Bishop James D. Conley - Sursum Corda 10 Suggestions For Rekindling The Literary Imagination

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Nat iona l Cat hol ic R egist er , m ay 31, 2015

“Good literature forms a worldview: It


offers us insight into our families, our
communities and ourselves. Great
literature offers us insight into our
relationship with God and the world.”

AMONG THE BOOKS. The Long Room in the Trinity College Library, the largest library in Ireland and home to The Book of Kells, in Dublin. MayaTheB / Shutterstock

Sursum Corda: 10 Suggestions for


Rekindling the Literary Imagination

G
The Internet also demands our attention, does and what good literature can do.
reat men and women — great souls — are formed by and when we do read, we often do so in bite- If we want to solve the problems of

great literature. Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt size morsels, reading only email, tweets,
blogs or inane and prattling lists. Or we read
Western culture, we need, desperately, a
renewal of the Western mind.  
and Thomas Jefferson were voracious readers. St. Paul, pornographic depictions of zombies and
vampires — books which neither satisfy our
All of us who wish to bring forward
a renewal of Christian culture in our world
St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas were steeped in intellects nor our imaginations.  
And, finally, modern methods of educa-
should begin on our knees, in prayer.  
But we must also begin with books in
the literary traditions of their times. St. John Paul II, canonized tion too often favor reading as a technical
exercise — as a necessary skill to prepare us
our hands, being formed in the great tradi-
tion of the classical mind.   
just last year, recalls that, in his youth, he was “completely consumed for a career, instead of as a way to become In short, we need to be wise to defeat the
more fully human. father of lies. We can’t propose wise policies
by a passion for literature.” The cultural content we consume today if we have not cultivated wisdom and good
is mostly uninspiring, at best. And the media judgment. And wisdom begins with the
itself — the technology by which we con- wonder of the literary imagination. 
BY B I S H O P J A M E S C O N L E Y moral discernment has become a lost art. sume content — is very dangerous. While I’m often asked for book recommenda-
SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER
I talk about beauty a great deal. And I am the technology we possess in our cellphones tions. In fact, this essay was inspired by such
The men and women who have been sometimes asked, in the midst of our current and tablets offers great potential, it can also a request from Catholic friends. Many of my
most influential in my own life were readers, crisis, whether paying attention to literature, have the effect of making us shortsighted: friends know that I have had the benefit,
too. Professor John Senior, my teacher and music, poetry and art is a waste of time. I’m hooked on instant gratification, bored with- entirely undeserved, of the kind of literary
godfather, seemed to have the whole canon asked whether it would be more prudent to out immediate stimulation, lonely for real formation that has become too rare these
of Western literature and poetry at his fin- spend all of our energies fighting the political connections instead of text messages, tweets
gertips. Blessed John Henry Newman, my effects of secularism, rather than spending and Facebook “likes.”
spiritual mentor, was a man of letters. My time in the library reading books. In a situa- When we aren’t careful, our technology
grandfather was an avid reader of American tion as grave as ours — for family life, for reli- can make us flat-souled — very bored and Sursum Corda
history, and my father was a reader and gious liberty and for the unborn — this is a very lonely.
Just as the priest prays in the liturgy,
author — in his spare time, he wrote a book legitimate question. Sometimes, in moderation, television can
addressing the faithful in the preface,
on our family’s Wea Indian ancestry. We need to be active in the political arena be worthwhile. And the Internet can be a Sursum Corda — “Lift up your hearts.”
The Russian playwright Anton Chek- — each of us, as Christians. We need to pro- source for great good. But we’ve lost the lit-
hov said, “The business of literature is not to pose policies that support the dignity of the erary culture that formed the heroes of
answer questions, but to state them fairly.”   human person and the institutions that ani- Western history. We’ve replaced it with
I’m not certain that is true. Literature mate and order society. We need to protect noise. Literature, which once formed hearts days. As a student in the Integrated Human-
does raise questions, but it can also — in the the unborn, the freedom of conscience, the and minds towards greatness, is forgotten.    ities Program at the University of Kansas, I
witness of ideas or characters or stories — traditional understanding of marriage and But literature — and poetry, music and read from the great books of Western culture
point us to the final answers, to the perma- the sovereignty of the family.   the fine arts — is the antidote to our flat- and also from the thousands of good books
nent things. But we won’t be successful in the political souled culture. And it is critical to solving that have some worthwhile story to tell.
arena if we don’t first succeed in transform- our culture’s real crisis. Those books began my journey to the Cath-
Cultural Formation ing culture.   We need to understand the humanity olic Church and to Jesus Christ.   
Good literature forms a worldview: It The crisis we face today is a cultural cri- taught by Plato, Augustine and Shakespeare, This essay includes a list of some of
offers us insight into our families, our com- sis, with political consequences. Good policy because we need to understand our own my favorite works and some favorite authors,
munities and ourselves.   is borne of good minds and good hearts, and humanity. In the darkness of elective illiter- following the trajectory of Western thought
Great literature offers us insight into our bad policy is born of dull minds and small acy, it seems that we can too easily lose our and culture. This list is not definitive, or
relationship with God and the world.  vision — of egoism, greed and lust. sight, even of ourselves. authoritative, or even objective.  
Literature reflects culture and forms it. Our battle is not just for policies. It is a Instead, this list is deeply personal:
The history of Western culture can be traced battle for hearts and minds. ‘Born Anew in Wonder’ reflecting the authors who have touched
in the stories we’ve told over the past millen- Literature opens our imaginations to my heart or my mind or my imagination.  
nia. Whether we read much or not, we’ve all Literary Crisis wonder. Reading good books exposes the All good-book lists will necessarily be
been formed, at least in part, by the ideas and Our crisis is, in some ways, a literary cri- contemplative part of our human- personal. This book list is by no means
About the author hopes expressed in the history of Western lit- sis — and thus a crisis of the imagination.   ity. Good books can spur in us a sense of exhaustive — there are too many good
erature. Very few people today are reading good justice, charity and generosity. They can books to list them all.  
Bishop James D. Conley Today, we face an unprecedented crisis of books. We’re busy with families and profes- expand our souls and inspire our hearts And the experience of reading proves that
is the shepherd of the culture. The family is disintegrating before sions. Television sings a siren song, tempting to strive for greatness. Just as the priest a good book may touch one heart very
Diocese of Lincoln, our eyes. Women and children are objectified us to spend mindless hours taking in sports prays in the liturgy, addressing the faith- deeply and hardly touch another at all. Such
Nebraska. in new and dangerous ways. Pornography is or crass comedy or the over-scripted melo- ful in the preface, Sursum Corda — “Lift lists may spark vigorous debate and deep
ubiquitous. Abortion is pervasive. Civil and drama called “reality television.”   up your hearts.” That’s what our faith continues on page C2
Nat iona l Cat hol ic R egist er , m ay 31, 2015

