Browse by...
Title
Author
Subject
Go directly to the...
Catalogue
Main Page

Return to...
  Home page
  What's New
  Catalogue
  About IHS
  IHS News
  Contact IHS


Click here at any time
to see the contents
of your shopping cart.
 Home > Catalogue > Book detail


Copies of William Cobbett
ship within 3 business days.


Shipping/handling by U.S. Postal Media Mail:
$5.50 for first copy and $1.50 each add'l.

*IMPORTANT NOTE REGARDING E-BOOKS:
E-books will be delivered by email or other method for transfering large files upon receipt of a paid order, similar to how paper products are shipping. When our new website comes online we envision being able to offer download of electronic-format books immediately upon checkout.


William Cobbett
by G. K. Chesterton
foreword by Stewart Weaver | introduction by James Bemis
Page count:
Trim size:
Edition:
160
5.5” x 8.5”
first
Imprint: IHS Press
LCCN: 2009048655
Publication date: May 2009
First published by: Hodder and Stoughton, Ltd., London
First published in: 1925
format/ISBNprice click to order*
paperback /
9781932528466
18.95
PDF /
9781605700625
9.95

William Cobbett was one man, but his impact on the English society of his day was equivalent to that of a movement. Former and current biographers have portrayed him as a political journalist or rabble-rouser whose relevance was to his day alone. Chesterton, on the other hand, puts paid to that notion, and does so succinctly. He shows that Cobbett was more than a political journalist: he was, rather, a man with a vision of restoring to its rightful place of prominence and centrality the rural aspects of English life and culture. This was a vision, moreover, that Cobbett attempted to follow in his daily life, and not merely sketch out for some uncertain future. As such, he was what might be called a genuine rural reformer. Second, Chesterton shows that Cobbett had far wider interests than just journalism, and he goes on to look at some of the main aspects of Cobbett’s life which have been skimmed over by too many academics lacking perspective and intuition. Finally, Chesterton’s work demonstrates the continuity between the concerns of Cobbett and his day and those of Chesterton and his. Indeed, it feels almost at times as if the two could well have been the same man, living and writing in two different ages. Both the subject of the biography, in fact, and its author received much the same public reception calumny, abuse, and accusations of irrelevancy from powerful figures, contrasted with gratitude and support from those whose lives were being crushed out by modernist forces. And yet their names both live on, frequently in the same breath.

Foreword —Stewart Weaver, Ph.D.

Introduction –James Bemis

I. The Revival of Cobbett

II. A Self-Made Man

III. The Tragedy of the Patriot

IV. Revolution and the Bones of Paine

V. The Amateur Historian

VI. The Rural Rider

VII. Last Days and Death

  • editors’ annotations

  • Attention bookstores: call or e-mail today for orders in
    quantity with the standard trade paperback discount:
    IHS Press
    222 W 21st St. Suite F-122
    Norfolk, VA 23517
    877-IHS-PRES (877.447.7737)
    query@ihspress.com