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
James Earl Jones reads an excerpt from Shakespeare’s Othello at the White House Evening of Poetry, Music, and the Spoken Word on May 12, 2009:
(This is the latest in a series of arts- and history-related videos that appear in this space each Monday, Wednesday, and Friday)
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