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Leisure, the Basis of Culture by Josef Pieper


Josef Pieper was a German-Catholic philosopher, which we can form a truly Christian family, and a
a professor of sociology and anthropology at the Uni- truly Christian culture.
versity of Munster. He was a student of St. Thomas The exploration of great literature is a form of lei-
Aquinas, Plato and Aristotle.   sure. Today, in our “down time,” we too often shut off
Pieper possessed the unique gift of clarity: He our minds, our hearts or our imaginations.  
reflected on virtue and vice, sin and redemption, But real leisure is the use of our minds and hearts
beauty and culture in books that could be easily to form deeper relationships with Christ and his
understood and easily appreciated. Church. I think often of my father, working each day,
Leisure, the Basis of Culture was written in 1952. providing for our home, but carving out huge
The book explains that leisure — the capacity to per- amounts of time to write a little book on our family’s
ceive, contemplate and celebrate the world we’ve history. He didn’t write the book for money or fame.
been given — is a gift from God. To be fully human It has only been read by our family. He did it, I think,
is to accept the gift of leisure from God and to culti- as an act of leisure — a pursuit of quiet intellectual
vate serenity, joy and peace.   effort that brought him much pleasure and joy and
Leisure, says Pieper, is not about the absence of pointed him to a deeper appreciation of our family. It
work — about idleness. Instead, leisure is about the was a pursuit that helped him to see reality.  
cultivation of goodness in souls: about literature, The rest of this list is comprised of mostly fiction.
music, celebration and wonder.   Even the dialogues of Plato are dramatized accounts,
In 1958, Mortimer Adler wrote, “Leisure consists whose historical accuracy is open for debate.
in activities which are neither toil nor play, but are But Pieper’s book can be understood as a kind of
rather the expressions of moral and intellectual vir- a key — a broad sketch of the ways the literary imag-
tue — the things a good man does because they are ination can form and renew Christian culture.
intrinsically good for him and for his society, making If we want to transform culture, we must begin
him better as a man and advancing the civilization in by cultivating our minds for Christ. Leisure, real lei-
which he lives.”   sure, is the practice of putting our minds, bodies and
Pieper believes that leisure is the basis by which hearts at the service of God. Josef Pieper understood
L’Osservatore Romano
we can grow in wisdom — and therefore, the basis by this, and so must we.  

