Literary and Cultural Essayist

Edward Short

68 articles 2005–2017

Edward Short is a British-born writer and essayist known for his work on literary, cultural, and religious topics, with particular focus on Catholic intellectual history. He contributed extensively to The Weekly Standard from 2005 to 2017, writing essays and book reviews spanning literature, art, history, and religion. He is the author of several books exploring figures in the English Catholic literary tradition.

Picture Imperfect

March 3, 2017 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In 1970, in a review of Kenneth Clark’s Civilization, John Russell, art critic of the New York Times, grandly prophesied that "the civilization that Clark describes is one which has had its day and will not be seen again." In acknowledging the learned brio with which Clark came to the defense of…

The English Look

January 20, 2017 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In The Pleasures of the Imagination (1997), his study of English culture in the 18th century, John Brewer made a vital point when he argued that, although we might look back on the culture of the Georgians and see an enviable “order, stability and decorum," the Georgians themselves considered it…

Disraeli, Trump, and 'One Nation Conservatism'

November 11, 2016 · Donald Trump, Edward Short, Blog

"Democracy has not saved us from a distinct decline in the standard of our public men," the Liberal prime minister William Gladstone told his biographer, John Morley, towards the end of his life. And he had no doubt that "For all this deterioration one man and one man only is responsible: Disraeli.…

Birth Pains

November 4, 2016 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

No history cries out for revision more insistently than Irish history. And no event in Irish history demonstrates this better than the Easter Rebellion—the centennial of which is now in full throttle—because no event better epitomizes the vexed question of what constitutes Irish identity and Irish…

Critic for Life

August 26, 2016 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

"At the beginning of the 21st century," Edward Mendelson writes in his entry on W. H. Auden in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, "many readers thought it not implausible to judge his work the greatest body of poetry in English of the previous hundred years or more." Even allowing for a…

Heavens on Earth

July 8, 2016 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In 1908, H. L. Mencken was approached by an editor and author named Robert Rives La Monte, who was keen on persuading the 28-year-old Mencken to join him in an epistolary debate about the benefits of socialism: La Monte would argue for and Mencken could argue against. Despite his misgivings,…

The Eliot Shelf

January 29, 2016 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Writing in 1920 of Algernon Swinburne, the appeal of whose enraptured lyricism was not self-evident to the generation that had survived the Great War, T. S. Eliot pronounced, in that marvelously authoritative tone of his, that "it is a question of some nicety to decide how much must be read of any…

Dr. Johnson’s Friend

September 28, 2015 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In his memorable poem “At the Grave of Henry James,” W. H. Auden apostrophized the novelist to make a useful point:

London Calling

June 29, 2015 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

During 1849-50, the author and journalist Henry Mayhew (1812-1887) set about anatomizing the lives of the London poor in a series of 82 articles for the Morning Chronicle, which would eventually lay the groundwork for the greatest study of the English poor ever written, the four-volume London…

Lessons Learned

May 18, 2015 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In the debate about what needs to be done to make university education more coherent and more effective, no figure is cited more frequently than John Henry Newman, whose classic study The Idea of a University (1873) tackles educational questions that still exercise would-be reformers. Some of those…

Dublin’s Fair(?) City

February 23, 2015 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In 1732, Jonathan Swift wrote a friend that, while he had lost all hope of favor with those in power in Dublin, he had won “the love of the Irish vulgar” and inspired “two or three dozen signposts of the Drapier in this city.” Here, he was referring to Dublin’s gratitude for the eloquent stand he…

Here the Word

December 15, 2014 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In William Makepeace Thackeray’s Vanity Fair (1848), Pitt Crawley, Becky Sharp’s first employer, “an old, stumpy, short, vulgar, and very dirty man, in old clothes and shabby old gaiters, who smokes a horrid pipe, and cooks his own horrid supper in a saucepan,” is given a characteristic by his…

Eye of the Beholder

October 27, 2014 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

This deft, revelatory collection opens with a poem about the poet’s mother, in which Richard Greene speaks of shapes of memory from which she can / never turn away. Integral to his own “shapes of memory” is familial love, and Greene, who has written a brilliant critical biography of Edith Sitwell…

Journey’s End?

September 29, 2014 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In this foray into what Hamlet famously styled the “undiscover’d country from whose bourn no traveller returns,” Judy Bachrach looks at recent accounts of those claiming to have returned from the undiscovered country in order to suggest what her readers’—and, indeed, her own—“impending itineraries”…

The Son Also Rises

August 18, 2014 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In his preface to this well-researched and witty retelling of the famous Ampthill Succession case, Bevis Hillier recalls how he chose his subject after researching a proposed Oxford Book of Fleet Street. He went to a dealer of vintage newspapers in Covent Garden and came away with a sheaf of old…

Bertie the Good

June 16, 2014 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

In 1871, when Albert Edward Prince of Wales (1841-1910) and his wife Alexandra lost their youngest child after a premature birth, Queen Victoria advised that they go into prolonged mourning. Bertie’s response exhibited one of the great differences between him and his notoriously woeful mother: 

Action into Words

March 24, 2014 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In 1755, in the preface to A Dictionary of the English Language, Samuel Johnson declared that “the chief glory of every people arises from its authors.” Barely 160 years later, when England entered the First World War, the very notion of glory began to take a beating from which it has never…

Agony of Spirit

December 16, 2013 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

England produced some superb letter-writers in the 19th century: Lord Byron, Emily Eden, John Keats, Charlotte Brontë, and Sydney Smith gave an altogether new charm and expressiveness to the epistolary art. Smith’s letter to his young friend Miss Lucie Austin in 1835 is a good example:

