People considered Joseph Hilaire Pierre René Belloc, French-born British writer, as a master of light English prose and also knew widely his droll verse, especially The Bad Child's Book of Beasts in 1896.
Sharp wit of Hilaire Belloc, an historian, poet, and orator, extended across literary output and strong political and religious convictions. Oxford educated this distinguished debater and scholar. Throughout his career, he prolifically across a range of genres and produced histories, essays, travelogues, poetry, and satirical works.
Cautionary Tales for Children collects best humorous yet dark morals, and historical works of Hilaire Belloc often reflected his staunch Catholicism and critique of Protestant interpretations. He led advocates of an economic theory that promotes and championed distribution of small-scale property ownership as a middle ground between capitalism and socialism alongside Gilbert Keith Chesterton, his close friend.
In politics, Hilaire Belloc served as a member of Parliament for the Liberal party, but the establishment disillusioned him. His polemical style and strong opinions made a controversial figure, who particularly viewed modernism, secularism, and financial capitalism as threats to traditional Christian society in his critiques.
Influence and vast literary legacy of Hilaire Belloc extends into historical circles. Erudition, humor, and a forceful rhetorical style characterized intellectual vigor and unique perspective, which people continue to study and to appreciate, on history, society, and human nature.
Belloc was a quirky writer in every respect, from his erratic use of capitalization to his dropping of historic references by obscure handles to his intriguing condensation of historical struggles along axes quite orthogonal to your typical Whig and sub-Whig historian. This period turns out to be a crucial one for Belloc's understanding of economic history, since it is the time that the oligarchy of the rich took final control in England, while in France it was staved off for a long time.
It's also fascinating to get his reaction to the world of the late 1930s, and the comment that the American Presidency is the most powerful monarchy in the modern world is surely more true now than then. To pull him and Chesterton into the 1970s, or 80s, or today, and see their reading of how the world has continued to evolve would be most entertaining, to say nothing of instructive.
There has surely been some large number of television treatments of Louis XIV's reign, although I doubt this book has ever served as a basis for any of them. There are seven or ten seasons' worth of material, and Belloc's interpretation of it would be both punctuated with dramatic episodes and driven by clear sympathetic goals: squashing the usurers (Fouquet et al.), securing the frontiers, temptation-fall-redemption with Montespan, etc. Then, of course, the whole Dumas corpus is available to steal from as needed...
Here I will just say this book moves me profoundly. Perhaps it is even changing my life. It is certainly shaping everything I am doing at my website ...