Intro Homer’s The Odyssey


continuing page C1 introduction Odysseus was a pilgrim — a husband, a father, a soldier and a man
disagreement, which is a sign of the on a journey home.
way good books can wiggle into our The ancient epic poem of Homer, coming from the Greek world and
hearts and remain there forever. composed almost 3,000 years ago, is the story of a man who is taken cap-
This is not a list of the books tive, who fights battles with gods and men, who is tempted, shipwrecked
that contain all of the ideas that and nearly drowned.  It is the story of a man who never loses sight of his
have shaped me or even all of the journey home.
most important ideas. It is not a list Odysseus is prideful, vengeful and cunning. He is not perfect. He
of spiritual classics. It is a literary sins — and does so with spectacular aplomb. But despite his sinfulness,
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list. The list is subjective and aes- he presses onward, to his wife, his family and his home.
thetic — the books on this list are The story is adventurous and dangerous. The battles are vivid. The
among those which I consider to be travels are trying. The temptations are real. It is an instructive story.
particularly beautiful; and thus, par- Almost 3,000 years ago, Homer recognized the dangers our modern cul-
ticularly compelling. ture faces: apathy, escapism, lust, vanity and anger.  
In 1999, St. John Paul II wrote, But the story of Odysseus is the story of a man who overcomes temp-
“Faced with the sacredness of life tation and, with fortitude, reaches his destination.  
and of the human person, and before The Odyssey may remind us of the Christian life or of the arduous
the marvels of the universe, wonder challenges of daily life. It may be a reminder of the most important
is the only appropriate attitude.”   things, the first things, around which we should order our lives: work,
I share the literature that has family and home. Or it may be enough to read it and to imagine the siren Shutterstock

moved me to wonder.   singers, the edge of the world itself and the battle of brave Odysseus.
I also share the books that I have The Odyssey is a companion to The Iliad, the epic poem depicting a
simply enjoyed — characters, adven-
tures and stories I have loved. My
few weeks of the Trojan War. The Iliad is the story of the “rage” of its
hero, Achilles, and his feud with the warrior-king Agamemnon. It is a
“The Odyssey may remind
good friend, author Anthony Eso-
len, says that books open the door-
story of pride, honor, loyalty and fate.  
Virgil’s The Aeneid, whose poetry is beautiful, relates the aftermath of us of the Christian life
ways to possibility.   the sack of Troy and the founding of Rome by Aeneas. This epic poem,
“If you are not reading novels to
make new friends,” he says, “or to
which transitions from the Greek world to the Latin world, takes up many
of the same characters and considers many of the same themes as Hom-
or of the arduous
wander across the fields, or to sail er’s works. These books influenced St. Paul, St. Augustine and St. Thomas
the sea, then you should not read
them at all.”
Aquinas, and, through them, they have influenced us. Together, The
Odyssey, The Iliad and The Aeneid form the basis for almost all of West-
challenges of daily life.”
Finally, this list was not designed ern literature and for much of the Western imagination. 
to be a “top 10” list. I’m not sure such
a project would be possible — I’ve
left off far many more beloved books
than I’ve included.  
Instead, I’ve chosen particu-
lar books on this list because I hope
they will be a branching-off point — a
“All of us who wish to bring forward a renewal of Christian culture in our
place from which to begin explora-
tion of the classics of Western litera-
ture. In a certain sense, they represent
world should begin on our knees, in prayer. But we must also begin with
various genres, and they come from
the vast history of Western culture.    books in our hands, being formed in the great tradition of the classical mind.”
If you have read any of the books
on this list, I pray you might consider
reading them again.  
— Bishop Conley
C.S. Lewis wrote, “The sure mark
of an unliterary man is that he consid-
ers ‘I’ve read it already’ to be a conclu-
sive argument against reading a work.
… Those who read great works will
read the same work 10, 20 or 30 times The Dialogues of Plato
during the course of their lives.”
I also pray that you might read I can’t suggest a favorite or a most important work of Plato. Plato’s
these books — and many others — philosophy is unfolded in the drama of Socratic dialogue: Plato con-
with your families, in your parishes structs and records conversations between his teacher, Socrates, and
and in your communities. I pray for his fellow students.
Catholic book clubs and literary cir- The dialogues of Plato initiate the great questions of philosophy: What
cles, comprised of ordinary, everyday is knowledge? What is wisdom? What is goodness? Who, what and where
Catholics, reading and reflecting on am I? What is truth?
important ideas and beautiful stories.  Among the most important and most touching dialogues of Plato
Reading is, in the modern world, are the Apology, in which Plato defends the contemplative life and the
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a solitary pursuit. But for most of our search for truth; Euthyphro, which explores the meaning of piety and reli-
history, books have been read aloud, gious devotion; Phaedo, which reflects on the soul and tells the story of the
and stories have been told by the fire- death of Socrates; and Crito, which deals with justice and injustice and the
side or at the dinner table or on a proper response to injustice in the world. 
walk. Ideas germinate best when Gorgias is a particularly valuable dia-
they are shared, and they tend to ‘The School of Athens’ fresco by Raphael (1483–1520) Public domain / Wiki- logue today, because it provides insight Socratic Method
matter most when a community pedia into the relationship between politics,
“The method of inquiry
shares them. justice and natural law; Plato insists that
and instruction employed
The language of these books can political ethics must always be rooted in by Socrates, especially as
be awkward or seem foreign to our Bishop Conley’s Recommended Plato Reads objective truth. Republic is a much lon- represented in the dialogues of
modern ears. Please do not be dis- ger work, among Plato’s best, in which Plato and consisting of a series
couraged. Please persevere! You n Apology Socrates explores the nature of justice, of questionings, the object
might not understand everything n Euthyphro the state and the soul. of which is to elicit a clear
you read. You might be tempted to Plato was not a Christian. In fact, he and consistent expression of
n Phaedo
something supposed to be
put these books down and go on to n Crito wrote 350 years before the birth of
implicitly known by all rational
something else. Jesus Christ.   beings.” 
n Gorgias
But plowing forward through But his ideas — about being, about —Merriam-Webster.com
good literature has its own rewards. n Republic justice and about virtue — have some
The more often we undertake chal- similarities to the Christian worldview,
lenging works, the stronger our intel- Parts of and they have influenced many of Christianity’s most important thinkers
lects and imaginations become — Oxyrhynchus — among them St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas and Pope Benedict XVI. 
ever more clearly unlocking the Papyri, third Plato is not always easy to understand, but reading his dialogues and
beauty of characters, stories and century, reflecting on them is an encouragement to consider life’s most important
God’s abundant providence. containing questions.
My hope in this essay is to spur fragments “A man who is good for anything,” wrote Plato, “ought not to calcu-
the imagination, to open the mind of Plato’s late the chance of living or dying; he ought only to consider whether in
and to encourage you, each of you, Republic. doing anything he is doing right or wrong — acting the part of a
to be “born anew in wonder,” to mar- Wikipedia good man or of a bad.”  
vel, in your heart and your imagina- If we wish to become good men and women, Plato’s dialogues have a
tion, at the glory of the Lord. great deal to teach us.
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Nat iona l Cat hol ic R egist er , m ay 31, 2015

