Modern Man
“It is very currently suggested that the modern man is the
heir of all the ages, that he has got the good out of these successive human
experiments. I know not what to say in answer to this, except to ask the reader
to look at the modern man, as I have just looked at the modern man-- in the
looking-glass. Is it really true that you and I are two starry towers built up
of all the most towering visions of the past? Have we really fulfilled all the
great historic ideals one after the other ... ? ...Have we indeed outstripped the
warrior and passed the ascetical saint? I fear we only outstrip the warrior in
the sense that we should probably run away from him. And if we have passed the
saint, I fear we have passed him without bowing.
This is, first and foremost, what I mean by the narrowness
of the new ideas, the limiting effect of the future. Our modern prophetic
idealism is narrow because it has undergone a persistent process of
elimination. We must ask for new things because we are not allowed to ask for
old things. The whole position is based on this idea that we have got all the
good that can be got out of the ideas of the past. But we have not got all the
good out of them, perhaps at this moment not any of the good out of them. And
the need here is a need of complete freedom for restoration as well as
revolution.”
~G. K. Chesterton
Comments