{"id":12958,"date":"2018-11-14T09:57:35","date_gmt":"2018-11-14T14:57:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/?p=12958"},"modified":"2018-11-17T16:33:06","modified_gmt":"2018-11-17T21:33:06","slug":"francisplanet-effeminate-sentimentalists-and-barbarians-theyre-really-just-the-same-vicious-people","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/?p=12958","title":{"rendered":"FRANCISPLANET: EFFEMINATE SENTIMENTALISTS AND BARBARIANS:  THEY&#8217;RE REALLY JUST THE SAME VICIOUS PEOPLE"},"content":{"rendered":"<p style=\"text-align: left;\">Dr. Robert Hickson<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\">\u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 12 October 2018<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: right;\">Our Lady of the Pillar (40 A.D.)<br \/>\nGeneral Robert E. Lee (d. 1870)<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>Sentimentalists and Barbarians:<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>\u00a0Contrasting Thoughts of Hilaire Belloc in 1912 and G.K. Chesterton in 1934<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>\u00a0<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\"><strong>Epigraphs<\/strong><\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cThe Barbarian hopes\u2014and that is the very mark of him\u2014that he can have his cake and eat it too. He will consume what civilisation has slowly produced after generations of selection and effort but he will not be at the pains to replace such goods nor indeed has he a comprehension of the virtue that has brought them into being. Discipline seems to him irrational, on which account he is for ever marvelling that civilisation should have offended him with priests and soldiers.\u201d (Hilaire Belloc, \u201cThe Barbarians,\u201d Chapter XXXII from his anthology <em>This That and the Other<\/em> (1912))<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cThe Barbarian wonders what strange meaning may lurk in the ancient and solemn truth, &#8216;<em>Sine Auctoritate nulla vita<\/em>&#8216; [&#8216;Without Authority there is no life&#8217;].<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cIn a word, the Barbarian is discoverable everywhere in this that he cannot <em>make<\/em>; that he can befog or destroy, but that he cannot sustain; and of every Barbarian in the decline or peril of every civilisation exactly that has been true.\u201d (Hilaire Belloc, \u201cThe Barbarians,\u201d Chapter XXXII from his anthology <em>This That and the Other<\/em> (1912))<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201c<strong>Just lately<\/strong> [around 1933], <strong>and at historical intervals<\/strong>, he [the Teuton] becomes the bear-garden German&#8230;and [I] would prefer to avoid his embrace. For the embraces of bears&#8230;are apt to show that <strong>over-emphasis<\/strong>, or <strong>excess of pressure<\/strong>, which is the fault of the German temperament. Now&#8230;there has been an increasing impression on sensitive and intelligent minds that [as of the 1930s] <strong>something very dangerous has occurred. A particular sort of civilisation has turned back towards barbarism<\/strong>&#8230;.Never be merely on the side of barbarism, for it always means <strong>the destruction<\/strong> of all that men have understood, <strong>by men who do not understand<\/strong> it [also in the Church if there be\u00a0 the crude destruction of Sacred Tradition and Dogma, as is so today]. That is the sense in which<strong> a detached and dispassionate person,<\/strong> <strong>watching that strange turn of the tide in the centre of tribal Germany<\/strong>, <strong>will be disposed to suspect\u00a0 a tragedy<\/strong>.\u201d (G.K. Chesterton, \u201cOn the Return of the Barbarian,\u201dChapter VII from his 1934 anthology <em>Avowals and Denials<\/em> (London: Methuen &amp; Co. LTD., 1934))<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">\u201cOddly that [\u201cracial mass solidified\u201d] is <strong>the advantage<\/strong> of hypnotism [and thus of \u201ca hypnotic faith\u201d]. That is <strong>the charm of illusion and the compelling power of unreality&#8230;.That is the advantage of being a sentimentalist. You only remember what you like to remember. It is also the advantage of being a barbarian<\/strong>&#8230;The danger of the emergence of anything really barbaric in the world is that we do not know what it [or even a pope?] will do next, or where it will turn up at last&#8230;.Now <strong>Barbarism<\/strong> is a beast [like \u201ca runaway horse\u201d], and has the nature of a beast&#8230;.But in all\u00a0 these [varied \u201cmovements among Teutons&#8230;or Turks or Mongols or Slavs\u201d] we can mark <strong>the moment of history<\/strong> when men turned back towards it [\u201cBarbarism\u201d], and delayed for centuries the civilization of mankind. <strong>What is really disquieting about this new note of narrow nationalism and tribalism [in Germany] in the north [Prussia, especially] is that there is something shrill and wild about it<\/strong>, that has been heard in those [earlier] destructive crises of history&#8230;.