Tuesday, February 3, 2026

‘Green Men and Green Churches’

 

A modern prophet from England, Paul Kingsnorth, has made the comment in a number of his essays that he appreciates how the ancient churches in England look as if they grew out of the soil itself rather than were constructed by human hands.  If one looks into Southern life, he will find that our churches share a strong resemblance to this description of his.

Mary Eastman opened her book Aunt Phillis’s Cabin; or, Southern Life as It Is, with this word-picture of a church in Virginia:

‘The old Episcopal church, standing at the entrance of the town, could not fail to be attractive from its appearance of age; but from this alone.  No monuments adorn the churchyard; head-stones of all sizes meet the eye, some worn and leaning against a shrub or tree for support, others new and white, and glistening in the sunset.  Several family vaults, unpretending in their appearance, are perceived on a closer scrutiny, to which the plants usually found in burial-grounds are clinging, shadowed too by large trees.  The walls where they are visible are worn and discolored, but they are almost covered with ivy, clad in summer’s deepest green.  Many a stranger stopped his horse in passing by to wonder at its look of other days; and some, it may be, to wish they were sleeping in the shades of its mouldering walls’ (Lippincott, Grambo & Co., Philadelphia, 1852, Dodo Press reprint, p. 1).

Margaret Junkin Preston wrote in her novel Silverwood:  Book of Memories,

‘Beautifully stood the antique, moss-grown church, almost hidden on its sloping knoll, among giant, white-branched sycamores, and stalwart oaks, and mountain ashes—the heroic remnants of the primeval forest, which, like the race whose council-fires they may have shaded, alone remained to give token of former glory. A stream of clear water crossed the road, just at the foot of the knoll on which this old structure, dating away back to colonial times, reared its venerable walls. A steep roof, with wide, projecting eves, windows and doors scattered about with not much reference to symmetry, an outside covered stairway, all combined to make it a most quaint-looking pile’ (Derby & Jackson, New York, 1856, p. 100).

William Gilmore Simms presents a similar image of forest and church merging in his poem ‘Sabbath in the Forest’:

‘THE mighty and the massy of the wood

Compel my worship: satisfied I lie,

With naught in sight but forest, earth, and sky,

And give sweet sustenance to precious mood! —

'Tis thus from visible but inanimate things,

We gather mortal reverence.  They declare

In silence, a persuasion we must share,

Of hidden sources, spiritual springs,

Fountains of deep intelligence, and powers,

That man himself implores not; and I grow

From wonder into worship, as the show,

Majestic, but unvoiced, through noteless hours,

Imposes on my soul, with musings high,

That, like Jacob's Ladder, lifts them to the sky!’

(Poems:  Descriptive, Dramatic, Legendary and Contemplative, Vol. II, Redfield, New York, 1853, p. 12)

This way of seeing the world has survived into modern times in Dixie, in Cormac McCarthy’s novel Suttree, for instance:

‘In his solitary wanderings, hallucinations, and dream visions in the “cool green fire” of the mountains, Suttree comes to look at “a world of incredible loveliness.  Old distaff Celt’s blood in some back chamber of his brain moved him to discourse with the birches, with the oaks….  He could hear the footsteps of the dead.  Everything had fallen from him” (286).  Suttree, in effect, becomes a Southern version of Yeats’s Mad Sweeney.  He is now the true Celtic gealt, the madman whose insanity allows him to see and comprehend truths which the sane wish to avoid and are able to ignore.  At the end of his immersion into this “greenly phosphorescent” natural world, he comes to see “with a madman’s clarity the perishability of his flesh” (287).  In other words, he reaches the humility of human finitude.  The world Suttree has left is a world of incredible cruelty, violations, and dispossessions.  He enters a world of wonder.  We now see Suttree “muttering along half mindless, an aberrant journeyman in the trade of wonder” (290)’ (Dr James Everett Kibler, Jr, The Classical Origins of Southern Literature, Abbeville Institute Press, McClellanville, SC, 2017, p. 174).

Every culture has symbols that are peculiarly their own.  The nature-church, or the green church as we shall call it, is one such belonging to Dixie.  It represents the sacramental view of nature that traditional Southerner’s hold, that God is present in his creation in a mysterious yet very real way.  Though it resembles the Romantics’ view of nature, it nevertheless does not fall like them into pantheism:  It remains a Christian vision.

This symbol of ours is related to a symbol found in England, the land of the South’s first settlers:  the green man, or the foliate head.  It appears on a number of old churches there.  While several theories have been put forward to explain its presence on these churches, Josh Robinson offers the most reasonable one in an essay he wrote for The Symbolic World:  It is a pictorial representation of a story, ‘The Life of Adam,’ from the medieval book The Golden Legend (13th century) –

 . . .

The rest is at https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/green-men-and-green-churches/.

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Remembrances for February - 2026

 

Dear friends, if you have time, please pray for these members of the Southern family on the day they reposed.  Many thanks.