‘Tilting at Windmills’
Together, Dante Alighieri (at right, top), Geoffrey Chaucer (at right,
middle) and Miguel de Cervantes (at right, bottom) are probably the great-
est patriarchs of modern literature. Their work spans 300 years, from the
early 14th century until the early 17th century. Their work represents a
bridge between the epic poetry of ancient cultures and the modern novels
of the contemporary world. Each of them helped to cement the use of the
written word in vernacular languages. And together they represent the
incredible use of narrative fiction to tell the stories of pilgrim souls — jour-
neying, with flaws, weaknesses, delusions and sin, towards Jesus Christ.
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Dante’s The Divine Comedy, Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales and Cer-
vantes’ The Ingenius Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha are not always
easy reads, but they are worthwhile. The Divine Comedy is the account of a
pilgrim journeying through the realms of the dead: through hell, through
At right, Don Quixote and Rocinante, after the battle with the purgatory and into the glory of paradise. The Canterbury Tales contain doz-
windmill, from The History of Don Quixote book, published in 1880 ens of tales, told by a group of pilgrims journeying together to a holy shrine.
in London; drawings by Gustave Dore. Shutterstock Below, depiction And Don Quixote is a story both tragic and glorious all at once. It is the
of the end of the 1381 peasant’s revolt, during the time Chaucer story of a man who sets off, with great zeal, to perform heroic deeds — but
was writing. Included are two images of Richard II: One looks who doesn’t see the reality of the world around him. For example, thinking
on while the other is talking to the peasants. Date c. 1385–1400 them to be giant marauders, he jousts with windmills, never realizing the
unknown / Wikipedia pitiful futility of his undertaking. 
But Don Quixote is, in his own way, a pilgrim. He is seeking after holy
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greatness. Like all of us, his own perceptions mar his efforts, despite the
purity of his intentions. But we can learn from Don Quixote the value of

“This mountain is so formed that it is always tenacity and fortitude, of pursuing noble ideals even when we might be
seen as pitiful or tragic.
In Chaucer’s work, we’re exposed to the reality of humanity — exposed
wearisome when one begins the ascent, but to its brokenness and its glory, to its desolations and its hopes.  
In Dante’s work, we’re exposed to the glory of God — and to the grav-
ity of damnation and redemption.
becomes easier the higher one climbs.” Dante, Chaucer and Cervantes have influenced me profoundly. Together,
in some sense, they pave the way for the modern world. In another sense,
— Dante Alighieri, Purgatorio they are the antidote to the modern world — reminding us of how good the
world is when seen through the eyes of faith, looking towards Providence
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and rooted in hope.

