How to navigate this site
This site contains CWNY’s works from 3/3/12 through 7/31/21, when CWNY ceased writing, as noted by his family in The Minstrel Sleeps. To download a pdf of all posts from this time period, go to About this site. (You may also download individual posts and pages, using a plugin we’ve made available.)
Please note that this site includes all posts from his previously de-platformed blog, which were completely restored as of 6/10/22. Should you wish to view only those restored posts, use the category link: Older posts (pre-April 2019).
For CWNY’s writing from 5/25/06 to 2/25/12, visit his older blog, still available here.
More content on this site is also available on the Remembrances page, which includes his final, albeit unfinished, Christmas story, and To His Readers (4/21/19), which he posted after his return from being deplatformed.
Categories
Tags
- 19th Century Christian Authors
- Alfred Lord Tennyson
- Anthony Jacob
- C. S. Lewis
- Charles Dickens
- Chateaubriand
- D. P. Dugauquier
- D. P. Duguauquier
- de la Motte Fouque
- Dostoyevsky
- Dream of the Rood
- Edgar Allan Poe
- Edmund Burke
- G. M. Trevelyan
- George Fitzhugh
- H. V. Morton
- Hans Christian Andersen
- Henry Francis Lyte
- Herbert Butterfield
- Herman Melville
- Hippolyte Taine
- Ian Maclaren
- J. S. LeFanu
- Johanna Spyri
- John Buchan
- John Donne
- John Sharp Williams
- Kenneth Grahame
- Le Fanu
- N.F.S. Grundtvig
- Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Richard Weaver
- Robert Lewis Dabney
- Robert Louis Stevenson
- Rudyard Kipling
- Shakespeare
- St. John
- St. Paul
- Stark Young
- Thomas Hughes
- Thomas Nelson Page
- Walter Scott
- Washington Irving
- Weyl & Marina
- Wilbur Daniel Steele
Archives
Tag Archives: John Sharp Williams
The Anaconda’s Coil
In that day the LORD with his sore and great and strong sword shall punish leviathan the piercing serpent, even leviathan that crooked serpent; and he shall slay the dragon that is in the sea. –Isaiah 27: 1 _________________________ Every … Continue reading
For Unto You Is Born
When the Christ-Child to this world came down, He left for us His throne and crown, He lay in a manger, all pure and fair, Of straw and hay His bed so bare. But high in heaven the star shone … Continue reading
His Europe Shall Not Pass Away
What can I give Him, poor as I am?If I were a shepherd, I would bring a lamb;If I were a Wise Man, I would do my part;Yet what I can I give Him: give my heart. –Christina Rossetti _________________________ … Continue reading
We Are Born of Thee
“You would be incorrect if you claimed that the Scarlet Pimpernel only existed in the imagination of Baroness Orczy. He exists in the spirit of every European who refuses to allow colored barbarians to torture and kill other Europeans. Christian … Continue reading
In This Hope We Live
The Ash Grove The ash grove, how graceful, how plainly ’tis speakingThe wind through it playing has language for me.Whenever the light through its branches is breaking,A host of kind faces is gazing at me.The friends from my childhood again … Continue reading
More Precious Than Gold
For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. – Matthew 6: 21 __________ I want to continue with John Sharp Williams’ mediation on sentiment, because it lies at the heart of the white man’s dilemma. The white … Continue reading
A Sentimental Attachment
And yet, my friends, there are people who say that all this sort of talk is “sentiment;” that what we want to do is to “come down to cotton and corn and pork;” buying and selling, negotiating your bank exchange; … Continue reading
Hold to the Vision
There is no grander, no more superb spectacle than that of the white men of the South standing from ’65 to ’74 quietly, determinedly, solidly, shoulder to shoulder in phalanx, as if the entire race were one man, unintimidated by … Continue reading
The Little European Town of Bethlehem
And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. And there were in the same country shepherds abiding in the … Continue reading