The Truth of Beauty: Educating the Moral Imagination

By |2024-07-19T21:33:44-05:00July 19th, 2024|Categories: Beauty, Benjamin Lockerd, C.S. Lewis, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays, Truth|

The answers to the errors of modern times need to be given in philosophy and theology, but it is essential that we also experience the truth imaginatively. Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know. —Keats, “Ode on a Grecian Urn” These famous lines of Keats [...]

Making America Great Again: Orestes Brownson on National Greatness

By |2024-07-16T20:06:32-05:00July 16th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Catholicism, Government, Natural Law, Politics, Religion, Timeless Essays|

It’s time for Orestes Brownson to re-enter our contemporary political discourse, and on the campaign trail to remind us, first, that all just authority is from God, who instituted natural law, and also, that moral authority is not relative. I. The Brownson Revival In 1993 Peter J. Stanlis revisited Orestes Brownson’s political thought by reviewing [...]

Arnold Schoenberg’s Atonal “Erwartung” – Stay or Go?

By |2024-07-12T11:53:48-05:00July 12th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Music|

My biggest beef about atonal music is that my brain craves a story. It needs a story. That’s what holds my interest. What I hadn’t anticipated when I first saw "Erwartung" was the way a singer presenting a libretto became the “story” in itself, twofold. I’ve never attended the symphony before with the sense that I might [...]

Heaven’s Delights: Gustav Mahler’s Fourth Symphony

By |2024-07-06T18:13:23-05:00July 6th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Gustav Mahler, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Gustav Mahler's Fourth Symphony is his most sheerly delightful and accessible creation. It is written on a human scale and brings us on a clear and cogent musical and emotional journey. What’s more, this relatively traditional work still shows many of the ways in which Mahler was one of the most original and inventive composers [...]

The Challenge of Secularization

By |2024-07-05T14:11:24-05:00July 5th, 2024|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Communio, England, Islam, Morality, Secularism, Timeless Essays|

What the faith of the Catholic Church can offer is a framework—intellectual, imaginative, and moral—for the pursuit of all the good that pertains to human destiny, and its effective bestowal in the grace of conversion. The Church civilizes while she evangelizes. But she evangelizes first. Secularisation is far more of a challenge to Christianity in [...]

“Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero”

By |2024-07-04T21:50:51-05:00July 4th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Film, War, World War I|

Strikingly traditional and patriotic, "Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero" is truly a film for all ages. It is at first surprising that it was a box-office flop when it premiered in 2018, in the 100th anniversary year of the end of the Great War it depicts, despite generally positive reviews by critics and moviegoers. But [...]

On the Artistic and Intellectual Temperaments

By |2024-07-01T17:58:51-05:00July 1st, 2024|Categories: Art, Beauty, Culture, Jacques Barzun, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors, Western Tradition|

Several trends have alienated ordinary laypeople from the worlds of both art and intellect, contributing to anti-intellectualism and hostility to the arts, as well as simple indifference to the finer things of culture. This is deplorable because the arts and the life of the mind are both important. When I was about five years old, [...]

An Empire Like No Other

By |2024-07-01T19:11:06-05:00July 1st, 2024|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Christopher Morrissey, Cluny, Featured, Rome, Theology, Timeless Essays|

The Roman Empire was unique because it espoused the principle of moderation in politics. This is what permitted the unique dynamism of a uniquely changing but uniquely enduring political form: from city, to empire, to nation. And that dynamism may still propel us today as a principle of rebirth, if only we recapture its essence. [...]

A Woke Globe

By |2024-06-28T15:52:47-05:00June 28th, 2024|Categories: Art, Culture, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, William Shakespeare, Wokeism|

The reconstructed Globe theater is a masterpiece, a beautiful dream-come-true and a wonderful contribution to the universal Shakespeare industry. If only the productions of the Bard’s plays were as authentic as the theater in which they are performed, instead of being the puerile pastiches that their producers foist upon us. It was a glorious June [...]

Rediscovering the Higher and Lower

By |2024-06-21T14:37:24-05:00June 21st, 2024|Categories: Beauty, Christianity, Darwin, Goodness, Science, Truth|

Our cultural confusions, especially among the educated, reveal a language desperately in need of repair, a reality in need of rediscovery. Differences in rank, in particular, were obvious until the dawn of modern scientism, the political ideology of technocratic materialism. An extremely liberal, atheist British comedian came out in support of Britain’s new free speech [...]

The Taste of Strawberries: Tolkien’s Imagination of the Good

By |2024-06-19T14:09:50-05:00June 19th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Film, Imagination, J.R.R. Tolkien, Timeless Essays|

Tolkien succeeds in portraying the goodness of the Shire, of Rivendell, of Gondor, of Rohan in compelling, tangible ways. The most remarkable aspect of Tolkien’s vision is his ability to make the good desirable. Near the end of The Return of the King movie, while Frodo and Sam are making the arduous climb up Mount [...]

Why “The Great Music” Is as Important as “The Great Books”

By |2024-06-17T14:05:34-05:00June 17th, 2024|Categories: Aristotle, Classical Education, Culture, Great Books, Liberal Learning, Music, Timeless Essays|

Ignorance of the great works of music is as bad, for someone who seeks to be educated in Western culture, as ignorance of Dante and Shakespeare in literature, and Plato and Aristotle in philosophy. So important is it to have some sort of understanding of how the noble art of music works, and so important is [...]

The Many Musical Moods of Edvard Grieg

By |2024-06-14T14:30:03-05:00June 14th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Edvard Grieg, Music, Timeless Essays|

Oh, the many moods and stories Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg conjures in my mind, my heart. There’s the transcendent “Morning Mood” from his Peer Gynt Suite, the haunting yet hopeful “Last Spring.” I’ve sat in my car and wept to the wintry longing in his “Nocturne.” There’s the “March of the Dwarves” that evokes a [...]

“The American Flag”

By |2025-06-13T15:45:51-05:00June 13th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Antonin Dvorak, Audio/Video, Timeless Essays|

Antonín Dvořák wrote the cantata “The American Flag” in 1892-3, during the Czech composer’s tenure as director of the National Conservatory of Music in New York City. The work was commissioned by the founder of the conservatory, Jeanette Thurber, to celebrate Dvořák’s arrival in the United States and to commemorate the four-hundredth anniversary of Christopher Columbus’ discovery [...]

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