Confessions by St. Augustine Fresco of St. Make Time to Read


Augustine and his n Challenge yourself to read for five, 10,
“Late have I loved you, O Beauty ever ancient, ever new; late have I loved mother, St. Monica, 15 or 30 minutes a day.
you! You were within me, but I was outside, and it was there that I searched in Basilica di Sant n Choose a worthy book, and have the
for you. In my unloveliness, I plunged into the lovely things which you created. whole family read a chapter a day and
Agostino (Augus-
discuss what you read at the dinner table.
You were with me, but I was not with you. … You called, you shouted, and you tine) by Pietro
broke through my deafness. You flashed, you shone, and you dispelled my Gagliardi, 19th cen-
blindness. You breathed your fragrance on me; I drew in breath, and now I tury. Renata Sedmakova /
pant for you. I have tasted you; now, I hunger and thirst for more. You touched Shutterstock
me, and I burned for your peace.”
St. Augustine’s Confessions is a work of beauty and a work of genius.
The book is the spiritual autobiography of Augustine of Hippo, the fourth-
Public domain / wikipedia
and fifth-century Christian convert, theologian and bishop.
Confessions is a love story, really — the story of a soul created by
God, loved by God and transformed by God.  
It is also an account of the realities of sin; the story of sin altering our
perceptions and hopes, drawing us far from the happiness to which God
has called us. Above all, Augustine’s Confessions is a witness to the inti-
mate friendship God desires with each of us and the degree to which he will
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pursue us in love and friendship. 
There is one student of Augustine, in particular, whose work is also Literary Company
worth attention for all readers. Boethius was a Roman senator in the sixth Interested in starting a book club or
century after Christ. He read Augustine carefully, as well as Plato and Aris- literary circle? Gather some friends
together at church or at your local
totle. He wrote excellent works of philosophy and theology. He also wrote library, choose some good reads, and
on music, astronomy, geometry and arithmetic.
In 523, Boethius was falsely accused of treason, imprisoned and eventu- “You have made us for enjoy!
Literary journals can offer
inspiration: Check out Dappled
ally executed. While in prison, he wrote his most famous work, The Conso-

yourself, O Lord, and our


Things (DappledThings.org),
lation of Philosophy — a short series of reflections on justice, happiness and Image (ImageJournal.org), Pilgrim
goodness. (PilgrimJournal.com), Second Spring
Pope Benedict XVI wrote that, while writing The Consolation of Philos- (ThomasMoreCollege.edu/books-
ophy, Boethius “learned not to sink into a fatalism that extinguishes hope.
He teaches us that it is not the event but Providence that governs, and Prov-
hearts are restless until lectures/second-spring-journal/) and St.
Austin Review (StAustinReview.com).
Other solid resources are the American
idence has a face. It is possible to speak to Providence because Providence
they rest in you.”
Chesterton Society, with chapter
is God.” information at Chesterton.org/local-
societies/, and the book clubs found at
The goodness of God’s providence is a lesson Augustine teaches well. CatholicMom.com/book_club.htm and
Boethius learned it in prison. And we, too, in reading the work of St. Augus-
tine, can learn to recognize the face of God’s providence.
— St. Augustine FathersforGood.org/ffg/en/fathers_
bookshelf/index.html.

