I finished reading a book about Brexit this week. In fact,
it was a novel by Anthony Cartwright called The
Cut, and specially commissioned by the publisher. The idea was to
understand why a majority of British voters said they wanted to leave the EU.
One of the key themes is how easy it is to see the prejudice in others and
completely overlook the prejudices in ourselves. It has lessons for people in the United States. I’ll
be writing more about it next month.
Tessa Carman at Mere
Orthodoxy reads The Gospel in George Macdonald and considers the reality of
creeks. Fred Sanders talks about the Biblical paintings of Henry Ossawa Tanner.
An anti-slavery campaigner you may never have heard of is Benjamin Lay, and
it’s a fascinating story.
A lot of good poetry this week, including a story from The
Guardian on T.S. Eliot’s “The Waste Land” and how it remains one of the finest
reflections ever written on mental illness.
And the video is a song we sing often at our church.
Life and Culture
Earning
the Tradition – Glenn Arbery at The Imaginative Conservative.
The
Death of Newsweek – Jonathan
Alter at The Atlantic.
How to Stay
Informed Without Staying Glued to the News – Scott Slayton at One Degree to
Another.
Art and Photography
Achieving
a Luminosity: Henry Ossawa Tanner’s Biblical Paintings – Fred Sanders at The Scriptorium Daily.
Hiking
Northbrook Gorge – Neil Ennis at Musings.
Poetry
Relic
– Matthew Thorburn at Image Journal.
Annabelle
Moseley – D.S. Martin at Kingdom Poets.
The cause –
Troy Cady at T(r)oy Marbles.
The
Language of the Dead – Brendan MacOdrum at Oran’s Well.
The
Eleventh of January – Maureen Doallas at Writing Without Paper.
Headlong
into Light – Jason Ramsey at Altarwork.
TS
Eliot's The Waste Land remains one of the finest reflections on mental illness
ever written – Jonathan McAloon at
The Guardian.
Faith
The Factitude of
Creeks, or, Loving the Real – Tessa Carman at Mere Orthodoxy.
Tears
of Hope – Kayla Hodges at Literary Life.
Christendom
in 1200 Words (Give or Take) – Jake Meador at Mere Orthodoxy.
Faith
& Reason vs. Mush – Rod Dreher at The American Conservative.
A Blessed
Lent – Martha Orlando at Meditations of My Heart.
American Stuff
Benjamin
Lay: The Quaker dwarf who fought slavery – Nic Rigby at BBC (Hat tip: J of
India).
British Stuff
How to do
things – David Warren at Essays in Idleness.
Writing and
Literature
'I
really want to find it before I die': why are we so fascinated by lost books?
– Lorraine Berry at The Guardian.
Behold Our God –
Praise and Harmony Singers
Painting: A Woman Reading, oil on canvas by Jean Francoise de Troy (1679-1752).
Thanks so much for including me here today, Glynn!
ReplyDeleteThank you for including my poem, Glynn.
ReplyDelete