<strong>All these things have a savour of savage and hasty simplification<\/strong>,&#8230; which, when taken altogether, give <strong>the uncomfortable impression of wild men who have merely grown weary of the complexity that we call civilization<\/strong>.\u201d (G.K. Chesterton, \u201cOn the Return of the Barbarian,\u201d Chapter VII from his 1934 anthology <em>Avowals and Denials<\/em>\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">***<\/p>\n<p>In a posthumously published, undated collection of Hilaire Belloc&#8217;s essays, <em>One Thing and Another<\/em> (1956),<a href=\"#_ftn1\" name=\"_ftnref1\">[1]<\/a> one may alertly note the title of Chapter XXXV\u2014\u201cThe Barbarians\u201d\u2014and rightly see it as a companion piece or a deepened counterpoint to Belloc&#8217;s more widely known and somewhat longer 1912 essay, which is also entitled \u201cThe Barbarians.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>One paragraph from his posthumously published 1956 book will give us, at the outset, a good sense of his lucidity and farsightedness:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">We to-day in what used to be called Christendom are slipping down the same slope [as our Roman ancestors]. <strong>Our leaders become more indifferent to culture, the organized masses grow less susceptible to the leadership of men trained in a high tradition<\/strong>, the area of freedom grows rapidly less, the great mass of men suffer an increasingly servile condition. The relation between the mass of men and their labour is inhuman and the relation between the mass of men and their economic masters has <strong>also lost its own human savour<\/strong>. <strong>Men will accept subjection<\/strong> <strong>when it is connected with loyalty and humour and the air of domesticity; they will not accept it when it is mechanical and therefore hopeless<\/strong>. (204\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>By way of contrast, in 1934, two years before his own death, G.K. Chesterton wrote in his <em>Avowals and Denials<a href=\"#_ftn2\" name=\"_ftnref2\"><strong>[2]<\/strong><\/a><\/em> a set of short sentences that, as is so often the case, have caused others to ponder afresh his subtle and fuller meanings, and his abiding charity\u2014even toward the Germans:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">That is the charm of illusion and the compelling power of unreality&#8230;.That is<strong> the advantage<\/strong> of being a sentimentalist. <strong>You only remember what you like to remember<\/strong>. <strong>It is also the advantage of being a barbarian<\/strong>. (16\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Chesterton&#8217;s use of the word \u201cadvantage\u201d in this context seems to imply a privileged advantage that maneuvers (and even exploits) others, but is nonetheless blinkered and even somewhat constricted. However, Chesterton has here expressed his possible meanings in a politely ironic way. If, perhaps, his \u201cadvantage\u201d likewise subtly implies a dubious and unfair or even a merely temporary advantage, his word \u201cadvantage\u201d further\u00a0 conveys itself as a subtle substitute for the word \u201ctemptation.\u201d That is to say, \u201cTaking unfair advantage is itself an alluring (even permanent) temptation.\u201d (For, a temptation wouldn&#8217;t be a temptation if it weren&#8217;t attractive.) Moreover, not all such attractive \u201cadvantages\u201d are themselves wholesome and presented in proper proportion, just as a tendentiously constricted and over-simplified, armed \u201cideology\u201d is often not very healthy, nor abidingly just. Such armed and all-too-constricted ideologies have also been memorably called\u00a0 those \u201cmind-forged manacles\u201d (as expressed by the poet William Blake in his own verse, entitled \u201cLondon\u201d).<\/p>\n<p>In any case, what has especially prompted me to greater reflection was Chesterton&#8217;s own unusual coupling of\u00a0 \u201cthe sentimentalist\u201d and \u201cthe barbarian.\u201d That has caused me to return, first of all, to Hilaire Belloc&#8217;s essay, \u201cThe Barbarians\u201d (1912), which is to be found in his own pre-World War I anthology, <em>This and That and the Other<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Moreover, in addition to Hilaire Belloc&#8217;s earlier 1912 essay, \u201cThe Barbarians,\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn3\" name=\"_ftnref3\">[3]<\/a> we may also now\u00a0 fruitfully consider, even as an ongoing clarifying contrast,\u00a0 his\u00a0 brief posthumously published 3-page essay, which is also entitled \u201cThe Barbarians.