Homer versus Virgil

By |2024-06-03T12:18:35-05:00June 3rd, 2024|Categories: Greek Epic Poetry, Homer, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Virgil, Western Tradition|

Sign up for Joseph Pearce’s course on Classical Epic and Tragedy this Fall: https://rosary.college/applicant-registration/ What do the great literary epics tell us about the epochs in which they were written? And, more important, what do these epics and epochs tell us about our own epoch? To what extent are literary epics the children of their [...]

Grammar, Speech, Rhetoric, & the Fate of Humanity

By |2024-06-02T16:09:47-05:00June 2nd, 2024|Categories: Language, Philosophy, Time, Timeless Essays, Truth|

Could a fifty-year-old, small book on grammar, speech, and rhetoric by a nearly-forgotten thinker have the power to revolutionize and re-awaken our decadent intellectual life? Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy Eugen Rosenstock-Huessy (1888-1973) might not recognize, in 2018, the America to which he came in 1933, seeking refuge from a Germany that had just elected Hitler. [...]

The Roots and Dangers of Pride and Envy

By |2024-05-31T14:48:32-05:00May 31st, 2024|Categories: Books, Christianity, Dante, Dwight Longenecker, Louis Markos, Modernity, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Together, the corrupting sins of pride and envy destroyed the democracies of ancient Athens and Rome. But what lies at the root of these two greatest of sins? And is there any remedy or antidote that can cure us, and our society, once we give way to them? Fr. Dwight Longenecker’s “Immortal Combat” offers answers. [...]

On The Importance of Shoes

By |2024-05-30T14:38:58-05:00May 30th, 2024|Categories: Culture, Dwight Longenecker, Timeless Essays|

Let us sneak around in sneakers and slip into our slippers after a busy day, but let us wear dignified and unostentatious shoes for those times when life demands that we be dignified and unostentatious. I was serving as a Housemaster in an English boarding school when I finally learned the full importance of shoes. [...]

In Praise of a Great and Neglected Novelist: Maurice Baring

By |2024-05-30T07:23:35-05:00May 29th, 2024|Categories: Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

When I read Maurice Baring, I feel that, culturally, he is walking on a crystal floor above my head. He is so well read in so many different languages and so well-versed in the full panoramic landscape of Western literature, that I am in awe at the depth and the breadth of cultural experience from [...]

Apostles to the Skeptic: C.S. Lewis and the Catholic Church

By |2024-05-28T14:16:28-05:00May 28th, 2024|Categories: Books, C.S. Lewis, Catholicism, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Timeless Essays|

Joseph Pearce’s “C.S. Lewis and the Catholic Church” presents a compelling case in suggesting that its subject evolved “into a very Catholic sort of Protestant.” Though C.S. Lewis never became a Roman Catholic, his later works betray a growing affinity for Catholic teaching. C. S. Lewis and the Catholic Church, by Joseph Pearce (220 pages, [...]

“Memoriae Tuae”

By |2024-05-28T10:39:47-05:00May 26th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Film, Memorial Day, Music, Timeless Essays, World War I|

“Memoriae Tuae” Martis nec gladius, belli nec ignis impiger Vivum momentum unquam memoriae tuae consumet Nor Mars his sword nor war’s quick fire shall burn The living record of your memory* Patrick Doyle wrote "Memoriae Tuae" as part of his score for the animated film, Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero, a 2018 computer-animated adventure film [...]

Irrational Forces: Christopher Dawson on the Modern Age

By |2024-05-24T20:56:54-05:00May 24th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, History, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Evil, according to Christopher Dawson, is a progressive force, and it has grown mightily over the centuries since the Reformation first tore apart the West. The Reformation led to secularization, and secularization led to the creation of a machine-like society, dehumanizing all citizens of the world. The modern world is the world of the anti-Christ, [...]

The Conversion of John Randolph

By |2024-05-25T23:30:53-05:00May 23rd, 2024|Categories: Christianity, History, John Randolph of Roanoke, Timeless Essays|

Few who knew John Randolph in his youth ever imagined him embracing the tenets of the Gospel or admitting the reality of Original Sin. He was raised in an orthodox Christian home. He lived in a conservative place, around people who identified as traditionalists. But as Christianity waned in his day, he embraced new vogues. [...]

Harold Bloom: A Monster Among the Critics

By |2024-08-22T11:33:49-05:00May 22nd, 2024|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Faith, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Timeless Essays, William Shakespeare|

It is always a dangerous and potentially deadly error to consider the enemy of our enemies to be our friend, patting him on the back while he is stabbing us in ours. The truth is that Dr. Harold Bloom is himself a servant of dark forces, which are subtler by far than those politically oriented [...]

An Ode to Great Books and a Beautiful Library

By |2024-05-22T17:08:19-05:00May 22nd, 2024|Categories: Books, Essential, Featured, Libraries, Timeless Essays, W. Winston Elliott III, Will Durant, Wisdom|

“If I were rich I would have many books, and I would pamper myself with bindings bright to the eye and soft to the touch, in paper generously opaque, and type such as men designed when printing was very young. I would dress my gods in leather and gold, and burn candles of worship before [...]

Saint Augustine’s “Confessions”: An Introduction

By |2024-05-21T14:12:16-05:00May 21st, 2024|Categories: Books, Great Books, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays|

Augustine is accessible and applicable because he is one of us. He suffers from the same temptations and succumbs to those temptations. He falls and does not always get up again, preferring to wallow in the gutter with his lusts and his illicit appetites. And yet, like us, he is restless until he rests in [...]

R.J. Rummel’s Chilling “Death by Government”

By |2024-05-20T17:34:47-05:00May 20th, 2024|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Death, Featured, History, Timeless Essays, War|

State-sponsored murder was the primary fact of the twentieth century—not the rise of democracy or the liberation of peoples, as many have been taught, but the devastating horrors of the gulag, the holocaust, and the killing fields. It was in June 1996 that I picked up a book that, for all intents and purposes, changed my [...]

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