Poems List

It is often a mistake to combine two pleasures, because pleasures, like pains, can act as counter-irritants to each other.
2
The true object of all human life is play. Earth is a task garden; heaven is a playground.
3
They also serve who only stand wait for the two-fif- teen [train].
4
Your next-door neighbour ... is not a man; he is an environment. He is the barking of a dog; he is the noise of a pianola; he is a dispute about a party wall; he is drains that are worse than yours, or roses that are better than yours.
4
Modern nature-worship is all upside down. Trees and fields ought to be the ordinary things; terraces and temples ought to be extraordinary. I am on the side of the man who lives in the country and wants to go to London.
3
The greenhorn is the ultimate victor in everything; it is he that gets the most out of life.
4
The Museum is not meant either for the wanderer to see by accident or for the pilgrim to see with awe. It is meant for the mere slave of a routine of self-education to stuff himself with every sort of incongruous intellectual food in one indigestible meal.
3
If there is one thing worse than the modern weakening of major morals it is the modern strengthening of minor morals.
3
The miser is the man who starves himself, and everybody else, in order to worship wealth in its dead form, as distinct from its living form.
2
The martyr endured tortures to affirm his belief in truth but he never asserted his disbelief in torture.
4

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Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874-1936) was one of the most prolific and influential intellectuals in early 20th-century England. His work spans poetry, fiction (notably the Father Brown stories), essays, criticism, and Christian apologetics. Chesterton was a master of paradox and aphorism, using his wit and intelligence to defend conservative ideas and the Christian faith. His personality was as striking as his writing; he was described as a portly man, with a jovial appearance and a brilliant, inquisitive mind. He fought against what he saw as the decline of rational and spiritual thought in modern society, advocating for traditional values and human dignity.