\u201d<a href=\"#_ftn4\" name=\"_ftnref4\">[4]<\/a> Belloc deftly begins his 3-page essay, as follows:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">It is a pity that true history [including ecclesiastical history] is not taught in schools. If it were, People would understand much better the history of what is passing in their own time. For instance, the dangers which are now threatening European civilization are of the same sort <em>in part<\/em> with those which<strong> threatened and at last undermined<\/strong> the old pagan civilization of Rome.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">That civilization was not destroyed by invaders, it was never defeated in a decisive battle. What happened to it was that it was <strong>undermined from within<\/strong> by the very same forces which are <strong>destroying the supports of our own traditional culture<\/strong>. (203\u2014italics in the original; bold emphasis added).<\/p>\n<p>Moreover, says Belloc, as he remains especially loyally attentive to one of his own recurrent themes, namely about the destabilizing binary combination of \u201c<strong>insecurity and insufficiency<\/strong>\u201d:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Those [undermining] forces are <strong>the forces of contrast<\/strong>\u00a0 between well-being and indigence, coupled with the contrast between freedom and servitude [today to include \u201celectronic servitude,\u201d as well] and enforced by the contrast between human and inhuman relations. When a large number of men are compelled to labour by a small number of men, when their labour is passed under inhuman conditions and the sense of servitude inseparable from the <em>enforcement<\/em> of labour in any form, they end by driving <strong>the masses subject to such disabilities<\/strong> to rise against their wrongs. <strong>But in doing this, the rebels [and barbarians] may well act blindly, for the very conditions of their subjection forbid them the culture that would enable them to act wisely<\/strong>. They are <strong>impelled <\/strong>not only by the desire for freedom but <strong>by the hatred of those who exploit them<\/strong> and who enjoy <strong>a freedom of security<\/strong> and substance <strong>denied to themselves<\/strong>. They [such effectively unreconciled and vengefully germinating barbarians] are <strong>filled also with a general hatred; a love of destruction for its own sake<\/strong>. (203\u2014italics in the original; bold emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>In Belloc&#8217;s eyes, such are the inclinations and even the entrenched habits of the recurrent barbarian, as his own circumambient society [in the pagan empire of Rome] \u201cwas accumulating these same evils in its old age.\u201d (203)<\/p>\n<p>Belloc&#8217;s special attentiveness to the organized pagan Roman military institution will help us further understand how the barbarian elements were consequently to develop:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">The <strong>organized armed force upon which everything depended <\/strong>was more and more <strong>recruited from<\/strong> <strong>men not possessed of the full Roman civilization<\/strong>, but either born outside the boundaries of the Empire or settled within them and yet<strong> not fully\u00a0 digested into the general culture<\/strong>. <strong>Soldiers of such a kind tended to take things more and more into their own hands and be officered by people like themselves<\/strong>. The men who watched <strong>the general breakdown of society in the West<\/strong> saw what was passing before them as <strong>a social revolution<\/strong>\u2014and they were right. (204\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Belloc then contrasts our current situation with the tragedy of the ancient decomposition:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">But though the parallel between our present entry into general revolution is singularly like the entry of our fathers into the Dark Ages, <strong>there is one disturbing difference between the two tragic epochs, making our peril far more tragic than theirs<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">This difference does not come from the triumphs of what is called \u201cScience\u201d in the art of destroying mankind, nor does it lie in the use of this or that instrument of war. It was possible to exterminate one&#8217;s fellow beings by the myriad and to unpeople the whole of a vast country when men [like the Mongols] had nothing more than bows and sharp blades to do it with. Mesopotamia was thus destroyed.