Dispirit of ’76

September 30, 2013 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In his groundbreaking history of the American War of Independence from the British standpoint, The War for America (1964), Piers Mackesy argued, “To understand the war, one must view it with sympathy for the Ministers in their difficulties, and not with the arrogant assumption that because they…

This American World

July 29, 2013 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

If one thing distinguishes all of Conrad Black’s books, from his brilliant biographies of Franklin Roosevelt and Richard Nixon to his impassioned 2011 apologia, A Matter of Principle, it is exuberance. The onetime press magnate takes up nothing that he does not enliven, and by offering readers a…

Cardinal Virtue

June 3, 2013 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

When John Henry Newman died in 1890, English papers around the world singled out different aspects of his life and work for praise or censure, but on one point they were unanimous. As the obituarist of the Colonies and India put it, “We question whether there is a living writer who had a command of…

A Faithful Poet

February 18, 2013 · Edward Short, Magazine, poetry

When John Betjeman was charged with helping find a proper recipient for the Queen’s Gold Medal for Poetry in 1977, he contacted Philip Larkin and suggested Elizabeth Jennings (1926-2001), who had befriended Larkin and Kingsley Amis when they were undergraduates together at Oxford. Larkin considered…

Not So Special

September 24, 2012 · Edward Short, England, Magazine

Not long ago I was in Boston browsing the stacks of that legendary emporium, the Brattle Book Shop, when I chanced upon Winston Spencer Churchill: Servant of Crown and Commonwealth, a collection of tributes to the parliamentarian, war leader, historian, and wit, which his longstanding English…

Original Edith

July 16, 2012 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Does a biography bring any psychological insight to the portrayal of its subject? Does it place its subject in the context of his or her contemporaries? Does it have anything of critical substance to say about its subject? Is it well written? Is it entertaining? Is it animated by that sympathetic…

People of the Book

April 30, 2012 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The popular Victorian novelist and travel writer Georgiana, Lady Chatterton (1806-1876), describing the bafflement she felt when reading the Bible as a girl, recalled how “one governess considered me unteachable, because I could not say the second Psalm by heart, and especially the verse, ‘Why do…

In Shakespeare’s Shadow

March 12, 2012 · Edward Short, Shakespeare, Magazine

On the cover of Ian Donaldson’s new biography of Ben Jonson (1572-1637) there is a portrait of the poet and dramatist by the Flemish painter Abraham van Blyenberch showing him regarding the viewer with amused intentness, as if poised to make some choice rejoinder. Here is the man of the theater,…

Sincerely, T. S. Eliot

December 5, 2011 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In 1909 Henry James took thousands of letters that he had received over the years into his garden at Lamb House in Rye and committed them to a great bonfire. In his last years what time he could spare from refining his ever more rarefied fiction he devoted to confounding his biographers. Indeed, he…

Writer’s Progress

November 7, 2011 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

n 1853, when William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863) made his first lecture tour of America, Boston particularly pleased him because, as he said, its “vast amount of toryism and donnishness” reminded him of Edinburgh. Today, there may be precious little toryism or donnishness left in Boston, but…

Caught in the Web

September 26, 2011 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In 1747, eight years before the publication of his pioneering dictionary, Samuel Johnson wrote that his “chief intent” in compiling his great work was “to preserve the purity and ascertain the meaning of the English idiom,” which he characterized as “the exact and pure idea of a grammatical…

Things Not Seen

August 8, 2011 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

In The Making of the English Working Class, E.P. Thompson famously claimed that he wrote his history to rescue his subjects “from the enormous condescension of posterity.” This did not stop him from saddling his weavers, tailors, croppers, and artisans with aspirations that they would hardly have…

Seeker of Truth

June 27, 2011 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

G. K. Chesterton A Biography by Ian Ker Oxford, 688 pp., $66

Ideas Matter

May 23, 2011 · Edward Short, biography, book reviews

History Man

Speaking of Volumes

March 7, 2011 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Oxford Companion to the Book edited by Michael Suarez & H. R. Woudhuysen Oxford, 1,408 pp., $325

Pick Yourself Up

February 7, 2011 · Edward Short, book reviews, Magazine

Dead End Gene Pool

Saint From Hippo

May 3, 2010 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Augustine of Hippo

It Takes a Visage

December 14, 2009 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Renaissance Faces

The Good Doctor

November 9, 2009 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Samuel Johnson

Gothic Tradition

August 31, 2009 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

God's Architect

'Truth and Metre'

April 13, 2009 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Collected Critical Writings

He Said What?

March 23, 2009 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Oxford Dictionary of Humorous Quotations

Between the Wars

December 29, 2008 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Lights That Failed

Art Under Siege

November 24, 2008 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The National Gallery in Wartime

After the Fox

July 7, 2008 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Blood Sport

Crock of Gold

June 9, 2008 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Luck and the Irish

Fascinating Rhythm

November 19, 2007 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The House That George Built

Below the Surface

October 8, 2007 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Cheating at Canasta

Brains Distrust

May 21, 2007 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Absent Minds

Mum's the Word

May 7, 2007 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

John Osborne

Hands Across the Sea

March 19, 2007 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

A History of the English-Speaking Peoples Since 1900

Bound for Rome

November 6, 2006 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Letters and Diaries of John Henry Newman

The Maritain Way

October 2, 2006 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Jacques & Raissa Maritain

Rhyme without Reason

June 12, 2006 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Oxford Book of American Poetry

Owzat, you say?

April 24, 2006 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

Divided by a Common Language

The Grand Old Man

February 27, 2006 · Edward Short, Magazine, Books and Arts

The Mind of Gladstone