Songs & Dances of Death: 10 Classical Works for the End of Time

By |2025-09-19T13:14:58-05:00September 19th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Camille Saint-Saëns, Gustav Mahler, Jean Sibelius, Music, Richard Strauss, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Timeless Essays, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart|

From Modest Mussorgsky's "Songs and Dances of Death" to Oliver Messiaen's "Quartet for the End of Time," here are ten great classical pieces about death and the end of this world. They may or may not provide you comfort. 1. Songs and Dances of Death, by Modest Mussorgsky A song cycle for voice (usually bass [...]

Surveying America: The Chain-Bearers

By |2025-09-18T16:20:21-05:00September 18th, 2025|Categories: American Republic, George Washington, History, Literature, Thomas Jefferson|

What is history if not a “survey,” and what are historians if not chain-bearers? Have you reckoned a thousand acres much? —Walt Whitman, Song of Myself History records that in 1763 two guys surveyed a demarcation line separating Pennsylvania and Maryland as well as bits of Delaware and West Virginia. The surveyors were Charles Mason [...]

How Poetry Can Save Us in Our Age of Superficiality

By |2025-09-18T14:15:37-05:00September 18th, 2025|Categories: Culture, Liberal Learning, Literature, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

Poetry offers a unique antidote to the superficiality that dominates American culture. Poetry calls us back to tradition and calls us out of the shallows into the deeper water of human experience. It draws us toward transcendence. It is tempting to decry our age as the worst of times. Anyone who has studied history, however, [...]

Charlie Kirk’s Assassination: Turning Point or Breaking Point for America?

By |2025-09-21T17:54:07-05:00September 17th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Culture, John Horvat, Morality, Politics, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine|

Charlie Kirk's assassin symbolizes a subculture of rebellion found in recent shooters: full of dark, video-gaming, and Satanic themes. Indeed, like the biblical Cain, the assassin took his rage against the moral law to the point of killing one who embodied the ideal of that law. The assassination of Charlie Kirk is forcing the nation [...]

The Violent Assault Upon Virtue

By |2025-09-17T13:58:50-05:00September 17th, 2025|Categories: Culture, Featured, Imagination, Literature, Marion Montgomery, Poetry, Timeless Essays, Virtue|

When one dares to enter the country of other men’s souls in quest of understanding about the nature of virtue, he enters a dangerous world. When one dares to enter the country of other men’s souls in quest of understanding about the nature of virtue, he enters a dangerous world, especially when that world is [...]

Two Classics: “Crime and Punishment” and “Columbo”

By |2025-09-17T06:01:05-05:00September 16th, 2025|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Literature, Rule of Law, Senior Contributors, Social Order, Television|

The classic television show "Columbo," like the great novel "Crime and Punishment," is a classic, and rightfully so, because it too penetrates to the heart of a modern heresy and exposes it for the lie that it is. This is the Nietzschean idea of the "ubermensch": the superman who can transcend ordinary law. Selecting a [...]

The Jubilee of the Constitution

By |2025-09-17T05:59:44-05:00September 16th, 2025|Categories: Constitution, History, John Quincy Adams, Timeless Essays|

The Constitution consummated the work commenced by the Declaration of Independence—a work in which the people of the North American Union had achieved the most transcendent act of power that social man in his mortal condition can perform. John Quincy Adams, at the time a former President of the United States and member of the [...]

Platonism, Christianity, and the Future Life

By |2025-09-16T08:54:30-05:00September 15th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Michael De Sapio, Philosophy, Plato, Senior Contributors|

Plato’s contributions are indispensable, pointing us to a world beyond what we immediately sense and teaching us of our dignity and worth. But what parts of Plato are good for us, and what parts are not? Where does Plato end and Christianity begin? Those are the questions which thoughtful believers need to ponder. It has [...]

Sources of Authority: The Roots of the Great American Identity Crisis

By |2025-09-14T20:58:01-05:00September 14th, 2025|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, American Revolution, Authority, Catholicism, Christianity, Civil Society, Community, Culture, Nature of God, New Polity, Social Order|

The problem of authority is not merely a political problem or even simply a problem of faith. It instead requires a gathering up of the whole of life, indeed the world in all of its rich multitude of aspects, in relation to its meaning-granting center. Anxious about trends he was witnessing in the ’60s and [...]

Four Forgotten Heroes of True England

By |2025-09-15T05:56:51-05:00September 14th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, England, History, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

Starting just 30 years after the Crucifixion, Catholic England produced remarkable figures, including lesser-known luminaries like Bishop Robert Grosseteste, who pioneered the scientific method. In my book Faith of Our Fathers: A History of True England, I sought to present a panoramic overview of two thousand years of English history, from the first century to the [...]

An Unexpected Personal Climax

By |2025-09-19T10:50:06-05:00September 13th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, David Torkington, Love, Prayer, The Primacy of Loving|

Without returning to the prayer and the spirituality of our forefathers, the Church has seemed to have gradually deteriorated at every level. However, I am now witnessing the many who are beginning to see the truth. They are beginning to see and do what can alone bring personal renewal, and Church renewal, by generating and [...]

Peace, What Is It Good For?

By |2025-09-13T15:14:02-05:00September 13th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Peace, Pope Leo XIV|

Peace is anything but trite or futile. It is our way to a fuller life, a life ordered to the flourishing for which God made us. Pope Leo’s invocation of peace is a demonstration of his love for all peoples and his zeal for their salvation. Peace is an early theme of Pope Leo XIV’s pontificate. [...]

Notes From Underground

By |2025-09-13T09:36:20-05:00September 12th, 2025|Categories: Books, Imagination, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, StAR, The Imaginative Conservative|

I urge “imaginative conservatives” to use their imagination in selecting what they choose to read. Instead of wasting time with the toxic triteness of New York Times bestsellers, we need to reward the courage that adventurous publishers are showing by buying and reading the new and adventurous works that they are publishing. For almost a [...]

Go to Top