Guy Crouchback: Evelyn Waugh’s Hosea

By |2023-03-14T10:24:34-05:00March 13th, 2023|Categories: Dwight Longenecker, Evelyn Waugh, Fiction, Literature, Senior Contributors|

In Evelyn Waugh’s "Sword of Honor" trilogy, the character Guy Crouchback has married a glamorous, but promiscuous woman. In doing so, he echoes the heroism of Hosea, who pictures God’s own faithfulness to his promiscuous people. The true sword of honor is not military glory, but Guy’s noble action of forgiveness. To illuminate and inspire [...]

Education as if Truth Mattered

By |2022-08-25T12:54:22-05:00August 24th, 2022|Categories: C.S. Lewis, Education, Evelyn Waugh, Featured, G.K. Chesterton, Great Books, Joseph Pearce, StAR, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

If the twenty-first century is to produce more great men and more great books, it will have to restore a true education; and a true education is an education as if truth mattered. The title of this essay, “Education as if Truth Mattered,” is taken from the subtitle of Christopher Derrick’s book, Escape from Scepticism: [...]

Evelyn Waugh on Style & Substance in Writing

By |2021-05-06T16:07:32-05:00May 6th, 2021|Categories: David Deavel, Evelyn Waugh, Literature, Senior Contributors, Writing|

Evelyn Waugh understands that if a writer is to develop, he “must concern himself more and more with Style.” By approaching words with the attention and craft of a tailor, the literary artist not only communicates but also gives pleasure to others. “What do you think you’re doing?” It’s a question I occasionally get from [...]

To Be Unfit for the Modern World

By |2024-02-03T17:35:23-06:00September 6th, 2018|Categories: Books, Education, Evelyn Waugh, Great Books, History, Western Tradition|

The Great Tradition patiently endures, ready to speak on its own behalf, ready to challenge narrow prejudices, ready to examine those with the courage to be interrogated by it, ready to teach those who are willing to be made unfit for the modern world... The following is an excerpt from Richard Gamble, The Great Tradition: Classic [...]

A Satirist at Work: Evelyn Waugh’s “Helena”

By |2019-10-24T11:32:34-05:00January 14th, 2017|Categories: Books, Evelyn Waugh, Featured, Sainthood|

Evelyn Waugh’s Helena is a saint for modern times—not an otherworldly ascetic or a heroic martyr, but a woman who “discovered what it was God had chosen for her to do and did it”… This year marks the fiftieth anniversary of the death of Evelyn Waugh (1903-1966), Catholic convert and novelist. I had never read [...]

Great Works of the Catholic Revival

By |2019-09-28T09:50:55-05:00November 10th, 2015|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Evelyn Waugh, G.K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, J.R.R. Tolkien, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Sainthood, StAR|

It is often forgotten that the Catholic presence in England is older than England itself. From the martyrdom of St. Alban in the early fourth century, under the Roman occupation, the land has been blessed with a host of Catholic saints. After the Romans left the land that they called Albion, a faithful remnant of [...]

Crimes against the Humanities: The Tragedy of Modernity

By |2016-12-07T01:15:30-06:00March 16th, 2014|Categories: Christianity, Culture, Evelyn Waugh, G.K. Chesterton, History, Humanities, Joseph Pearce, T.S. Eliot|

One of the most heinous crimes against humanity that modernity has perpetrated is its war on the humanities. And let’s not forget that the humanities are thus called because they teach us about our own humanity. A failure to appreciate the humanities must inevitably lead to the dehumanizing of culture and a disastrous loss of [...]

To Become Unfit for the Modern World: The Great Tradition

By |2024-02-03T17:21:06-06:00October 25th, 2011|Categories: Books, Evelyn Waugh, Liberal Learning|

 The Great Tradition: Classic Readings on What It Means to Be an Educated Human Being , an excerpt from Richard Gamble's introduction. Evelyn Waugh’s gently satirical Scott-King’s Modern Europe follows the declining career of a classics teacher at Granchester, a fictional English public school. Granchester is “entirely respectable” but in need of a bit of modernizing, [...]

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