William Shakespeare’s Plays


If you know the characters of Shakespeare — Shylock, Hamlet, Lear, Henry, Mac-
“The love of heaven
beth, Puck, Ophelia, Falstaff, Rosencratz and Guildenstern — they can seem as real makes one heavenly.”
as the people you’ve known your entire life.  
— William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare was a master playwright and poet of the English language
— and his genius was creating characters and stories that reflect what is best about
us and what is worst. 
Most people have had some brush with Shakespeare in high school or college lit-
erature classes. But the plays of Shakespeare seem to have more meaning each time
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they’re read or faithfully performed. Catholic author and speaker Benja-
min Wiker rightly says that “a single sentence of Shakespeare is filled to overflowing
with layers of meaning integrated into the larger play.”   Shakespeare’s Plays
To understand the deepest meaning of Shakespeare’s plays, we need to read them
often. But even a person who has never read Shakespeare will be riveted by the play- Bishop Conley’s favorite Shakespeare plays are: King Lear,
Hamlet, Macbeth, Henry V and The Merchant of Venice. 
wright’s understanding of the human person: of real temptations, real desires and
real choices — and of their consequences. n All’s Well That Ends Well n A Midsummer Night’s
There is considerable evidence to suggest that Shakespeare was probably a Cath- Dream
n Antony and Cleopatra
olic. If this is true, it gives a lens through which to understand the meaning of his n As You Like It
n Much Ado About Nothing
work. But even without that lens, principles of Christian virtue are evidenced in all n Othello
n The Comedy of Errors
of Shakespeare’s work. In fact, the Catholic literary critic Joseph Pearce says that n Pericles
Shakespeare is “a tradition-oriented Christian moralist whose works represent a n Coriolanus
n Richard II
sublime response to … modern and postmodern errors.” n Cymbeline
n Richard III
To begin reading Shakespeare, I recommend five of his most powerful plays. n Hamlet
King Lear tells the tale of a flawed father abandoned by his daughters, but ulti- n Romeo and Juliet
n Henry IV, Part 1
mately redeemed in suffering and in love. n Henry IV, Part 2
n The Taming of the Shrew
Hamlet is the story of a young prince, haunted by his father’s murder and driven n The Tempest
n Henry V
towards a tragic path of revenge. n Timon of Athens
Macbeth is the story of a husband and wife, consumed and destroyed by a quest n Henry VI, Part 1
n Titus Andronicus
for power.  n Henry VI, Part 2
n Troilus and Cressida
Henry V tells the complicated history of the Battle of Agincourt and displays the n Henry VI, Part 3
glory and the tragedy of warfare. n Twelfth Night
n Henry VIII
The Merchant of Venice is a fascinating story of friendship, of mercy and of her- n Two Gentlemen of Verona
n Julius Caesar
oism — and it includes some of the most vivid Shakespearean characters.  n Two Noble Kinsmen
n King Edward III
Reading Shakespeare — and especially the plays above — can be a moving expe- n The Winter’s Tale
rience. Other plays, like Twelfth Night or A Midsummer Night’s Dream, are wonder- n King John
THE GLOBE THEATER. A reconstruction of the Globe Theater, an ful poetry and riotously funny. Still more, like Measure for Measure, are meaningful n King Lear
Elizabethan playhouse in the London borough of Southwark, on morality plays. n Love’s Labour’s Lost
the south bank of the River Thames, was originally built in 1599. It And Shakespeare is particularly well-suited to be read aloud. A few friends, with n Macbeth
was destroyed by fire in 1613, rebuilt in 1614 and then demolished a few hours to spare, can read a play together, aloud, and experience the drama of
n Measure for Measure
in 1644. The modern reconstruction is an academic approximation Shakespeare’s work. “Shakespeare is not great because he is free from such lowly
n The Merchant of Venice
based on the 1599 and 1614 buildings. It was founded by the actor things as religious belief and the moral law,” says Anthony Esolen, “but because he Shylock and Jessica by
and director Sam Wanamaker, built near the site of the original makes compelling their beauty.”   n The Merry Wives of Maurycy Gottlieb (1856–
Windsor
theater and opened to the public in 1997, with a production of The world is compelling and beautiful. Shakespeare helps us to see and under- 1879) Wikipedia
Henry V. Lance Bellers/Kamira/Shutterstock stand that beauty.
Nat iona l Cat hol ic R egist er , m ay 31, 2015

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A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens


