“The Cultivation of Christmas Trees”

By |2024-12-24T13:25:21-06:00December 24th, 2024|Categories: Christmas, Poetry, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

There are several attitudes towards Christmas, Some of which we may disregard: The social, the torpid, the patently commercial, The rowdy (the pubs being open till midnight), And the childish — which is not that of the child For whom the candle is a star, and the gilded angel Spreading its wings at the summit [...]

The Knight Before Christmas

By |2024-12-24T07:59:15-06:00December 23rd, 2024|Categories: Christmas, J.R.R. Tolkien, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Senior Contributors|

Any discussion of Christmas and literature brings to mind instantly the miserly figure of Scrooge and the ghosts in Dickens’ Christmas Carol. It is not likely, however, that such a discussion would bring to mind the medieval classic, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. Yet this epic of the Middle Ages, written by an anonymous [...]

“The Shop of Ghosts”

By |2024-12-23T19:52:11-06:00December 23rd, 2024|Categories: Christmas, G.K. Chesterton, Literature, Timeless Essays|

The man in the shop was very old and broken. When I put down the money, he pushed it feebly away. “No, no,” he said vaguely. “I never have. We are rather old-fashioned here.” “Good heavens!” I said. “What can you mean? Why, you might be Father Christmas.” “I am Father Christmas,” he said apologetically. [...]

“O Emmanuel”: A Final Antiphon and More Music

By |2024-12-22T22:30:09-06:00December 22nd, 2024|Categories: Advent, Christianity, Malcolm Guite, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

In my Advent Anthology from Canterbury Press Waiting on the Word, we come to the last of the Seven Great O Antiphons, which was sung on either side of the Magnificat on Christmas Eve, O Emmanuel, O God with us. This is the antiphon from which our lovely Advent hymn takes its name. It was also this final [...]

Ignoble Treasure: Russell Kirk’s “Fate’s Purse”

By |2024-12-24T14:21:58-06:00December 22nd, 2024|Categories: Ghost Stories, Literature, Russell Kirk|

Greed—like gluttony or sloth—is not conducive to human flourishing. Regarding greed, Russell Kirk commented, “Avarice, rather, is desiring more wealth than one’s soul can support properly. Avarice sometimes produces present poverty: the miser, proverbially, is ragged and lean.”[i] When he chose to personify greed in his fiction, Kirk had to look no further than his [...]

“An Old Man’s Winter Night”

By |2024-12-20T09:25:18-06:00December 20th, 2024|Categories: Poetry, Robert Frost|

All out of doors looked darkly in at him Through the thin frost, almost in separate stars, That gathers on the pane in empty rooms. What kept his eyes from giving back the gaze Was the lamp tilted near them in his hand. What kept him from remembering what it was That brought him to [...]

“O Sapientia”: An Advent Antiphon

By |2024-12-16T20:28:48-06:00December 16th, 2024|Categories: Advent, Audio/Video, Christianity, Malcolm Guite, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

The poem I have chosen for December 17th in my Advent Anthology from Canterbury Press Waiting on the Word is my own sonnet “O Sapientia,” the first in a sequence of seven sonnets on the seven great ‘O’ antiphons which I shall be reading to you each day between now and the 23rd of December. You [...]

A Travel Bag of Memories: “Solzhenitsyn and American Culture”

By |2024-12-10T21:52:23-06:00December 10th, 2024|Categories: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Books, David Deavel, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

Such are the power and relevance of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn's words, that we would be doing ourselves a disservice if we did not engage with his memories in an effort to connect them with our own, transforming them into something new. And, happily, this is what the authors of "Solzhenitsyn and American Culture" do. “Own only [...]

“My Life had stood – a Loaded Gun”

By |2024-12-09T17:36:51-06:00December 9th, 2024|Categories: Poetry|

My Life had stood – a Loaded Gun – In Corners – till a Day The Owner passed – identified – And carried Me away – And We roam in Sovereign Woods – And now We hunt the Doe – And every time I speak for Him – The Mountains straight reply – And do [...]

The Ancient Liberty of Milton’s Epic Verse

By |2024-12-08T19:24:31-06:00December 8th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Great Books, John Milton, Liberty, Poetry, Timeless Essays|

John Milton’s “ancient liberty” is not the liberalism of Thomas Hobbes or John Locke, where the telos governing human liberty is dispensed with. Rather, “Paradise Lost” cultivates Christian virtues by reclaiming an ancient liberty within the traditional epic verse form and by returning to that which is first or most ancient: Divine Will. The opening [...]

“To A Friend Estranged From Me”

By |2024-12-06T15:54:37-06:00December 6th, 2024|Categories: Friendship, Poetry|

Now goes under, and I watch it go under, the sun That will not rise again. Today has seen the setting, in your eyes cold and senseless as the sea, Of friendship better than bread, and of bright charity That lifts a man a little above the beasts that run. That this could be! That [...]

The Conditions for Ultimate Greatness

By |2024-12-04T18:19:52-06:00December 4th, 2024|Categories: Books, Catholicism, David Deavel, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Poetry, Senior Contributors|

Margaret Ellsberg’s volume contains her own biographical, critical, and indeed spiritual understanding of Gerard Manley Hopkins, a poet whose brilliant lines were not appreciated in his time and whose life included both the glory and agony of the Christ he served. The Gospel in Gerard Manley Hopkins: Selections from His Poems, Letters, Journals, and Spiritual [...]

Marriage: The Last, Best Gift of Heaven

By |2024-12-03T16:38:34-06:00December 3rd, 2024|Categories: Books, Featured, Heaven, Jane Austen, Literature, Marriage, Timeless Essays|

For Jane Austen’s heroines, marriage is the end towards which their virtuous lives are directed. Above all other blessings Oh! God, for ourselves, and our fellow-creatures, we implore Thee to quicken our sense of thy Mercy in the redemption of the World, of the Value of that Holy Religion in which we have been brought [...]

Wraiths and Reason

By |2024-12-03T09:43:49-06:00December 2nd, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Reason, Senior Contributors|

Natural and supernatural reality are both subject to reason. If the natural is divorced from reason, it leads to the irrational reductionism of rationalism. If the supernatural is divorced from reason, it leads to superstition. “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy.” Hamlet’s words to his [...]

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