I have troubles referring to GKC as a journalist. When I hear “journalist,” I think "Kolchak.” I’m not the only person who has grappled with the label. Paul Johnson wrote in the Winter 2002 Chesterton Review:
A “highly unprofessional journalist.” That seems apt. It’s not fair to say he wasn’t a journalist, just because he didn’t engage in the muckraking of his era or doesn’t resemble the shoe hounds of today. After all, he was a denizen of that hotbed of journalism, Fleet Street, his biographer Michael Coren noting that “most of the mythology about Gilbert had its origins in Fleet Street,” and that “Fleet Street was his domain, and he was as much a part of it as the El Vino and Cheshire Cheese watering holes which he frequented.”
It might be correct to say that GKC was an op-ed writer. That, after all, is what he wrote: opinion pieces by the truck-full, especially for the Illustrated London News. He landed that weekly column gig in 1905 and would do it for over thirty years, publishing over 1,600 columns. They paid him 350 pounds annually (which, using the calculation explained last week, would equal about $35,000 today). The assignment gave him financial stability and continued access to the leisure that allowed him to create some of the finest books of the early twentieth century.
Even if he isn’t properly considered a journalist, we can be grateful that the journals of his day thought him worthy of the title.
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Chesterton was a "journalist ... the chief of that trade," that is, someone who thought that telling the truth to anyone who could read was itself the most worthwhile of enterprises. “The journalist is the man who discovers the truth about important happenings affecting his country in the world even as they happen, and who, having discovered the truth, proclaims it in such a fashion that his fellows shall know it too.”
That passage from Belloc is one my friend William Burleigh at Scripps-Howard would like very much. Chesterton did have the uncanny ability to discover the roots of ultimate things in the happenings of every day events which often ceased to be merely ephemeral through his very words.
But Belloc feared that such writing the truth in the press could not be heard in his land. Belloc compared Chesterton to Samuel Johnson. "Dr. Johnson telling some truth was heard by all the
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