The Man Who Was Thursday

This paper reviews Gilbert Keith Chesterton’s novel, The Man Who Was Thursday, considered the author’s best piece of work

This paper presents a thesis statement that Chesterton highlights that a balance between good and evil is significant in fostering a realization of good against evil in the society. The author points out that the novel is written in a way that encourages the readers to cling to the twists and turns in the storyline, mystified until the conclusion of the story. The paper relates that the story is focused on the character Gabriel Syme, appointed by the British police to infiltrate an anarchist movement in order to understand and report inside information on the plans of the movement.

Table of Contents
Introduction
About the Author
Thesis Statement
Theme
Analysis
Conclusion
Once settled, the members’ every attempt had been to seek out Sunday, the president of the anarchic movement. Upon finding Sunday, another paradox emerges. Sunday is the same character who hired these police officers to infiltrate the movement in the first place. At this stage in the novel, the story takes a turn from a `satirical detective story to spiritual allegory`. The council of the anarchists finally witnesses the unmasking of Sunday, revealed as the Sabbath rather than an anarchist leader. This is another paradox in the novel suggesting that the infiltration was a plan, a plot to establish the final and primary paradox of the novel. Sunday enlightens the council of anarchists that in their struggle to fight the evil of anarchy, they were unified in their fight against Satan.”