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">No, <strong>the difference between our father&#8217;s <\/strong>[sic]<strong> entry into their Dark Ages and our own is this<\/strong>:<strong> there inhabited<\/strong> [in] an increasing number of men during the fourth and fifth centuries [A.D.] <strong>a certain spirit or philosophy<\/strong> which was capable of saving all that could be saved of the old culture. <strong>There was a new religion abroad<\/strong> [<em>i.e<\/em>., the Catholic Faith]&#8211;<strong>well-organized, universal, and definitive<\/strong>. By <strong>this instrument<\/strong> [<em>i.e<\/em>., the Sacramental Catholic Church, also an <em>Ecclesia Militans<\/em>] our civilization was saved half-way down the slope. It did not recover the fullness of its ancient [pagan] glory, <strong>but it survived and rose again after a long ordeal<\/strong> of nearly five hundred years. The eleventh century was a daybreak, and the twelfth was a morning, and the thirteenth was a glorious day. (204-205\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Hilaire Belloc will now end his articulate perceptive insights with a somewhat bleak and sobering assessment of the dimming down of the ancient Traditional Faith and that yet very robust Faith&#8217;s own abiding challenge to all of us still:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">We [of the West] have with us now no such saving influence. There is, indeed,<strong> a sort of new miasmic philosophy drifting about<\/strong> [as is so with the syncretistic ecumenisms?],<strong> but morally it is of the basest [sort] and intellectually contemptible, not even capable of definition<\/strong>. It will not be able to insure its own survival as a mood [much less as a conviction!], let alone the survival of <strong>our inheritance<\/strong> [to include our sacred inheritance]. You may see its fruits in the works of modern men: their building, their daubs [<em>i.e<\/em>., their purported arts of painting], their <strong>obscenity<\/strong> of prose, their <strong>deafness<\/strong> to harmony and rhythm, <strong>and their blindness to beauty<\/strong>. We of to-day have no chance of survival, save by reaction, <strong>by the restoration of ancestral things<\/strong> [hence divinely\u00a0 revealed Sacred Tradition]. But among these [restorations] we must include <strong>a passion for social justice<\/strong> and an establishment of human relations between man and man. <strong>Otherwise we shall not only perish but perish in hypocrisy, and therefore despair<\/strong>. (205\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Although we are not sure when Belloc first composed his fine three-page essay posthumously published in 1956, we are certain\u00a0 that he published his ten-page article on \u201cThe Barbarians\u201d two years before the outbreak of World War I. From this latter composition of 1912 we also have much to learn.<\/p>\n<p>Belloc often openly said that for us human beings \u201ctruth resides largely in proportion.\u201d Therefore, we should not be surprised to find that, in the opening sentence of his 1912 essay and with\u00a0 his characteristic integrity, Belloc uses the more abstract word for \u201cproportion,\u201d <em>i.e<\/em>.,\u201canalogy\u201d (273):<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>The use of analogy<\/strong> [Greek and Latin \u201c<em>analogia,<\/em>\u201d that is to say, \u201cproportion\u201d], which is so wise and necessary a thing <strong>in historical judgment<\/strong>, has <strong>a knack of slipping<\/strong> into the falsest forms. (273\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Then Belloc aptly discusses \u201cthe Barbarian invasions\u201d (273) into the Roman lands and Empire:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">When ancient civilisation broke down its breakdown was accompanied by the <strong>infiltration<\/strong> of barbaric <strong>auxiliaries<\/strong> into the Roman armies, by the <strong>settlement<\/strong> of Barbarians (probably in small numbers) upon Roman land, and, in some provinces, by <strong>devastating<\/strong>, though not usually permanent, <strong>irruptions<\/strong> of barbaric hordes.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">The presence of<strong> those foreign elements<\/strong>, coupled with the <strong>gradual<\/strong> loss of so many arts, led men to speak of \u201cthe Barbarian invasions\u201d <strong>as though<\/strong> they were the <strong>principal cause <\/strong>of what was <strong>in reality<\/strong> no more than <strong>the old age and fatigue of an antique society<\/strong>. (273\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Belloc then applies this brief insight to our actual situation in Europe as of 1912:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Upon the model of this conception [of the illusory and the true causes of a larger peril], men, <strong>watching the dissolution <\/strong>of our own civilisation to-day [1912], <strong>or