(May 29, 1874–June 14, 1936), was a modern British poets and novelists. His fondness of paradox is seen in his great works: Heretics; Orthodoxy; Outline of Sanity; All Is Grist; and All I Survey. In English Men of Letters, Chesterton wrote very enlightening sketches about both Browning and Dickens. In What’s Wrong with the World, 1910, Gilbert Keith Chesterton wrote:
The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried.3217