But one may ask:  ‘What good does it do to pray for the departed?’  An answer is offered here:  https://orthochristian.com/130608.html

Along with prayers and hymns for the departed:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6je5axPodI

1 Feb.

Cmdr Matthew Fontaine Maury.  A pioneer in sciences of the sea:  ‘Honored all over the world as the founder of a new science, Maury was the first man to describe the Gulf Stream and to mark sea routes across the Atlantic Ocean. He instituted the system of deep-sea sounding and suggested the laying of transoceanic telegraph cables, which later became a reality. His work earned him the nickname “Pathfinder of the Seas.”’

https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/matthew-fontaine-maury/

https://www.britannica.com/biography/Matthew-Fontaine-Maury

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/8835/matthew-fontaine-maury

4 Feb.

Jean Laffite.  Brother of Pierre Laffite, he was the ‘respectable’ business manager of the two pirate brothers of Barataria Bay, Louisiana.  He and Pierre are well-known for their role in the Battle of New Orleans and other acts of mischief.  Quintessential lovable rogues.  New Orleans’s Grace King gives details of their life:

https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Louisiana/New_Orleans/_Texts/KINPAP/10*.html

11 Feb.

Charles Gayarré.  ‘New Orleans native Charles Gayarré wrote the first complete history of Louisiana: a four-volume series entitled Louisiana History (1866). Originally written in French, his study focused on the region’s domination by France, Spain, and then the United States. Many of the components for this work came out of public lectures that Gayarré began giving in the 1840s. He also wrote and published other histories, political tracts, government reports, plays, novels, biographies, and articles in numerous journals, establishing himself as one of Louisiana’s literary pioneers.’

https://64parishes.org/entry/charles-gayarr

13 Feb.

Bishop William Green.  He oversaw the building of 41 churches in his diocese in Mississippi during the years of his pastoral ministry, and later became the chancellor of the University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn., which he founded.

https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/green-william-mercer

13 Feb.

Lt Gen Charles Pitman, Sr.  A uS Marine in New Orleans who helped end a shooting rampage by a Black Panther sympathizer in 1973 by taking a helicopter up without official approval.  Not a native-born Dixian, but ne’ertheless a good ensample of the fighting Southern spirit and of old-fashioned Southern leadership and guts who helped Dixie in her time of need.

https://www.nola.com/news/crime_police/u-s-marine-pilot-whose-heroics-helped-stop-1973-new-orleans-sniper-dies-at-84/article_2b288cf0-527d-11ea-bffa-13c453033b9c.html

https://www.military.com/daily-news/2020/02/19/marine-pilot-who-borrowed-helicopter-end-sniper-situation-has-died.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/207283816/charles-henry-pitman

14 Feb.

Alcée Fortier.  ‘Fortier published numerous works on language, literature, Louisiana history, folklore, Louisiana Créole languages, and personal reminiscence. His perspective was valuable because of his French Créole ancestry and he became the first historian to apply the folklore concept to Louisiana's cultural traditions.’

https://64parishes.org/entry-image/alce-fortier

http://files.usgwarchives.net/la/stjames/bios/fortiera.txt

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/146777449/alcee-fortier

15 Feb.

Oscar Adams, Jr.  A sharp lawyer and judge in Alabama.  He was the first black man to serve on Alabama’s Supreme Court.

http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-3138

24 Feb.

Nicola Marschall, born in Prussia, he made his way to Alabama.  He was a successful painter and designed both the first Confederate flag and the Confederate soldier’s uniform.  He also served as a soldier in the War.

http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-1134

http://www.artnet.com/artists/nicola-marschall/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicola_Marschall#Gallery

27 Feb.

General Francis Marion (Swamp Fox), the wily South Carolinian who caused much grief for the British in the War for Independence.

https://www.scencyclopedia.org/sce/entries/marion-francis/

https://www.carolana.com/SC/Revolution/patriot_leaders_sc_francis_marion.html

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/669/francis-marion

William Gilmore Simms’s biography of Marion is available to read here:

https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/843/pg843-images.html

28 Feb.

Abel Upshur, one of Virginia’s many talented and well-respected sons.  He died young in a naval accident while serving as Secretary of State in 1844.  He wrote an important refutation of Justice Joseph Story’s theory that the united States are one, inseparable nation.  It is A Brief Enquiry, linked here along with another of his works:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abel_P._Upshur#External_links

More about Sec Upshur is at these pages:

https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/review/abel-p-upshur/

https://www.abbevilleinstitute.org/lectures/abel-upshurs-critique-of-joseph-storys-commentaries-on-the-constitution-of-the-united-states-by-donald-livingston/

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37679771/abel-parker-upshur/photo

Also, to celebrate some of the saints of February from the South’s Christian inheritance of various lands, follow these links on over if you’d like:

https://southernorthodox.org/orthodox-saints-for-dixie-february/

http://confiterijournal.blogspot.com/2020/02/happy-feast-for-saints-of-february.html

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Friday, January 23, 2026

‘The Mystery of October Twelfth’

 

For five long years

General Lee led the army

Defending Christian Dixie

From invading

Pagan Yankees.

