Several years ago I wrote a biography of the great and neglected poet, Roy Campbell.
Considering my own admiration for Campbell I am pleased to see a new article on his life and legacy posted on the internet. The article is good and refreshing, though culpably devoid of all sources for which it is clearly dependent. My only concern is that it is published on a site that idolises and idealises idiots, such as Nietzsche, and neo-Nazis, such as Tyndall. Campbell deserves better than to find himself unjustifiably in the company of such enemies of the the True West, which is Christian. Nonetheless, and in spite of these reservations, I’m providing a link to the article:
“Campbell now realized that Christ was the first to ‘proclaim the doctrine of heredity and survival of the fittest,’ and that his ‘aristocratic outlook’ was misunderstood by Nietzsche as being a religion of the weak. World War I had destroyed the best breeding stock and demoralized humanity. The Russians for example had succumbed to Bolshevism. But Campbell hoped that a portion might have become ennobled from the suffering.”
I suppose the only mystery that remains is the question of whether the author is conscious of his own fascism.