Home2025-03-30T18:33:21-05:00
September-October Issue: Reason Versus Rationalism

September-October Issue: Reason Versus Rationalism

Sample Content from Our Latest Issue Table of Contents Sample Article Who Are the Celts? The Celts: A Modern History...
Read More

Tolkien on Film: Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down?

Discussing film adaptations of great works of literature? Tolkien on Film: Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down? - Joseph Pearce
Read More

Good Books versus Bestsellers

Why we should be reading new Catholic fiction and not the toxic titles on the New York Times Bestseller List... Good Books...
Read More

Why Men Need Great Literature

True manhood is not machismo, nor is it feminised emasculation. A true man is cultured and civilized...  Why Men Need...
Read More

The St. Austin Review

The St. Austin Review (StAR) is an international journal of Catholic culture, literature, and ideas. In its pages, printed every two months, some of the brightest and most vigorous minds around meet to explore the people, ideas, movements, and events that shape and misshape our world.

Shakespeare: Not of an Age, But for All Time

Sample Article Villiany, Taught and Executed: Jesuit Philosopher and a Jesuit Poet: A Thomistic Reading of Hopkins’ “As Kingfishers Catch Fire”

It would be a mistake to think that literature exists only to give us simple morality lessons. It instead exists to display human experience. It manifests before us some human beings in human circumstances, faced with human dilemmas and choices, acting for human reasons, and enduring the human consequences. It does not direct our moral considerations; it merely informs them. But oh, what information is supplied! Treat a man like a beast, and he will grow brutal. Give that brutal man an opportunity to slay his tormentor, he will leap at it. Realize such revenge, and destruction will be consummated. Let mercy present itself as an option against a deadly earnest, and some may nobly seize upon it. We can then assign moral praise or blame according to our own lights, but through literature we must first get our facts straight.

The Merchant of Venice portrays the power and claim of mercy in our affairs, but first shows forth that no one seeks revenge out of thin air; there is always a reason, otherwise it would not be revenge. Except for the restraint of proportion, there is little to no natural check against it as such boiling spite is emulsified with some sense of justice. Resolute and narrow in its vision, it is frequently impervious to reason, even to the caution of the unforeseen ruin that so often attends such pursuits. Unflinching, it can usually yield to nothing other than grace; that is, the whole paradigm shift that grace can effect on the vengeful mind, radically altering the perspective to consider mercy, if the will is not walled up in stubbornness.

The Ink Desk Blog

Check Them Out

St. Austin Review Issues

Check out our other issues here and see what you're missing!
Check Them Out

More From The Ink Desk Blog

Get Involved

Support St. Austin Review

To be truly effective, we need the help from clergy and laity everywhere. Help us help the next generation of Catholics to grow up educated in Catholic truth, beauty, and goodness. Please consider a one-time or continuing, tax-deductible gift to StAR!
Get Involved
Go to Top