I must confess that I like Charles Dickens very much. I’ve read his works
since college, and I expect I’ll continue to read his works. His novels are
clever, interesting, often funny and very moving. Dickens wrote about the
things he knew — the poverty he knew, the struggles he knew and the char-
acters he knew.  
He wrote for ordinary men and women who lived lives much like those of
his characters: full of hard work, high hopes and great love.  
Dickens wrote from his experience, from his imagination and from his
Christianity — he worshipped devoutly as an Anglican and worked for years
Nicku / Shutterstock
on a retelling of the Christian story. The hope of Dickens’ work was that
everyday people would be seen for what they were: beloved sons and daugh-
getty images
ters of God, endowed with an unshakeable dignity.  
An engraving in A Tale of Two Cities, titled ‘The Sea Rises’ by A Tale of Two Cities is among Dickens’ best work, as are Great Expecta-
Hablot K. Browne (Phiz), published by Houghton, Mifflin and Co., tions, David Copperfield and Bleak House. A Tale of Two Cities, the first book Death Comes for
1894. Wikipedia by this author I ever read, is a classically Dickensian novel. A summary of the
twisting plot would fail to do the book justice. The novel takes place during The Archbishop by
the French Revolution, across Paris and London, and among characters, good Willa Cather
Dickens’ Dramas and evil, who experience death and life, darkness and light and, ultimately,
Bishop Conley recommends: A Tale of Two Cities, Great
redemption and resurrection.   Last year, I had the opportunity to
Expectations, David Copperfield and Bleak House. A Tale of Two Cities is not Dickens’ funniest novel, nor his most tragic. visit Willa Cather’s home in Red Cloud,
Certainly, it contains humor and tragedy. But A Tale of Two Cities is a story of Neb. The plains outside of Red Cloud
Novels Christmas Books
humanity — of real people, confronting difficult situations, sometimes at are what Cather called “the material
n Barnaby Rudge n A Christmas Carol their worst and sometimes at their best. It is a story of families and of friend- out of which countries are made.” Red
n Bleak House n The Chimes ship. It is a story of our own human hearts, longing and striving, and the sur- Cloud is a beautiful place, and standing
n David Copperfield n The Cricket on the Hearth prising grace of God. there makes it obvious why the open
n Dombey and Son n The Battle of Life Before his death, Dickens wrote: “I have always striven in my writings to skies of Nebraska were the inspiration
express veneration for the life and lessons of Our Saviour; because I feel it.” for one of America’s greatest authors.
n Great Expectations
Dickens’ work can be thought of as a kind of literary social commentary. He But growing up in Red Cloud, in the
n Hard Times
gave faces and names to the social classes that comprised his world. He showed 1880s and 1890s, Cather was touched
n The Haunted Man and the the poor what it was to be aristocratic, and he showed the aristocracy what it by more than just the scenery of
Ghost’s Bargain
was to be poor. He demonstrated that vice has broad consequences, and so does Nebraska prairie. She was touched by
n Little Dorrit virtue. His work calls for awareness that society can undermine the humanity the people who had come from many
n Martin Chuzzlewit of real people, in ways that are often unintended but are nonetheless profound. places to farm that prairie. She was
n The Mystery of Edwin Drood Many believers have written compelling social commentary. Fyodor Dosto- touched by people who set out from
n Nicholas Nickleby evsky, who wrote The Brothers Karamazov, among other things, examined sin, foreign cities with their families to sow
grace and redemption in the context of families, the Church and the state. And seeds and harvest crops in land they
n The Old Curiosity Shop
Sigrid Unset, a Norwegian convert who wrote just decades after Dickens, is the had never seen. She was touched by
n Oliver Twist
Marley’s ghost from A author of Kristin Lavransdatter, a beautiful trilogy that demonstrates the way their hope, their optimism and their
n Our Mutual Friend Christmas Carol; illustration in which Christian culture leads to justice and holiness for its citizens. fortitude — and by the losses they
n The Pickwick Papers by John Leech. Public domain/ Each of these novels can point out injustice — and point the way to justice endured as they traveled to new lives.
n A Tale of Two Cities Wikipedia and to the source of justice in Jesus Christ. Death Comes for the Archbishop is a
historical novel. It is a fictionalized
account of the first missionary bishop
of Santa Fe, whom Cather names Jean
Marie Latour. The story is his journey
west, his struggle to proclaim and live
The Betrothed by Alessandro Manzoni the Gospel, his friendship with a brother
priest and, ultimately, his quiet death.
Pope Francis is astoundingly well-read. In interviews, he reports reading the The story is familiar to me, because
classics: writer Fyodor Dostoevsky and poet Gerard Manley Hopkins — and he it parallels the story of Santa Fe’s real
often makes references to modern novelists and poets. He has expressed, in hom- bishop, Jean Baptiste Lamy, and his
ilies and letters, the importance of literary beauty. And one of his favorite books, good friend, the first bishop of Denver,
Alessandro Manzoni’s The Betrothed, published in 1825, is one I also treasure.  Joseph Projectus Machebeuf.  
I lived in Italy for 10 years. While I was there, I discovered that every Italian What animates the book is the
high-schooler reads I Promessi Sposi (The Betrothed). The book is a rite of passage; incredible scenery Cather describes
it is truly Italy’s national novel. And the book can give us real insight into the and the compelling sense of mission
heart and mind of Pope Francis. the friends share. Together, they are
Wikipedia
Last year, in an interview printed in America, Pope Francis said, “I have read The working to build the kingdom of God,
Betrothed, by Alessandro Manzoni, three times, and I have it now on my table because and Cather captures their motivation
I want to read it again. Manzoni gave me so much. When I was a child, my grand- perfectly. She drew from the stories
mother taught me by heart the beginning of The Betrothed: ‘That branch of Lake she’d heard about them and from those
Como that turns off to the south between two unbroken chains of mountains …’” she’d known in Red Cloud, who had
As the Holy Father remembers, The Betrothed begins with a beautiful descrip- also made improbable journeys moti-
