by Columba, an Irishman, on Iona in western Scotland; but Oswiu’s Queen came from Kent, and her chaplains kept the Roman ways brought by St Augustine to Canterbury. At last, Oswiu could stand the bickering no more.
Picture: © TatianaHepplewhite, Wikimedia Commons. Licence: CC BY-SA 4.0.. Source.
Posted December 25 2023
118
Juliet complains that the man she loves has the wrong name, and the man she loves hears her doing it.
One night, Romeo Montague slips into a masked ball at the Capulet residence in Verona — chasing a girl as usual. There he meets Juliet, and Rosaline is forgotten. When he learns that Juliet is the daughter of his father’s sworn enemy, he rushes from the dance, and soon afterwards we find him in the garden, thinking furiously. Suddenly he sees a light at a window above: it seems Juliet has been thinking too.
Picture: By John William Waterhouse (1849–1917), via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.
Posted December 24 2023
119
A destitute and friendless farmer, turned from the tradesman’s entrance, tries his luck at the front door.
This poem was composed by the Revd Mr Thomas Moss, minister of Brierley Hill and Trentham in Staffordshire, and included in a collection of verses that he published anonymously in 1769. Admired for its pathos, the poem became a standard for children to memorise, in the hope of sowing the seeds of charitable feelings at an early age; consequently, it was also much parodied.
Picture: By Michiel Sweerts (1618-1664), via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain.. Source.
Posted December 22 2023
120
John Gay reflects that in matters of friendship, quality is preferable to quantity.
This little Fable may look like one of Aesop’s ancient morality tales but it was composed by English poet and dramatist John Gay, remembered today for his Beggar’s Opera of 1728. Gay was one of those investors caught out by the South Sea Bubble, and discovered that in Georgian London being popular with the rich and famous was by no means a guarantee against hardship.
Picture: By Bruno Liljefors (1860–1939), via Wikimedia Commons. Licence: Public domain. . Source.
Posted December 22 2023