Russell Kirk (1918-1994) was the author of some thirty-two books, hundreds of periodical essays, and many short stories. Both Time and Newsweek have described him as one of America’s leading thinkers, and The New York Times acknowledged the scale of his influence when in 1998 it wrote that Kirk’s 1953 book The Conservative Mind “gave American conservatives an identity and a genealogy and catalyzed the postwar movement.”

Reflections on American Order

By |2023-04-28T16:56:22-05:00April 28th, 2023|Categories: Essential, Order, Ordered Liberty, RAK, Roots of American Order, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

Order is the first need of all. One finds happiness in restoring and improving the order of the soul and the order of the republic—not in acts of devastation that make a desert of spirit and of society. Imagine a man travelling through the night, without a guide, thinking continually of the direction he wishes [...]

Lost Temples, Giant Spiders, & the Death of Western Civilization

By |2023-02-01T12:10:37-06:00January 31st, 2023|Categories: Christopher Dawson, Modernity, Morality, Russell Kirk, Stephen Masty, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

All civilizations wither and die. But maybe the inevitable death of civilizations is partly a lesson in the Vanity of Human Wishes and partly God’s jest, rescued from cruelty because He also designed a Heavenly Reward to be seen in the next movie. You will need to wear your Indiana Jones fedora and stick with [...]

What Is It Now That Conservatives Must Conserve?

By |2023-01-25T10:59:33-06:00January 25th, 2023|Categories: Conservatism, Pat Buchanan, Politics, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

What is the conservative’s role in an America many believe has not only lost its way but seems to be losing its mind? What is it now that conservatives must conserve? In light of the great Patrick J. Buchanan’s just-announced retirement, we are republishing this excellent essay, which first appeared in our pages in 2012. [...]

What Exactly Is Conservatism: Russell Kirk Edition

By |2023-01-08T20:14:12-06:00January 8th, 2023|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors|

I can think of few men of the twentieth century who thought more deeply about the nature and meaning and definition of conservatism than did Russell Kirk. We can accept, reject, or take in partial form what he said, but we’re fools if we don’t take him seriously, especially as we think about the present, [...]

Grace in the Garden: The Fall of Man & the British Pastoral Tradition

By |2022-12-28T20:00:42-06:00December 28th, 2022|Categories: Books, Featured, John Milton, Literature, Poetry, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

The transcendent ‘overcoming’ or reconciliation of the Fall of Man—that symbol of the cause of the disorder that we would wish re-ordered, of the return to the garden—is what great poetry graciously asks of us. “An intermediate nature... prevents the universe falling into two separate halves.” —Plato, Symposium (203b). Almost from the beginning of when human [...]

A Conservatism of Joy, Gratitude, and Love

By |2023-07-10T10:46:20-05:00December 18th, 2022|Categories: Cicero, Classics, Conservatism, Essential, Featured, Russell Kirk, Support The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays, W. Winston Elliott III|

Will you join us in our mission to pursue Truth, Goodness, and Beauty by making a gift to us today? I am yearning for conservative voices offering great depth, thoughtfulness, and dare we say, grace. Is it possible to be strong in conservative principles and to present those principles in a manner which is attractive, [...]

Whether Order Is the First Need of All

By |2022-12-03T15:16:37-06:00December 3rd, 2022|Categories: Order, Russell Kirk, T.S. Eliot|

The more genuine sources of order come not from opinion-makers but from custom, convention, and continuity. The appeal is to the three parts that make an associated sensibility: heart, imagination, and intellect, and all three are calculating and decision-making, and all three tutored by the eternal standards of what is right and what is wrong. [...]

Russell Kirk: Planting Seeds for Generations to Come

By |2022-10-18T16:50:34-05:00October 18th, 2022|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Conservatism, Moral Imagination, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

Russell and Annette Kirk with the author Driving across the snowy landscape of Michigan the day after Christmas in 1973, I was somewhat apprehensive. I had been invited to take part in the first seminar of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute in the ancestral home of Dr. Russell Kirk at Piety Hill. We were [...]

The Eternal Community of Russell Kirk

By |2022-10-18T16:47:42-05:00October 18th, 2022|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Community, Conservatism, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

With Aristotle and Moses, Russell Kirk believed that man could only live truly and freely in community, and only through community could one pursue the good, the true, and the beautiful. Community sharpens our best selves, while attenuating our selfish impulses. It gives order and context to our existence. Russell Kirk never liked the word individualism, [...]

Columbus the Exemplar

By |2023-10-08T16:03:52-05:00October 9th, 2022|Categories: Christendom, Culture, History, Leadership, RAK, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

Christopher Columbus offers us the example of those virtues that the old Romans called fortitude and constancy; and the example of those virtues that the early Christians called faith and hope. Half a millennium ago, a Genoese navigator with three caravels and Spanish crews groped his way among the islands of the Caribbean. Thus commenced [...]

Restoring the Meaning of Conservatism

By |2022-08-30T13:59:19-05:00August 30th, 2022|Categories: Conservatism, Featured, George A. Panichas, The Conservative Mind, Timeless Essays|Tags: |

The conservative as conservator guards against violations of our reverent traditions and legacy, and is, in fine, a preserver, a keeper, a custodian of sacred things and signs and texts. “If you don’t stand for something, you’ll get knocked down by anything.” —Anonymous It is now more than half a century since the publication of [...]

Virtue: Can It Be Taught?

By |2024-01-14T20:14:30-06:00August 14th, 2022|Categories: Liberal Learning, RAK, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays, Virtue|Tags: |

Are there men and women in America today possessed of virtue sufficient to withstand and repel the forces of disorder? Or have we, as a people, grown too fond of creature-comforts and a fancied security to venture our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor in any cause at all? “The superior man thinks always [...]

Did Edmund Burke Support the American Revolution?

By |2022-07-08T16:52:38-05:00July 8th, 2022|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Conservatism, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Burke, History, Independence Day, Robert Nisbet, Russell Kirk, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Many conservatives have assumed that Edmund Burke was opposed to the American Revolution. It is, to my mind, an erroneous assumption. “Burke broke his agentship and went publicly silent on the American cause once war broke out,” Robert Nisbet claimed in his most definitive analysis of Edmund Burke, written and published in 1985. His fellow [...]

Russell Kirk’s “Southern Valor”

By |2022-07-02T21:16:23-05:00July 2nd, 2022|Categories: Clyde Wilson, Conservatism, John Randolph of Roanoke, Russell Kirk, South, Timeless Essays|Tags: , |

American culture and public life are in a perilously low state, but how much worse off we would be if it had not been for Russell Kirk and his valorous life in behalf of the moral imagination that is the essence of our civilization. We have no better example of resourceful defense of unchanging principle, [...]

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