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Our Captain, Kirk.(Russell Kirk)

National Review

| June 16, 2003 | Person, James E., Jr. | COPYRIGHT 2003 National Review, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

Looking back on past triumphs is a good thing, especially during times of uncertainty and jolting change. At a time of recession, terrorism, and the fearful realities of war, glancing back a half-century seems to take one back to a time that now seems colorless and tame. Weren't the 1950s the age of "the man in the gray flannel suit," a time when the mood of the United States was by and large conservative -- perhaps excessively so?

As Russell Kirk would say: nay, not so. In the 1950s, liberal statism bestrode the nation like a colossus, triumphant and in command of the foreseeable future, and conservatism was struggling into existence. While many Americans possessed a commonsensical, Reader's Digest form of gut-level conservatism, they were voiceless. In the public sphere, conservative writings were widely mocked as wellsprings of bigotry and antiquarian fanaticism.

Such charges are still leveled, but they sound increasingly shrill, hollow, and silly. What a difference 50 years can make -- and in the history of the postwar conservative movement, the early years of that half-century spelled the difference between living and languishing. "Incredible as it may seem, in 1950 the great intellectual tradition properly described as 'conservative' had no recognized interpreter or spokesman," wrote former National Review publisher William Rusher. "That omission was brilliantly rectified in 1953 by the publication of Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind. In this and subsequent books, Kirk revived the basic principles of conservatism, in particular as laid down by Edmund Burke, and applied them to modern America. Within five years, together with the principles of free-market economics, they had become the warp and woof of conservatism as we know it today."

That's quite a claim, but it is true: The year 1950 indeed saw no hope for the rise of anything resembling a movement among the ranks of America's anti-Communists, traditionalists, and libertarians. But over the next three years, three books appeared that drew together the scattered men and women of the Right and helped forge it into a living political force: William F. Buckley Jr.'s God and Man at Yale (1951), Whittaker Chambers's Witness (1952), and Kirk's great work.

In The Conservative Mind, Kirk -- who contributed a regular column to NR for 25 years and was described by Buckley as "this terribly mature, polished, knowledgeable student of American and European history" -- outlined the principles and key figures in the Anglo-American tradition "from Burke to Santayana" (the book's subtitle, changed in later editions to "from Burke to Eliot"). In doing so, he gave the modern conservative movement its pedigree and much of its definition.

But The Conservative Mind is much more than an artifact to be revered. It is a document that still speaks in ringing tones today, thanks chiefly to its author's articulate reminders that man is much more than a political and economic creature; he is also a spiritual being, who seeks meaning and purpose that cannot be found in wealth and comfort alone. He is a being in need of wise traditions and a sense of rootedness, what George Santayana termed "the old faiths, the old governments, the old economies, the old buildings, the old loves and loyalties." Man, despite his bent toward error and sin, is beloved by his Creator and meant for eternity. He is a player in the drama of history and part of a community of ...

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