“The Raven”

By |2025-10-24T13:19:55-05:00October 24th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Death, Edgar Allan Poe, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary, Over many a quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore — While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping, As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door. “ ’Tis some visiter,” I muttered, “tapping at my chamber door — Only [...]

Jean Raspail’s “The Camp of the Saints” Returns

By |2025-10-23T22:00:27-05:00October 23rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Chuck Chalberg, Dystopia, Europe, Immigration, Literature, Senior Contributors, Western Civilization|

"You are holding in your hands one of the most important dystopian novels ever written,” claims the introduction to the new edition of Jean Raspail's controversial 1973 novel, "The Camp of the Saints," an alternately brutal and comedic savaging of guilt-ridden Westerners, who allow their civilization to disappear by welcoming mass migration from the Third [...]

Everyone Desires the Aesthetic Cross

By |2025-10-23T19:34:08-05:00October 23rd, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Suffering|

When we take up the real cross, instead of seeking honor through it, we embrace its dishonor. Our heavier crosses are unaesthetic—ugly. They don’t bring admiring glances; rather, they humiliate. I used to frequently attend Mass in a church with a mostly beautiful series of painted Stations of the Cross. I say “mostly” only because the eleventh station, [...]

The Christian Humanism of Andrew Willard Jones

By |2025-10-22T20:20:45-05:00October 22nd, 2025|Categories: American Republic, Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Catholicism, Christian Humanism, New Polity, Senior Contributors|

Challenging a number of schools of thought in economics and political philosophy, Andrew Willard Jones in his book, "The Church Against the State," presents an unapologetically Catholic and specifically Thomist view of the world and, in particular, of America. Jones argues that America, in her own unique fashion, blends that which is venerable and ancient [...]

The Life of the Mind & Heart at Hillsdale College

By |2025-10-21T19:21:55-05:00October 21st, 2025|Categories: Education, Happiness, Humanities, Liberal Arts, Liberal Learning, Love, Nature of God, Nature of Man|

I had not seen my former student, Adam, for a decade or so after his graduation from Hillsdale College when I ran into him and his young family at the supermarket. "You once asked me" he said, "for what purpose was the soul of man made. I had little in the way of an answer [...]

John Paul II & the Spiritual Victory Over Communism

By |2025-10-21T16:08:08-05:00October 21st, 2025|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Christianity, Communism, Poland, Politics, Senior Contributors, St. John Paul II, Timeless Essays|

It might be tempting to characterize Pope John Paul II as the political foe who vanquished communism. But that would be untrue. His position challenged communism in the metaphysical realm, not in the political arena. He understood that the error of communism lay in its fundamental understanding of man, who is not merely a unit [...]

Seeking the Presence of God With Brother Lawrence

By |2025-10-20T19:06:06-05:00October 20th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Hope, Michael De Sapio, Mysticism, Nature of God, Prayer, Senior Contributors|

As institutions crumble around us, our constructed selves are stripped away, and we are more and more reduced to the most basic and existential thing: namely our relationship to God. Brother Lawrence of the Resurrection's method for “practicing the presence of God” consisted of keeping up a continuous dialogue with Him in one’s heart. Brother [...]

Samuel Taylor Coleridge: A Romantic Conservative

By |2025-10-20T17:13:26-05:00October 20th, 2025|Categories: Conservatism, Philosophy, Political Philosophy, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Timeless Essays|

Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s romantic conservatism is passionate, incisive, and high-minded. His notion of the “Idea” is persuasive in regard to how it exists in human society, and he lit the way to resolving the ever-present conservative tension between theory and practice. The life of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, if tumultuous and at times disastrous, was a [...]

Patronage and Purity

By |2025-10-19T19:31:30-05:00October 19th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Prayer|

As a member of the Angelic Warfare Confraternity, one offers 15 Hail Marys daily for themselves and fellow members. These are not offered as a transaction (I do this, and God will make me pure in exchange). Instead, they are offered as an invitation. For most saints, the patron-to-beneficiary link is fairly straightforward. There is more [...]

Philip Caraman: A Very English Jesuit

By |2025-10-18T21:53:41-05:00October 18th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Dwight Longenecker, Literature, Senior Contributors|

Fr. Philip Caraman not only epitomized the best of the Jesuit tradition in England, but he also chronicled the legacy of his heroic forebears: the Jesuit missionaries and martyrs of Tudor England as well as the courageous counter-Reformation apostles to the Americas, India, China, and beyond. Philip Caraman Rex Mottram—the Canadian dolt who [...]

Russell Kirk and the Haunting of Piety Hill

By |2025-10-18T21:19:04-05:00October 18th, 2025|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Featured, Fiction, Halloween, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

The curtain between the world of the living and that of the dead was for Russell Kirk truly thin, as evidenced in his scholarly work and in his fiction. A ghost, as Kirk understood it, was a soul trapped between physical and eternal existence. The curtain between the world of the living and of the [...]

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