at least its corruption<\/strong>, have asked themselves whence those Barbarians would come that should complete its <strong>final ruin<\/strong>&#8230;.For <strong>though<\/strong> the <strong>degradation<\/strong> of human life in the great industrial cities of England and the United States was <strong>not<\/strong> <strong>a cause<\/strong> of our decline, it was <strong>very certainly a symptom<\/strong> of it [of our decline]. Moreover, industrial society, notably in this country [of England] <strong>and in Germany<\/strong>, while increasing rapidly in numbers, is <strong>breeding steadily from the worst and most degraded types<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>But the truth is<\/strong> that no such mechanical explanation will suffice to set forth the causes of a civilisation&#8217;s decay.(273-274\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>A related insight, perhaps another helpful analogy, might be: \u201c<strong>There are no technical solutions to moral problems.<\/strong>\u201d But now our Belloc, in pursuit of some of the true causes, will employ another analogy, as it were: the metaphor of<strong> a slowly weakened immune system<\/strong>. It is, for sure, \u201ca terrible thing to think upon\u201d (Rabelais) when one candidly beholds\u2014as is the case today\u2014<strong>an ongoing\u00a0 and self-sabotaging \u201ccultural immune system.\u201d<\/strong> For, such self-sabotage constitutes a \u201c<strong>provocative<\/strong> weakness\u201d (Fritz Kraemer) and it becomes a tacit invitation and allure to the barbarians from without, and from within.\u00a0 Such is also the current situation (and plight) of the Roman Catholic Church.<\/p>\n<p>Belloc continues his consideration of the deeper causes of a civilization&#8217;s decay, and as well as some corrective remedies:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>Before<\/strong> <strong>the<\/strong> <strong>barbarian in any form can appear<\/strong> <strong>in it<\/strong> [<em>i.e.<\/em>, in a specific civilization], it must already have weakened. If it cannot absorb or reject <strong>an alien element<\/strong> it is because its organism has grown enfeebled, and its powers of digestion and excretion are lost or deteriorated; <strong>and whoever would restore any society which menaces to fall<\/strong>, must busy himself about <strong>the inward nature of that society<\/strong> [to include a religious society, such as the Jesuits and the larger Holy See] much more than about its external dangers or the merely mechanical and numerical <strong>factors of peril<\/strong> to be discovered within it.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Whenever we look for \u201cthe barbarians,\u201d&#8230;we are [often] looking rather for <strong>a visible effect<\/strong> of disease than for its source.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">None the less to mark those visible effects is instructive, and without <strong>some conspectus<\/strong> of them it will be impossible to diagnose the disease. A modern man may, therefore, well ask where the [Modernist?] barbarians are that shall enter into <strong>our inheritance<\/strong>, or whose triumphs [over the doctrinal and liturgical Sacred Tradition?] shall, if it be permitted, at least <strong>accompany<\/strong>, even if they cannot <strong>effect<\/strong>, <strong>the destruction of Christendom<\/strong>.(275-276\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>It should be remembered that Hilaire Belloc wrote these words during the anti-Modernist Reign of Pope Pius X (1903-1914).<\/p>\n<p>Belloc then chooses to clarify a little more the concept and the reality of \u201cChristendom\u201d:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">With that word \u201cChristendom\u201d a chief part of the curious speculation [about the fact of civilizational decay] is <strong>at once<\/strong> suggested. Whether the scholar hates or loves, rejects or adopts, ridicules or admires, <strong>the religious creed of Europe<\/strong>, he must, in any case, recognise two prime historical truths. The first is that <strong>that creed which we call the\u00a0 Christian religion was the soul and meaning of European civilisation<\/strong> <strong>during the period of its active and united existence<\/strong>. The second [historical truth] is that <strong>wherever<\/strong>\u00a0 <strong>the religion<\/strong> <strong>characteristic of<\/strong> <strong>a people has<\/strong> <strong>failed to react against its own decay<\/strong> and has <strong>in some last catastrophe<\/strong> perished, <strong>then<\/strong> that people has lost, <strong>soon after<\/strong>, its <strong>corporate<\/strong> existence&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>Christendom was Christian, not by accident or superficially, but in a formative connection<\/strong>&#8230;.It is equally true that <strong>a sign and probably a cause<\/strong> of a society&#8217;s end is <strong>the dissolution of that causative moral thing, its philosophy or creed<\/strong>. (276-277\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>After his remarks about the former \u201creligious creed of Europe,\u201d he becomes more specific about Europe&#8217;s vulnerability and plight in the year 1912:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Now here we discover the <strong>first<\/strong> mark of the Barbarian.