In the first chapter of his work,
entitled “Kirk and the Rebirth of American Conservatism,” Wes provided an
excellent survey of Kirk’s plea for the return to traditional concepts of
political order and power. The
description of Kirk’s education experiences was alluring, and at my insistence,
he included Kirk’s private reading as an undergraduate at Michigan State, where
he was engrossed in Donald Davidson’s Attack on Leviathan; and the
influence of his two mentors at Duke, Jay Hubbell (English) and Charles Sydnor
(History). Additionally, Wes’s inclusion
of Kirk’s own commentary as contained in
his Sword of Imagination made this an exemplary introduction to Kirk’s
early intellectual life.
The next two chapters are central
to his book. Wes thoughtfully conveys Kirk’s
defense of the moral basis of social and political life, and the appropriate
role of rights and natural law. Wes
depended heavily on Irving Babbitt to explain Kirk, and the effort to
distinguish Kirk explicitly from the Christian tradition of natural law
thinking evoked some criticism. While
Wes may have overemphasized Babbitt’s influence and the insights of the New
Humanists (and their contemporary disciples), he was still prescient in his
understanding of Kirk’s worldview. He
was also correct to suggest the important role of literature and humane letters
upon Kirk. For example, Wes’s analysis
of Kirk’s Enemies volume by is wonderful and this contribution alone
will encourage a new generation of readers to encounter this tome.
Wes’s chapters (four and five) on
Kirk’s contributions to political theory scholarship are the best assessment of
Kirk’s political thought every written. Chapter
six delineates the centrality of community to Kirk’s thought, and is presented
with great accuracy and clarity. Wes’s
stress on the role assumed by self-restraint makes the chapter an important contribution
to Kirk scholarship. Kirk believed that
humankind’s primary obligation lies in his or her community. Self-discipline and love of neighbor begin
with the individual, and spread to the community, and then to society as a
whole. In other words, Kirk’s concept of
community serves to define the limitations of society and politics on hand,
while on the other it presupposes and defends the necessity of a properly constituted
community for securing the moral and ethical results concomitant to society's
perpetuation.
There remain among us many who
knew and loved Russell Kirk, but very few of us who have devoted our lives to
the exegesis of his boundless wisdom for the rising generation. With the departing of Wes for the Heavenly
Banquet, we defenders of the “permanent things” should remember one of the
finest comrades and gentlemen to have come our way.
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