Words Worth Noting - February 23, 2026

“One who excels in traveling leaves no wheel tracks;/ One who excels in speech makes no slips;/ One who excels in reckoning uses no counting rods;/ One who excels in shutting uses no bolts yet what he has shut cannot be opened;/ One who excels in tying uses no cords yet what he has tied cannot be undone.”

Lao Tzu I.XXVII.60

Words Worth Noting - February 22, 2026

“The Hero does not regard the forest in which the dragon lurks as evil. Nor do I. I find that the world is on the whole a very jolly place, with inns and good fellowship. But try to justify the distinction: the good forest, the evil dragon; and you must have a philosophy.”

G.K. Chesterton in an interview with W.R. Titterton, in Titterton’s GKC: A Portrait (1936), the first Chesterton biography, reprinted in part at least in Gilbert: The Magazine of the Society of G.K. Chesterton Vol. 28 #6 (July/August 2025)

Words Worth Noting - February 21, 2026

“This is hilarious. Anti-Israel whack jobs shut down Ottawa’s Pride Parade… that’s not the hilarious part (tho it’s fun to watch intersectional rock paper scissors)…the hilarious part is @globeandmail headline: ‘Pride parade cancelled after *coinciding* with pro-Palestine rally’”

Jonathan Kay on X 24/8/25 [https://x.com/jonkay/status/1959774800488153489] (my favourite bit being “intersectional rock paper scissors”)

Words Worth Noting - February 20, 2026

“The division now is between those who want Western Civilization to continue and those who don’t... this is the moment when the West will either pull itself together or go over the edge of the cultural cliff.”

Melanie Phillips in The Builder’s Stone: How Jews and Christians Built the West – and Why Only They Can Save It, quoted by Chuck Chalberg reviewing the book in Gilbert: The Magazine of the Society of G.K. Chesterton Vol. 28 #6 (July/August 2025)

Words Worth Noting - February 19, 2026

“Much history-telling casts our ancestors as stupid or villainous, who deserve our pity and scorn accordingly. This helps us swallow contemporary notions of ourselves, which are unheroic and uninteresting.”

Christopher Jolliffe “The Attack on ANZAC Day” in Dorchester Review #32 (Vol. 15 #2 Summer 2025)