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Note that in <strong>the peril<\/strong> of English society today [as of 1912] <strong>there is no positive alternative to the ancient philosophical tradition of Christian Europe<\/strong>. It [the current English society] has to meet <strong>nothing more substantive<\/strong> than a series of negations, often contradictory [as with the subtle Hegelian Dialectic], but all <strong>allied in their repugnance to a fixed certitude in morals<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">So far has this <strong>process<\/strong> gone [as in the Catholic Church today, in 2018] that to be writing as I am here in public, <strong>not even defending the creed of Christendom, but postulating its historic place<\/strong>, and pointing out that the considerable attack now carried on against it [<em>i.e.<\/em>, the Christian Creed] is symptomatic\u00a0 of the dissolution of our society, has about it something temerarious and odd. (277-278\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>We are then asked to look at, and also allowed to consider, some of the \u201csecondary effects\u201d and other principles (or causes) of\u00a0 disorder or dissolution, especially to \u201cconsider how certain <strong>root institutions native to the long development of Europe<\/strong> [<em>e.g.<\/em>, <strong>Marriage<\/strong> and <strong>Property<\/strong>, to include the possibility of <strong>Private<\/strong> Property] <strong>and to her<\/strong> [arguably unique] <strong>individuality<\/strong> are the subject of attack, and [we should] note <strong>the nature<\/strong> of the attack.\u201d (278\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Belloc&#8217;s argumentation and propositions continue<strong>,<\/strong> as follows, especially about one&#8217;s effectively accepting and inwardly appropriating the criteria, often the very language, of the attacker or subverter:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">It is certain that <strong>if the fundamental institutions of a polity are no longer regarded as fundamental<\/strong> by its citizens, that polity is about to pass through the total change which\u00a0 in a living organism we call death&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Our peril is <strong>not<\/strong> that certain men attack the one or the other [<em>i.e.<\/em>, upon property or marriage] and deny <strong>their moral right to exist<\/strong>. <strong>Our peril is rather that<\/strong>, quite as much as those who attack, <strong>those who defend [them] seem to take for granted the relativeness, the artificiality, the non-fundamental character of the institution<\/strong> which they are <strong>apparently<\/strong> [but lukewarmly?] <strong>concerned to support<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>See how marriage is defended<\/strong> [in 1912, to boot!]. To those who <strong>would<\/strong> destroy it under the plea of its inconveniences and tragedies, the answer is <strong>no longer<\/strong> made that, good or ill, it is an absolute and intangible. <strong>The<\/strong> [often tepid and lax] <strong>answer made [to the potential destroyers of marriage] is that it is convenient, or useful, or necessary, or merely traditional<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Most significant of all, <strong>the terminology of the attack is on the lips of the defense<\/strong>, but the contrary is never the case. Those opponents of marriage&#8230;will never use the term \u201csacrament,\u201d<strong> yet how many for whom marriage is still a sacrament will forgo the pseudo-scientific jargon of their opponents?<\/strong> (278-280\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>After his few further points of lucid discussion about\u00a0 \u201cthe threat against property\u201d (280) and about those who believe themselves \u201csuperior to reason\u201d (281) and thus\u00a0 \u201cfree to maintain that definition, limit, quantity and contradiction are little things which he [\u201cthe Barbarian\u201d] has outgrown\u201d (281), Belloc will give us two very discerning and memorable paragraphs:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>The Barbarian hopes\u2014and that is the very mark of him [and also the mark of the Sentimentalist!]