Lt. Col. Jason K. Fettig and the United States Marine Band perform “When Jesus Wept,” a movement from William Schuman’s New England Triptych, based on the music of William Billings:
Almanac: Chesterton on courage
“Courage is almost a contradiction in terms. It means a strong desire to live taking the form of a readiness to die.”
G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy
Snapshot: Tony Bennett sings “If I Ruled the World”
Tony Bennett and the Woody Herman Herd perform “If I Ruled the World,” by Leslie Bricusse and Cyril Ornadel, on The Ed Sullivan Show. This episode was originally telecast live by CBS on March 21, 1965:
(This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos that appear in this space each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday)
Almanac: Edmund Burke on fear
“No passion so effectually robs the mind of all its powers of acting and reasoning as fear.”
Edmund Burke, A Philosophical Inquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful
Lookback: some thoughts on death
From 2016:
Read the whole thing here.I have a theory that you don’t become a full-fledged adult until you’ve weathered the death of someone with whom you are intimate, not in distant memory but at the actual moment of that person’s demise. (You get a pass if you yourself come close to dying, but not otherwise.) If that’s so, then I grew up at the end of 1995, two months shy of my fortieth birthday, when my best friend died a painful, senseless death to whose details I was fully and agonizingly privy.
Almanac: Clark Gable on death
“Die the way you lived—all of a sudden.”
Oliver H.P. Garrett and Joseph L. Mankiewicz, screenplay for Manhattan Melodrama(spoken in the film by Clark Gable)
Just because: James Earl Jones reads from Othello at the White House
Almanac: David Hume on grief
“Grief and disappointment give rise to anger, anger to envy, envy to malice, and malice to grief again, till the whole circle be completed.”
David Hume, A Treatise of Human Nature