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Tag Archives: Hilaire Belloc

The Catholic Genius and Range of Hilaire Belloc’s History, Poetry, and Prose

May 14, 2018 Brian Kelly Reply

National Catholic Register, Joseph Pearce: Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953) is not as well-known as he and his talent deserve. From the last years of the reign of Queen Victoria until the first years of World War II, when ill health silenced his … Continue reading →

Belloc, ‘Hills and the Sea’, a Man Who Could Write About Anything

Jul 19, 2016 Brian Kelly Reply

Crisis, K.V. Turley: These 38 essays are a mix of reflection and philosophy, personal memoir, and travel writing—some with English settings, some foreign. In fact, the geography with which this travel writing is concerned is mostly the Pyrenees and a … Continue reading →

Two Chivalrous Defenders of Saint Joan of Arc: Georges Bernanos and Hilaire Belloc

Apr 24, 2014 Dr. Robert Hickson Reply

Five years before the beginning of World War I, Joan of Arc was Beatified by Pope Saint Pius X. (It was on 18 April 1909 in Paris.) A little more than a decade later, and after the devastating 1914-1918 War, … Continue reading →

The Disadvantages of Comfort

Sep 3, 2013 Dr. Robert Hickson Reply

When an inspiring Scottish friend recently teased me with a trenchant quote from John Henry Newman’s sermon, entitled “Religious Cowardice,” I deployed my resourcefulness promptly to find, if I could, the entire homily and to read it. Gratefully, I did. … Continue reading →

Modern Noise and Man’s Ingrained Inattentiveness

Jul 5, 2013 Dr. Robert Hickson Reply

This brief essay proposes to consider how two eloquent Catholic authors, Hilaire Belloc and Evelyn Waugh, describe and deal with the phenomenon of noise, an unmistakable mark of the intrusive modern world even in times of putative peace. The first … Continue reading →

‘And You Cannot Build Upon a Lie’

Apr 20, 2013 Dr. Robert Hickson Reply

In 1920, ten years after Hilaire Belloc had stepped down from his four maturing years of publicly elected service in the House of Commons, he published a lucid book-length essay, entitled, The House of Commons and Monarchy. It is a … Continue reading →

Hilaire Belloc’s View of a Pilgrimage

Mar 7, 2013 Dr. Robert Hickson Reply

When Hilaire Belloc was a rumbustious young man in his mid-thirties, and only a few years after he had completed his journey afoot to Rome, he wrote an essay entitled “The Idea of a Pilgrimage,” which first appeared in his … Continue reading →

On Hilaire Belloc and a Great Wind

Feb 13, 2013 Dr. Robert Hickson 1

When Hilaire Belloc was a vigorous forty years of age, and three years before his life was shaken and shattered by the death of his wife Elodie on Candlemas 1914, he wrote an intimately evocative essay, entitled “On a Great … Continue reading →

The Man Who Changed The Face of Europe

Nov 3, 2012 Eleonore Villarrubia Reply

[Review of Richelieu, by Hilaire Belloc. Gates of Vienna Books, 2006.] Many years ago when I was in college, my history professors explained two theories of how and why a single man can change the course of history. Was the … Continue reading →

Distributism Gets a Plug in Washington Post On Faith Column

Oct 19, 2011 Brian Kelly Reply

Washington Post: Can an Anglican theologian from Britain revive an 80-year-old Catholic social justice theory and provide a solution to America’s economic woes and political polarization? Read full column here.

The Church vs. Economic Liberalism: Ferrara Nails It!

Aug 23, 2010 Robert Boehm 6

[Christopher A. Ferrara, The Church and the Libertarian (Minnesota: The Remnant Press, 2010), $25, 383 pp., soft cover.] Since hearing, a few years ago that Chris Ferrara was preparing this book, I have eagerly looked forward to reading it. I … Continue reading →

The Battleground: Syria and Palestine, the Seed Plot of Religion by Hilaire Belloc

Jul 7, 2010 Eleonore Villarrubia 2

[The Battleground: Syria and Palestine, the Seed Plot of Religion by Hilaire Belloc. Ignatius Press.] Hilaire Belloc, one of my favorite authors, was exceedingly prolific. He wrote one hundred fifty three books of poetry, essays, history, religion, politics, and economics, … Continue reading →

Christmas and the Catholic Thing

Dec 13, 2007 Brother André Marie Reply

The Roman statesman Cato the Elder (234-149 BC) gave us the pithy Latin proverb rem tene verba sequentur, “grasp the thing and the words will follow.” The lesson is this: once you sufficiently grasp the concept you wish to speak … Continue reading →

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