\u2014that he can have his cake and eat it too<\/strong>. He will <strong>consume<\/strong> what civilisation has <strong>slowly<\/strong> produced <strong>after generation of selection and effort<\/strong> [as with the cultivation of a great musical culture and enduring literature, and good wine and cheese, or the well-rooted vines of olives] but he will not be at the pains to replace such goods nor indeed\u00a0 has he a comprehension of <strong>the virtue that has brought them into being<\/strong>. <strong>Discipline seems to him irrational<\/strong>, on which account he is for ever marvelling that civilisation should have <strong>offended him with priests and soldiers<\/strong>&#8230;.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\"><strong>In a word<\/strong>, the Barbarian is <strong>discoverable everywhere<\/strong> in this that he <strong>cannot<\/strong><em> make<\/em>; that <strong>he can befog or destroy, but that he cannot sustain<\/strong>; and of every Barbarian <strong>in the decline or peril <\/strong>of every civilisation [and even of even the Catholic Church?] exactly that [crippled and parasitic manifestation of incapacity] has been true. (281-282\u2014italics in the original; my bold emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Belloc concludes his searching and sobering essay with the following words:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">He [the Barbarian], I repeat, is not an agent, but merely a symptom. <strong>It is not he [the Barbarian] in his impotence that can discover the power to disintegrate the great and ancient body of Christendom<\/strong>, but <strong>if<\/strong> we come to see him triumphant we may be certain that that [weakened] body [of Christendom]&#8230;is <strong>furnishing him with sustenance and forming for him a congenial soil<\/strong>\u2014and that is [or would be!] as much as to say that we are dying. (283\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>May the cultural immune system and the human elements of the Church Militant and the\u00a0 <em>Corpus Christi Mysticum<\/em> today (in 2018) not be so weakened and destructively self-sabotaging, as if we are dealing with a subtle \u201cauto-immune disease.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>May G.K. Chesterton&#8217;s own characteristic charity and insights refresh us now at the end of our\u00a0 essay&#8217;s presentation, also of\u00a0 his \u201cOn the Return of the Barbarian\u201d and on the Barbarian&#8217;s own recurrently discoverable and minatory traits:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">That is the [sound] sense in which <strong>a detached and dispassionate person<\/strong>, watching that strange turn of the tide [in all of Germany itself after the vengefully unjust\u00a0 28 June 1918\u00a0 Treaty of Versailles and even condignly continuing up to the early 1930s] in the centre of <strong>tribal<\/strong> Germany, <strong>will be disposed to suspect tragedy<\/strong>. The Germans have done many things that many of us may think right, <strong>but there is nothing to hold them back from doing anything\u00a0 that all of us think wrong<\/strong>&#8230;.<strong>The danger of the emergence of anything really barbaric in the world is that we do not know what it will do next, or where it will turn up at last<\/strong>; just as we do not know whether a runaway horse will be stopped [or where]&#8230;.<strong>What is really disquieting<\/strong> about this new note of <strong>narrow nationalism or tribalism<\/strong> in the north [especially Prussia] is that there is <strong>something shrill and wild about it<\/strong>, that has been heard in those destructive crises in history. There are<strong> many marks<\/strong> by which anybody of historical imagination can recognize the recurrence [of barbarism]&#8230;\u2014all these things have <strong>a savour of savage and hasty simplification<\/strong>, which, &#8230;when taken altogether give an uncomfortable impression of wild [though at times very disciplined!] <strong>men who have merely grown weary of the complexity<\/strong> that we call civilization. (17-18\u2014Chapter VII\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>In his essay, Chesterton first introduced us to these grave developments with politeness and with charitable charm, not with any stridency nor depreciative condescension:<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">The common garden German may be described as a beer-garden German. <strong>As such I love and embrace him<\/strong>. Just lately, and at historic intervals, he becomes a bear-garden German. <strong>As such I regard him with a love more mystical and distant<\/strong>, and would prefer to avoid his embrace. For the embraces of bears, even in the most festive and&#8230;illuminated bear-gardens, are apt to show <strong>that over-emphasis, or excess of pressure, which is the fault of the German temperament<\/strong>.