Caves, Happiness, and Liberal Learning

By |2025-12-09T10:31:08-06:00December 8th, 2025|Categories: Eva Brann, Liberal Learning, Plato, Socrates, St. John's College, Timeless Essays, W. Winston Elliott III|

If Plato’s extended metaphor of the mind as depicted by the city is true, every human mind has the capacity to train its Guardians, curb the appetitive part of the soul, and live on the grassy plains in the sun above the cave. It’s a question of true learning. When Eva Brann describes a liberal [...]

The Shield of Aeneas: Memory and History in Virgil’s “Aeneid”

By |2025-12-01T20:37:01-06:00December 1st, 2025|Categories: Aeneas, Aeneid, Civilization, Conservatism, Great Books, History, Paul Krause, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Virgil, Western Civilization|

The “Aeneid” was only possible because the Roman people had the memory and consciousness to make it possible. It is up to us to ensure that its living well of memory doesn’t dry up. Without it, the “Aeneid” will pass into the dustbin of history like the corpses of Priam and Pompey. The grandest image [...]

Living With C.S. Lewis & His Immense Personality

By |2025-11-28T18:02:49-06:00November 28th, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christian Humanism, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

C.S. Lewis possessed an immense personality, the kind of personality that affected not only those around him, but also all those who came after him. Full of charisma and brilliance, he both attracted loyal friends and made bitter enemies wherever he went. Strangely enough, I didn’t come to C.S. Lewis as a person or as [...]

Theories of Thankfulness

By |2025-11-26T20:00:15-06:00November 26th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Michael De Sapio, Senior Contributors, Thanksgiving, Timeless Essays|

Gratitude—both gratitude to the human persons around us and the ultimate gratitude toward the personal God—brings to us a sense of order and peace, a grounding in truth that sets us free. Gratitude, by Dietrich von Hildebrand, Balduin V. Schwarz, Joseph Ratzinger, and Romano Guardini (135 pages, Hildebrand Project, 2023) The great spiritual teachers tell [...]

Skyjack: The Mystery of D.B. Cooper’s Thanksgiving Eve Jump

By |2025-11-26T13:07:37-06:00November 25th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, History, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Thanksgiving, Timeless Essays|

In the end, we want D.B. Cooper's true identity to remain a mystery. We want him to continue to "get away with it"—such a brave, courteous, refined outlaw from a simpler era deserves better than to be caught by us postmoderns. On the evening of November 24, 1971—the day before Thanksgiving—a dark-haired man dressed in [...]

Gifts From We Know Not Where

By |2025-11-24T16:50:55-06:00November 24th, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Culture, Essential, Featured, Graduation, Great Books, Homer, Mystery, Odyssey, Timeless Essays|

We can encourage openness of expectation in ourselves and in one another, so that the mysterious gifts of experience, strange exhilarations and wonders, gifts from we know not where, will not be lost on us. A just expectation of life may include an expectation of moments that seem mysterious gifts from we know not where. [...]

All That Is Beautiful & Terrible: The Feast of Saint Cecilia

By |2025-11-21T13:25:02-06:00November 21st, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christendom, Conservatism, Sainthood, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

No matter how corrupt and bleak and depressing the world may appear, we can always turn to the many Cecilias of the world and see the goodness that is possible through grace and love. Properly remembered, these true symbols and true myths can re-orient our souls, our cultures, and perhaps even the world itself toward [...]

C.S. Lewis’s “Aeneid”: A Labor of Love

By |2025-11-18T14:03:29-06:00November 18th, 2025|Categories: Aeneid, Anthony Esolen, Books, C.S. Lewis, Christianity, Classics, Timeless Essays, Virgil|Tags: |

When a lover of poetry as sensitive and intelligent as C.S. Lewis provides us a translation of Virgil’s “Aeneid,” we should pay attention. C.S. Lewis’s Lost Aeneid: Arms and the Exile, edited by A.T. Reyes (184 pages, Yale University Press, 2011) Every poetic translator worth our attention is, as it were, a secondary artist, one [...]

World War I and the Inklings

By |2025-11-17T20:22:45-06:00November 17th, 2025|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, C.S. Lewis, Christian Humanism, Inklings, J.R.R. Tolkien, Literature, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, War, World War I|

The Great War destroyed much the Inklings had held true, personally and culturally. Each lost friends, and each felt the guilt that any survivor of a war feels. Many of them refused to talk about their own experiences, for good or ill. J.R.R. Tolkien, perhaps, provides the best example. Though not the best-known Inkling, Adam [...]

The Cigar, a Sacred Companion

By |2025-11-16T16:50:29-06:00November 16th, 2025|Categories: Community, Culture, Timeless Essays|

I encourage those who smoke to light a cigar in solitude or with a band of brothers. Recite a poem out loud or in the confines of your soul. Rejoice, reflect, and ponder over the mystery of our faith in Jesus Christ. What is a cigar to a man if not a sacred companion? Never [...]

How Successful Were the Articles of Confederation?

By |2025-11-14T16:47:29-06:00November 14th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Declaration of Independence, Freedom, History, Timeless Essays|

The Articles of Confederation were doomed by their perceived structural weakness. Yet defenders of the Articles at the time correctly pointed out that this early constitution, drafted under intense pressure at a critical time in the country’s history and intended to deal foremost with the exigencies of war, had been remarkably successful. The Declaration of [...]

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