American Exceptionalism: The Anatomy of an Idea

By |2026-03-03T17:32:28-06:00March 3rd, 2026|Categories: American Republic, History, Mark Malvasi, Senior Contributors|

Neither the past nor the present can be reduced to a simple morality play with unambiguous heroes and villains. This false and superficial understanding of human nature and the human condition has convinced many that American power and decency are, or ought to be, unassailable, and that the continued application of technology will forever sustain [...]

Antonio Vivaldi: “The Red Priest” Rediscovered

By |2026-03-03T17:41:41-06:00March 3rd, 2026|Categories: Antonio Vivaldi, Audio/Video, Culture, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Music, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays|

The popularity of Vivaldi’s “Four Seasons” has paradoxically led us to underestimate the Venetian’s true greatness. Once renowned across Europe, by the early twentieth century Vivaldi was considered a minor composer. Then, several events occurred to re-awaken interest in the music of “The Red Priest.” Inevitably, when one hears the name of Antonio Vivaldi, one [...]

Already-but-not-yet

By |2026-03-02T14:55:34-06:00March 2nd, 2026|Categories: Catholicism, Grace|

Christ has called us each in a particular way to labor in his vineyard here and now and witness to the truth of the gospel in our daily lives. To live that call—that vocation—our hearts must be open to the grace that Christ is offering to us in the circumstances of his providence. In two days, my [...]

Crises of Faith

By |2026-03-01T17:56:25-06:00March 1st, 2026|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Faith|

The essence of the attitude of the believer lies in the obduracy with which he approaches the real, and in the firmness of his determination to keep up the struggle. If faith is still developing, there comes a time when the believer considers his faith as the most securely anchored reality of all, sure to [...]

“Big Wonderful Thing”: A History of Texas

By |2026-03-01T18:02:26-06:00March 1st, 2026|Categories: Books, History, Imagination, Texas, Timeless Essays|

In “Big Wonderful Thing: A Texas History,” Stephen Harrigan explores the “poignantly unguarded self-love” and the “fierce national personality” that oozes from Texans. He is unapologetic in his praise for and fascination with the state. “Big Wonderful Thing,” however, is not a tribute piece; instead, Mr. Harrigan’s history carefully holds in tension the grandeur and [...]

J.R.R. Tolkien’s Vision of Just War

By |2026-03-03T14:49:41-06:00February 28th, 2026|Categories: Books, Christendom, Christianity, Featured, J.R.R. Tolkien, Just War, Timeless Essays, War, World War I|

Might certainly does not make right, but it does not make wrong either. There are times to reject the allure of power, especially when it involves dominating others, and there are times when the right course is to take up arms and fight unreservedly against the forces of darkness. Indeed, Tolkien suggests, there are times [...]

Mythologizing the Mythmakers: Tolkien’s “The Notion Club Papers”

By |2026-02-27T14:20:38-06:00February 27th, 2026|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, J.R.R. Tolkien, Senior Contributors|

Not surprisingly, J.R.R. Tolkien never finished "The Notion Club Papers," but they present a critical insight into his own view of the Inklings—not only mythologizing, but celebrating, them. Dear Reader, the following—a discussion of Tolkien’s unfinished novel, The Notion Club Papers, comes from chapter six of my forthcoming book, Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of [...]

Finding and Losing Train Culture

By |2026-02-27T18:41:40-06:00February 27th, 2026|Categories: American West, Bruce Frohnen, Culture, Timeless Essays|

Train culture itself helped integrate communities into the larger, state, and national society in a way that left local autonomy intact. The nice thing about trains is that they bring people and things to your community and take them from your community to the wider world without erasing your actual community. My family and I [...]

The Last Speech: “A Thing Called Civilization”

By |2026-02-26T17:52:05-06:00February 26th, 2026|Categories: Roger Scruton, Timeless Essays, Western Civilization|

I myself have obviously got into an awful lot of trouble through defending Western civilization. It seems a strange feature of our times that the more you’re disposed to defend it, the more you are regarded as some kind of narrow-minded bigot. But the people who make that accusation are the real ones with the [...]

Religion and Politics in Public Life

By |2026-02-25T12:04:56-06:00February 25th, 2026|Categories: American Republic, Catholic Culture Series, Catholicism, Politics, Religion|

Ours is the first nation under God which makes no real provision for God in its public life, owing to a great and sundering wall of separation between Church and State, religion and politics, faith and life. We live in a country whose citizenry have been, almost from the beginning of the Republic, carefully coached to [...]

On the Imagination

By |2026-02-25T12:21:11-06:00February 25th, 2026|Categories: Art, Beauty, Culture, E.B., Eva Brann, Imagination, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Timeless Essays, Wisdom|

The imagination invests the world with that richness and resonance which makes it an attractive dwelling for the intellect. But the imagination is indispensable to action as well. For the real world is worth our exertion only when the visionary imagination sets the scene for action. Tonight I shall commit the deliberate indiscretion of trying [...]

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