Liberal Learning, Great Books, & Paideia

By |2025-01-20T19:58:42-06:00January 20th, 2025|Categories: E.B., Education, Eva Brann, Featured, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

First, I want to say how honored I feel at receiving this prize named after Russell Kirk, an admirable writer, and Paideia, a noble practice. Even those of you who have not studied Greek may recognize what paideia means. It is the same word you can hear in “pediatrics,” the medical care of children, or [...]

Marriage: The Last, Best Gift of Heaven

By |2024-12-03T16:38:34-06:00December 3rd, 2024|Categories: Books, Featured, Heaven, Jane Austen, Literature, Marriage, Timeless Essays|

For Jane Austen’s heroines, marriage is the end towards which their virtuous lives are directed. Above all other blessings Oh! God, for ourselves, and our fellow-creatures, we implore Thee to quicken our sense of thy Mercy in the redemption of the World, of the Value of that Holy Religion in which we have been brought [...]

The Mystic Chords of Memory: Reclaiming American History

By |2024-11-05T10:16:06-06:00November 4th, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, History, Russell Kirk, St. John's College, Timeless Essays, Wilfred McClay|

Historical consciousness is to civilized society what memory is to individual identity. Without memory there are no workable rules of conduct, no standard of justice, no basis for restraining passions, no sense of the connection between an action and its consequences. A culture without memory will necessarily be barbarous. I am delighted to be with [...]

Chaos: The Gestating Principle of Civilization

By |2024-11-04T17:55:36-06:00November 4th, 2024|Categories: Civilization, Family, Featured, Quotation, Timeless Essays, Will Durant|

A certain tension between religion and society marks the higher stages of every civilization. Religion begins by offering magical aid to harassed and bewildered men; it culminates by giving to a people that unity of morals and belief which seem so favorable to statesmanship and art; it ends by fighting suicidally in the lost cause [...]

Why Should We Read?

By |2024-10-31T13:14:05-05:00October 30th, 2024|Categories: Books, E.B., Eva Brann, Featured, Great Books, Plato, Senior Contributors, Socrates, St. John's College|

Reading presents thoughts as gifts, and the best books, by preventing us from passively succumbing to other people’s pictures and their self-serving agendas, cooperate in saving our souls. You’ve all probably heard the expression “preaching to the choir,” which means trying to persuade the faithful of what they already believe. The opposite of preaching to [...]

The Last Great Englishman: Arthur Wellesley

By |2024-10-24T17:51:18-05:00October 24th, 2024|Categories: Books, Europe, Featured, History, M. E. Bradford, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays, War|

The Duke of Wellington was an exemplar of an older England—an England bound by blood, not interest. He affirmed the very English equality of manhood, which comes with honorable service in the line, the rule that he who is with the king on St. Crispin’s Day shall be by him called “brother.” The Great Duke, [...]

My Fatherland! Ten Great Musical Works About Home & Country

By |2024-10-16T14:08:00-05:00October 16th, 2024|Categories: Antonin Dvorak, Audio/Video, Featured, Jean Sibelius, Ludwig van Beethoven, Music, Timeless Essays|

Rouget de Lisle sings la Marseillaise for the first time, painted by Isidore Pils Perhaps the greatest of national anthems is France's "La Marseillaise," composed in 1792 by French officer Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle, and arranged by Hector Berlioz for voices and orchestra in 1830. But in addition to the official anthems [...]

Christopher Dawson: Wielding the Sword of the Spirit

By |2025-03-22T15:24:13-05:00October 11th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Culture, Essential, Featured, Timeless Essays|

Christopher Dawson set himself the task of surveying the history of Western Civilization in the light of a master-idea: that religion is the dynamic force, the basic constituent and the inspiration of all higher human activity, and that therefore the culture of an era depends upon its religion. Looking back over the vast ruins and [...]

The Tyranny of the Present Moment

By |2024-10-04T10:10:51-05:00October 2nd, 2024|Categories: American Founding, Featured, Federalist Papers, Glenn Arbery, Liberal Learning, Progressivism, Timeless Essays, Tyranny, Wyoming Catholic College|

For the Progressives, checks and balances were merely a hindrance to efficient government. How could it be wrong to act in accordance with the spirit of history? As “experts” replaced statesman, the whole idea of “the consent of the governed” became less important, even a stumbling block for the plans of Progressive reformers. Recently, Wyoming [...]

Harry Jaffa and the Demise of the Old Republic

By |2024-09-26T14:29:39-05:00September 26th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Conservatism, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Burke, Featured, Foreign Affairs, History, Political Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

Harry Jaffa’s constitutional history of America’s late-eighteenth-century is not credible nor, in keeping with many of his own pronouncements, is it conservative. The writing of history, as we have learned from authors as diverse as Thucydides, Voltaire, Nietzsche, Butterfield, Collingwood, and Oakeshott can and has been done in strikingly different ways while serving radically different [...]

The Spirit of American Constitutionalism

By |2024-09-16T15:27:37-05:00September 16th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Constitution, Edmund Burke, Featured, Federalist Papers, John Dickinson, Timeless Essays|

The Constitution described by John Dickinson in his “Letters of Fabius” is a model of prudence and moderation, based not primarily on theoretical arguments, but on experience and an extensive knowledge of history. Though virtually ignored by scholars in recent decades, John Dickinson was one of the most influential of the American Founders. When he [...]

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