Words Worth Noting - April 15, 2026

“The first impulse of an enlightened person on hearing the proposal to broadcast the debates of Parliament is merely that it is one of the typical triumphs of modern science. It is telling us that everybody can listen to what nobody wants to hear.”

G.K. Chesterton in Illustrated London News April 5, 1925, quoted in “Radio (and TV and Movies)” in Gilbert: the Magazine of the Society of G.K. Chesterton Vol. 28 #3 (Jan./Feb. 2025)

Words Worth Noting - April 14, 2026

“he was the very personification of the cad who haunts the racecourse and who lives not so much by his own wits as by the lack of them in others.”

Baroness Orczy “The York Mystery” in Alan K. Russell, ed., Rivals of Sherlock Holmes

Words Worth Noting - April 9, 2026

“The inclination here was to regard the war as a form of art, as a superior representation of life: only when mankind recognized that salvation lay in aesthetic values, in the symbolism of life and death, and not in sterile social norms, would the horror and sadness have meaning and be overcome. As evocation, as an instrument of change, the war had a positive purpose – that was the judgment of many artists, at least early on. The most radical artistic response to the war came from a group of people who made a complete break with traditional loyalties and gathered in neutral Zürich in 1915 to found there the Dada idea – if one can speak of this nihilistic manifestation as an idea. The cohort had an international flavor but its core was German.”

Modris Eksteins Rites of Spring: The Great War and the Birth of the Modern Era