When the English writer and artist Caryll Houselander was thirteen years of age, she had an experience that brought her face to face with the suffering of the world. The year was late 1914 or early 1915, and Caryll was a boarder at a convent school...

During the summer of 1940, the writer and visual artist Caryll Houselander was going on thirty-nine.  Her writing and drawings appeared anonymously in three periodicals: the Jesuit-run Messenger of the Sacred Heart, The Children’s Messenger, and The Grail Magazine.  She lived in a house on Milborne Grove with her...

Alfred Delp in Berlin’s “People’s Court”, January 8-9, 1945 One day in mid-January, 1945, the Jesuit Alfred Delp wrote to his secretary from his cell in Berlin’s Tegel Prison: “I’ve begun writing a few thoughts on the Pentecost prayer for you.” The letter was later dated “after...

Gerard Manley Hopkins, 1879 In December 1918, a ninety-seven-year-old widow by the name of Catherine Hopkins, received a modest volume of poetry with a simple blue cover. The title was Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins. The book, prepared and edited by England’s Poet Laureate, Robert Bridges,...

In the story “The Enduring Chill” by the fiction writer of the American South, Flannery O’Connor, an atheistic character by the name of Asbury is visited by a Jesuit priest.  Asbury, who fancies himself literary and intellectual, comes home to die and is met by...

In 1946, two years before Thomas Merton’s book The Seven Storey Mountain brought Trappist monasteries into popular focus, a twenty-one-year-old man set out on a ship from France to try his vocation in one of them.  His destination was the Abbey of Notre-Dame du Lac...

At six o’clock on a summer morning, the only sound outside the Trappist Abbaye Val Notre Dame is the croaking of two bull frogs in the nearby pond.  The abbey, located deep inside the foothills of the Laurentian Mountains in southern Quebec, is so remote...

When the English novelist Evelyn Waugh visited the United States in the late 1940s, a young journalist asked him what impressed him most in America.  His answer: the Trappist Abbey of Gethsemani in Kentucky.  Finding that his interviewer, whom he identified only as “the wretched...

In late October, 1866, a young student and poet named Gerard Manley Hopkins boarded a train in Oxford and took the 60-mile journey north to the industrial city of Birmingham. There, he was received into the Roman Catholic Church by John Henry Newman. By that time,...