Posted on September 29, 2008 by Lost and Found
First of all, I have to say thank you to you who visit and read this blog. I often wish it contained earth-shattering insights instead of the ongoing wrestling of a lethal mind, but this month more of you visited this blog by 25% than ever before. Thank you! I hope it has offered you [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Lost Tools of Writing, writing | Tagged: election 2008, McCain Obama debate, rhetoric and the presidential debate | No Comments »
Posted on September 16, 2008 by Lost and Found
Last night, when I was earnestly wishing I was fast asleep, a thought came to me that I thought (it being very late or very early) was quite profound. It went something like this, though of course all the profound illumination of the insight has faded with the light of day:
The soul delights in harmony. On [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Literature, grammar, science-natural, writing | Tagged: harmony in literature, john donne, literary theory, long sentences | 2 Comments »
Posted on September 13, 2008 by Lost and Found
Or what do you make of assumptions? Are assumptions good or bad?
We hear the cliche all too much about what assumptions make of you and me, but have you ever thought about how much that cliche assumes? Next time somebody says something like that to you, make a simple little request. Ask, “How can I [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Curriculum, Literature, Lost Tools of Writing, reading, writing | Tagged: logic, Lost Tools of Writing, nursery rhymes | No Comments »
Posted on September 11, 2008 by Lost and Found
Since I care so much about writing, and since one of the greatest pleasures in life is a well-tempered sentence, I have been reflecting quite a bit lately on what makes for good style. I’ve been asking how to improve my own style as well as reviewing some writers whom I particularly love reading, among whom [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Literature, Lost Tools of Writing, reading, writing | Tagged: CS Lewis | 2 Comments »
Posted on September 10, 2008 by Lost and Found
Here’s an example of a beautiful long sentence that couldn’t have said what it said if it had said it shortly:
[A great author] writes passionately, because he feels keenly; forcibly, because he conceives vividly; he sees too clearly to be vague; he is too serious to be otiose; he can analyze his subject, and therefore [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Lost Tools of Writing, writing | Tagged: John Henry Newman, Russell Kirk | 2 Comments »
Posted on September 6, 2008 by Lost and Found
We had been wandering, indeed, in the leafless shrubbery an hour in the morning; but since dinner (Mrs. Reed, when there was no company dined early) the cold winter wind had brought with it clouds so somber, and a rain so penetrating, that further outdoor exercise was now out of the question.
That is the [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Curriculum, Education, Literature, Lost Tools of Writing, classical education, college, grammar, humane sciences, philosophy, writing | Tagged: long sentences, syntax | 3 Comments »
Posted on August 22, 2008 by Lost and Found
I’ve been reading in snatches of a page or two at a time a book that fell out of heaven into my lap at the conference this summer. If you are interested in a theological and philosophical understanding of the place of rhetoric in the Christian classical tradition, I don’t think you’ll find a book more [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Education, Literature, Lost Tools of Writing, Teaching, Trivium, classical education, history of education, human nature, humane sciences, memorizing, seven liberal arts, writing | Tagged: medieval rhetoric, virtue | 1 Comment »
Posted on July 2, 2008 by Lost and Found
I’m not altogether certain but it might be. How often do you get to spend a weekend with a translator of Dante, a founder of a Christian classical college, and a group of people driven to figure out what Christian classical education is and how to implement it?
I just attended the SCL conference in Charleston, [...]
Filed under: Books - 2008 conference, Classical Rhetoric, Education, Lost Tools of Writing, Teaching, Trivium, classical education, conferences, history of education, school leadership, seven liberal arts, spirit of the age, writing | Tagged: CiRCE Institute 2008 conference | No Comments »
Posted on April 17, 2008 by Lost and Found
If you are hired to write speeches by the Vice President of these United States, you can write speeches. You can imagine, therefore, why my attention was aroused when I discovered an interview of Daniel Pink (speechwriter to Al Gore) by Tim Ferriss (author of The Four Hour Work Week).
Of course, I wanted to see if [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Lost Tools of Writing, Teaching, Trivium, writing | Tagged: Daniel Pink, essay writing, Lost Tools of Writing, Public speaking, speechwriting, Tim Ferriss | 1 Comment »
Posted on April 8, 2008 by Lost and Found
Since a poem has the four qualtities identified and haltingly addressed in this post: it’s music, its imagery, its logos, and its unspeakable quality that I’ve reluctantly and insultingly reduced to its connotations, we can develop a strategy when we approach a poem that is consistent with the nature of poetry. We don’t need to [...]
Filed under: Classical Rhetoric, Curriculum, Education, Literature, Lost Tools of Writing, Teaching, classical education, reading, seven liberal arts, writing | Tagged: Poetry, reading poetry, teaching poetry | No Comments »