tion of the countryside around Lake Como in northern Italy. It is the story of a Venetian Lovers by Paris Bordone, from between 1525 and 1530, vated by hope and by confidence in
young couple, Renzo and Lucia, who live in that region during the 17th century.  oil on canvas. Wikipedia God’s will. 
Renzo and Lucia want to be married. But a local nobleman, who wants Lucia Cather captures their sorrow and
for himself, does everything he can to stop the wedding. He intimidates the local their triumph. In spare prose, she
priest. He partners with a shadowy villain. He plots to ruin Renzo and Lucia’s Jorge Bergoglio taught writes real meaning.  
kindly friends. And he kidnaps Lucia and hides her in a mountain castle. literature and psychology at Consider the triumph, the friend-
Renzo, though, is unable to rescue Lucia.  He is exiled, and then caught up in a riot the Immacolata College in ship and the joy she portrays when the
and then a plague. He ends up very far from Lucia, working hopelessly in a factory. Santa Fe between 1964 and pair arrive in Santa Fe:
The young couple is not reunited by anyone’s heroics. Renzo is not able to save 1965; and then, in 1966, “The young Bishop was not alone in
the day. Instead, they are saved by an unmistakable act of God’s grace.   he taught the same sub- the exaltation of that hour; beside him
The Betrothed hangs on the power of God’s mercy to transform hearts in a rad- jects at the University of El rode Father Joseph Vaillant, his boy-
ical way. The story demonstrates how God can work — and how much our Salvador, in Buenos Aires. hood friend, who had made this long pil-
prayers and our sacrifices might impact others. Giulio Napolitano / Shutterstock grimage with him and shared his dan-
The Betrothed is not popular in the United States, but it should be. The book ger. The two rode into Santa Fe together,
is an extraordinary story for our times.   claiming it for the glory of God!”
It is very tempting for us to view those with whom we disagree as our ene- Death Comes for the Archbishop is a
mies. It is also tempting to believe that we have the power to save ourselves — particularly meaningful work for
that with hard work and ingenuity we can resolve any problem.   Christians. And its imagery is particu-
The Betrothed, in a beautiful, adventurous and often funny story, reminds us larly poignant for those who love the
that the real enemy is Satan and that the truest victor is Jesus Christ. American West. Its characters depict
the truest virtues of loyalty, fraternity
and friendship.  
But  Death Comes for the Arch-
bishop is a story of struggle and hope,
The English-Catholic Literary Revival failure and victory — a story of living
and dying for things far more impor-
For a little more than 100 years, between 1850 and 1960, British tant than ourselves.
authors produced great Catholic literature and poetry at an astonish-
ing rate. Some of them — like J.R.R. Tolkien, G.K. Chesterton and
Blessed John Henry Newman — are very well known. Others,
like Robert Hugh Benson and Hilaire Belloc, are not as universally
appreciated. Some, like Graham Greene and Evelyn Waugh, struggled J.R.R Tolkien / Ap photo G.K. Chesterton / Wikipedia John Henry Newman / Wikipedia
Conclusion:
with the meaning of Catholicism until their deaths. One — who pro- ‘Renewal of Minds’
duced literature thoroughly imbued with Catholic principles — was
not even a Catholic: C.S. Lewis. Who Were the Inklings? Books form culture. Good
This group of writers, and many of their friends and contempo- books, well-read and well-reflected,
The friendships among the English Catholic Literary
raries, produced books with insight into our modern problems and Revival were mostly fostered among the Inklings, an form good and holy culture.  
perspectives and to the eternal source of grace in Jesus Christ. They informal group of writers who gathered in Oxford Good books form good minds
were imaginative, clever, forthright and strong.   pubs, most especially The Eagle and the Child, which and good hearts. Good books form
they called “The Bird and the Baby.” Most of the
Books like Greene’s The Power and the Glory or Waugh’s Brides- Inklings were serious Christians, and many of them good lives. Good poems do the
head Revisited produce characters with constitutions and weak- were very serious Catholics. They read their work same thing. So do good pieces of
nesses very much like our own. Other works, like Tolkien’s Middle together and offered commentary, suggestions and music, good paintings and good
Earth epics or Lewis’ Space Trilogy, produce entire worlds that point support. Mostly, they were friends who understood plays.  
the power of telling stories — a power to build
us to Christ. The poetry of Belloc, the essays of Chesterton and the common virtues and a common culture. The Inklings It would be a worthwhile project
sermons of Newman depict that Christ moves in our own world and are a model for nurturing the Catholic intellectual life. to list some of those as well, and one
in our own hearts.   The spirit of their group — friendship, Christian unity I might accomplish — after reread-
and high and noble imagination — is precisely what
There are too many works to recommend. Pick up these authors, brings joy to the Catholic mind.
ing the books I’ve suggested to you.
and prepare to laugh heartily, but also to see clearly, and with stun- The books and authors I’ve
The regulars included:
ning insight, the power, the order, the love and the glory of God. I was listed are a place to start the forma-
first introduced to this world of the English-Catholic Literary Revival n J.R.R. Tolkien n Tolkien’s son, Christopher Tolkien tion of your literary imagination
Picture of The Eagle and Child pub facade, in Oxford,
during my undergraduate years in college, and it was reading these n C.S. Lewis n Lewis’ elder brother, Warren Lewis England, where the Inklings would meet. Wikipedia and all that comes with it.
authors that finally made me a Catholic. I will pray they will lead to more
books, more authors and more

“I was first introduced to this world of the English-Catholic Literary genres — to more discoveries in
library stacks and bookstores. I
pray they will lead to wisdom.

Revival during my undergraduate years in college, and it was reading May these books be a source of
joy, and may they be a source of
wonder. May each of us, as St. Paul
these authors that finally made me Catholic.” prays, “Be transformed by the
renewal of our minds.”  
— Bishop James Conley
— Bishop Conley

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