<\/p>\n<p style=\"padding-left: 30px;\">Now, ever since Herr Hitler began to turn the beer-garden into a bear-garden [in the 1920s and early 1930s], there has been <strong>an increasing impression on sensitive and intelligent minds that something dangerous has occurred<\/strong>. <strong>A particular sort of civilization has turned back towards barbarism<\/strong>&#8230;.But that is <strong>the advantage of hypnotism<\/strong>. That is <strong>the charm of illusion<\/strong> and <strong>the compelling power of unreality<\/strong>. The Germans, not being realistic [here], have already forgotten that they were defeated ten\u00a0 years ago [in World War I]; but they still remember vividly that they were victorious [against Austria and then France some] fifty years ago [circa 1860-1870].<strong> That is the advantage of being a sentimentalist. You only [selectively] remember what you like to remember. It is also the advantage of being a barbarian<\/strong>. (16-17\u2014my emphasis added)<\/p>\n<p>Just as Belloc said that the Barbarian effectively wants his cake and wants to eat his cake concurrently, too, he is also shown to deny or defy, quite emotionally, the foundational \u201cprinciple of non-contradiction,\u201d as does the subversive, occult Hegelian Dialectic. If something is itself and is not itself at the same time, then what is an identity? Thus the revolutionary slogan:\u201c<em>Solve et coagula<\/em>.\u201d<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: center;\">&#8211;Finis&#8211;<\/p>\n<p>\u00a9 2018 Robert D. Hickson<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref1\" name=\"_ftn1\">[1]<\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 Hilaire Belloc, \u201cThe Barbarians,\u201d in <em>One Thing and Another<\/em> (London: Hollis &amp; Carter, 1956), pages 203-205 (Chapter XXXV). See\u00a0 also Hilaire Belloc, \u201cThe Barbarians,\u201d in <em>This That and the Other<\/em> (1912), pages 273-283 (Chapter\u00a0 XXXII).<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref2\" name=\"_ftn2\">[2]<\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 G.K. Chesterton, \u201cOn the Return of the Barbarian,\u201d Chapter VII of his book, <em>Avowals and Denials<\/em> (London: Methuen &amp; Co. LTD., 1934), pp.16-18. Page references will be placed above in the main body of this text, in parentheses.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref3\" name=\"_ftn3\">[3]<\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 See H. Belloc, <em>This and That and The Other<\/em> (Freeport, New York: Books for Libraries Press, 1968\u2014an exact reprint of Belloc&#8217;s original 1912 book). Belloc&#8217;s essay \u201cThe Barbarians\u201d is to be found in Chapter XXXII, on pages 273-283. All future references to this text will be placed in parentheses above in the main body of this essay.<\/p>\n<p><a href=\"#_ftnref4\" name=\"_ftn4\">[4]<\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 See Hilaire Belloc, \u201cThe Barbarians,\u201d which is to be found Chapter XXXV of his anthology, <em>One Thing and Another <\/em>(London: Hollis &amp; Carter, 1956). This 1956 book is subtitled \u201cA Miscellany from his Uncollected Essays selected by Patrick Cahill.\u201d All further references will be from this text\u2014pages 203-205\u2014and placed in parentheses in the main body of this essay above.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Dr. Robert Hickson \u00a0\u00a0 \u00a0 \u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0 12 October 2018 Our Lady of the Pillar (40 A.D.) General Robert E. Lee (d. 1870) &nbsp; Sentimentalists and Barbarians: \u00a0Contrasting Thoughts of Hilaire Belloc in 1912 and G.K. Chesterton in 1934 \u00a0 Epigraphs \u201cThe Barbarian hopes\u2014and that is the very mark of him\u2014that he can have his cake <span class=\"ellipsis\">&hellip;<\/span> <span class=\"more-link-wrap\"><a href=\"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/?p=12958\" class=\"more-link\"><span>Read More &rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"nf_dc_page":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-12958","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12958","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=12958"}],"version-history":[{"count":18,"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12958\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":13047,"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12958\/revisions\/13047"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=12958"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=12958"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/stumblingblock.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=12958"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}