Mere Mortals Eavesdropping: The Greatness of Mozart

By |2024-01-27T13:47:50-06:00January 26th, 2024|Categories: Featured, Music, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

Mozart was not like us. The question as to why Mozart died so young is always superseded by: How could he have existed at all? How could you ask more of a miracle? In 1991, the bicentennial of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s death was the occasion for massive festivals and grand recording projects, as well as [...]

The Magnificent, Overlooked Operas of Tchaikovsky

By |2024-02-04T07:30:37-06:00January 24th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Beauty, Music, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky|

Tchaikovsky’s operas are remarkable for their passion, characters, and their pure, elevated humanity His music has the quality of touching something deep in one’s heart, revealing profound aspects of the human experience in a lofty and beautiful way that transcends time and barriers. Russian operas are not quite as well known as the operas of [...]

Can Something Be ‘Great’, Even If You Hate It?

By |2024-01-22T22:00:02-06:00January 22nd, 2024|Categories: Beauty, Literature|

I don’t really care for C.S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia. I sympathize with the allegory Lewis was trying to present throughout the series, but I felt that it was too overt in places, and took away from the overall narrative. To me, it was distracting. But even though I didn’t personally enjoy the Chronicles of Narnia, I [...]

The Romantic Reaction

By |2024-01-19T18:09:42-06:00January 19th, 2024|Categories: Art, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Philosophy, Romanticism, Senior Contributors|

C.S. Lewis thought that "Romanticism" had acquired so many different meanings that, as a word, it had become meaningless "and should be banished from our vocabulary.” But is Lewis right? In the “Afterword” to the third edition of The Pilgrim’s Regress C.S. Lewis complained that “Romanticism” had acquired so many different meanings that, as a [...]

Montesquieu & the Two Historical Foundations of Tolerance

By |2024-01-17T17:44:59-06:00January 17th, 2024|Categories: Books, Conservatism, Culture, Philosophy, Timeless Essays|

Westerners today ought to meditate upon Montesquieu’s admirable reflections whenever they decide to launch a war of humanitarian intervention. These reflections especially call into question the institutionalization and systematization at work in contemporary demands for international justice. In The Spirit of the Laws (1748), Montesquieu effected a revolution, one that called into question the character of Christian [...]

Blind Benjamin Franklin

By |2024-01-16T19:15:44-06:00January 16th, 2024|Categories: Benjamin Franklin, Christianity, Dwight Longenecker, Religion, Timeless Essays|

Even today, many Americans take an intentionally anti-intellectual stance, agreeing with the rationalists that faith and reason are incompatible. Blind Benjamin Franklin is father to them all. Apart from his rejection of wigs and the incident with the kite, the key and the lightning bolt, I’m afraid I have never been impressed or attracted to [...]

Chasing Lions: Don Quixote in Pursuit of the Beautiful

By |2024-01-15T18:05:45-06:00January 15th, 2024|Categories: Beauty, Culture, Featured, Great Books, History, Literature, Love, Timeless Essays, Truth|

When man pursues beauty, he takes it into himself and becomes beautiful through it; a perpetual beauty-seeker, such as Don Quixote, is, therefore, a beautiful man. He conceived the strangest notion that ever took shape in a madman’s head, considering it desirable and necessary, both for the increase of his honor and the common good, [...]

Men in Hats: An Endangered Species

By |2024-01-13T16:23:29-06:00January 12th, 2024|Categories: Community, Culture, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

When will men in hats come back? When men come back. When we push back from our desks and laptops, turn off the television and go back outdoors where we belong, we will start to need hats again. Whatever happened to the hat? Whither the fedora? Where have they stashed the Stetsons? Who has banished [...]

A Masterpiece of Cultural History: Jacques Barzun’s “From Dawn to Decadence”

By |2024-01-09T18:18:32-06:00January 9th, 2024|Categories: Books, Classics, Culture, Economics, Political Economy, Robert M. Woods, Timeless Essays, Virgil|Tags: |

In the annals of writing history, there are a handful of volumes that have become established as models due to tone, insightful content, and excellence of style. The most recent historical work by Jacques Barzun is such a work. It is a cultural history of the highest standard. As a historical volume of such scope, [...]

Mark Twain’s “Joan of Arc”

By |2024-01-08T17:44:12-06:00January 8th, 2024|Categories: Books, Christianity, G.K. Chesterton, Religion, Stephen Masty, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

“I studied that girl, Joan of Arc, for twelve years,” Mark Twain said, “and it never seemed to me that the artists and the writers gave us a true picture of her. They drew a picture of a peasant. But they always missed the face—the divine soul, the pure character, the supreme woman, the wonderful [...]

Realism in Modern Art

By |2024-01-07T19:26:28-06:00January 7th, 2024|Categories: Art, Beauty, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors|

One common criticism of realism is that it is merely mimicking what can now be done as well or better with a camera. This is simply not the case. With few exceptions, photographs only show the surface, not the personhood of the subject. "The Resurrection of Realism" by Igor Babailov During the time [...]

“The Gloucestershire Wassail”: A Carol for Epiphany Eve

By |2024-01-04T19:54:53-06:00January 4th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Epiphany, Music, Timeless Essays|

"The Gloucestershire Wassail" is a traditional English carol associated with the eve of Epiphany, when revelers drank wassail punch, a hot-mulled sherry- or brandy-based cider, sweetened with sugar and seasoned with other spices, and including yeast, apples, and toast. According to British Food History, "wassailing predates the Battle of Hastings and is thought to have [...]

“Maestro” and the Misuse of Culture

By |2024-01-02T15:14:28-06:00January 1st, 2024|Categories: Film, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

The film "Maestro" is certainly well-made and well-acted, with Bradley Cooper (who also directed) carrying off a spot-on impersonation of Leonard Bernstein. But at its core is an emptiness that no mere artifice can fill. Writers for the movies, I have found, don’t seem to know how to deal with the arts as a dramatic [...]

Pagans, a Pope, & Sauron: How We Got New Year’s Day

By |2025-12-31T11:06:21-06:00December 31st, 2023|Categories: Christianity, Culture, History, J.R.R. Tolkien, New Year's Day, Timeless Essays|

As you celebrate New Year’s Day, remember that for one thousand years the welcoming of a new year was not just a calendar event, but a culturally religious event which linked the renewal of nature with the redemption of the world. Some atheists, Muslims, and Christian fundamentalists like to grumble and gibe that the celebration [...]

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