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Malcolm Guite maintains a healthy sense of the numinous – of what a character late in his new book, Galahad and the Grail, calls “the world’s bright edge,” those sacred mysteries that defy tongue and pen. In Galahad, the first in a projected four-book series retelling the story of Logres in verse, he attempts to revive the Grail legend for a jaded and skeptical age. Unlike many contemporary authors, he has not sought to desacralize or deconstruct the old tales but to restore their ancient symbolic and religious edifice, like a contractor refurbishing a venerable and beloved house.
That behavior has long been a source of consternation for fans who love the magnanimous humanity of his work and struggle to reconcile these two...
Continue ReadingIn Schubert’s piece, you can positively feel and smell the breezes and hear the birds. . I’ve just been playing the Trout Quintet on the...
Continue ReadingIn these poems, Berry shows us how to access other layers of time beyond our restless, ordinary temporality. . Wendell Berry’s collected...
Continue ReadingThe rise of a Christian subgenre of samba in Brazil reignites old debates about cultural appropriation and whether any music can glorify God. ...
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