Defeated, his life lasted

Only five years more,

Exhausted by the strains

Of war-battle

And of heart-sadness,

Forced to watch

His people suffer

Under the wrathful rule

Of the Northern foe.

On October twelfth

His soul departed

From his weary body

And began its ascent

To the heavens.

 

***

 

Twelve hundred years before

In Northumberland,

A pagan king named Edwin

Was enlightened with the Gospel

By the preaching

Of an holy bishop –

Paulinus of York.

Baptized into Christ,

He banished idolatry

From his realm

And ruled with great virtue

Until Satan stirred up

Evil within the soul

Of merciless Penda,

Mercia’s heathen king.

At the Battle of Hatfield Chase

Young Edwin was slain,

To his people’s great dismay,

On that same October twelfth.

 

***

 

As the soul of Robert Edward Lee

Began its journey

Up towards God,

It was mighty fitting

That it be met

By the Christian Martyr

Saint Edwin of the English,

Who suffered cruelties

From the heathen

Together with his people,

As had General Lee,

Whose own lineage

Reaches far into

The English past.

And on those two went –

The pair whose death-days

Likewise coincided –

On to the Kingdom of Heaven,

To enjoy rest from their labors

In the sweetness of Paradise

With the angelic powers

And with many

Other godly men

Of every age.

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

“Why Stonewall Jackson Lost His Arm”

 

“Let us cross the river and rest in the shade.”

--The final words of General Jackson.

* * *

His eyes opened slowly, his body resting

Upon grass that was greener and softer

And springier than any seen before

In his own bonny land of Virginia,

Beneath trees, towering and majestic,

Whose iridescent white flowers set amidst

The silvery green leaves were sending down

Showers of petals upon the forest floor,

And also upon him.  He rose from the grass.

His left arm, surprisingly, was whole again.

A stream, pure and unclouded, ran nearby.

The air about him seemed fresh and vibrant.

All the objects in his sight glowed, he noticed,

With a beautiful light that seemed to shine

From within.  He surveyed the scene as he had

Countless others in recent times, his soldier’s

Instincts still very much alive:  Yet even he,

Though veteran of many battles, started

At the sight of another man, in ancient

Roman uniform, a soldier like himself,

From whom an even brighter light poured forth.

“Hail Thomas!”  The radiant man’s greeting,

Full of warmth and love, embraced him, calmed him.

Yet as he approached, the General felt

An instinctive need to bow his face to the earth,

In honor of the awesome holiness

That this man possessed.  “Rise fellow soldier

Of Christ.  I the lowly one have been sent

By the Holy Trinity, Who is blessed

Forever, amen! – by your God and my God,

To escort you to your resting place here

In Paradise.”  “Paradise,” Stonewall answered,

“Is that where I am?”  He got to his feet;

The man’s light was less intense.  “It is, dear man.”

“Thanks be to God for His mercy to me a wretch!

But, if you will pardon me for asking,

Who are you, Sir, who have come to do this

Kindness for an undeserving sinner?”

“I am unworthy George, a simple soldier.”

“Nay, Sir, there is more to you than this.  What

Is the cause of this great weight of Grace and joy

That I feel in your presence?”  “All of Christ’s

Witnesses and Confessors bear this Grace;

What you find in me is only ordinary.”

“Witness?  A martyria?  Art thou a martyr?”

“I will not deny it; yes, martyred for Christ –

Glory to Him! – at His behest outside

The walls of Nicomedia during

The cruel reign of Emperor Diocletian.”

“A saint?  Can it be?  I was told you were all

Fantasies and fairy tales, gross inventions

Of the imaginations of evil men!”

“It is true:  Christ has bestowed this crown

Upon me, though I have suffered but little

For Him.  You will find that there are other

Things which differ some from what you were taught.

But you lived well according to what you knew,

Obeying your conscience.  And you likewise

Suffered without grumbling at the end of your

Life, losing thine arm after your victory

At Chancellorsville.  Therefore, the Lord says,

“Well done, good and faithful servant!  Enter

Into the joy of your Lord and Savior!”

“These words of yours bring me powerful great joy

That I can scarce contain within me, Sir Saint!

May God be adored and exalted forever,

Amen!”  And he bowed himself upon the ground

Again.  Rising, the General spoke once more:

“Sir Saint, Sir George, I perceive deep inside

That, despite the humble effacing of

Yourself, you are a mighty man before God.

Tell me if you would, for it troubles me

Greatly in my soul:  What will be the outcome

Of the war in which my fellow Southrons

Are engaged?  I asked the Lord to take my life

If it were to end in failure.  Will it

Be so?”  Saint George closed his eyes for some moments,

Standing still and silent.  He opened them

At length and said, “I felt the pain in your heart

And have besought the Lord on your behalf.

Because of our Savior’s generosity,

He has granted you to know:  The South will fall.”

Tears immediately began to fall

From Stonewall’s eyes.  Saint George spoke consolingly:

“Be not dismayed.  All is not as it seems.

The Father is far-seeing.  In future times

A terrible menace will arise in

Eastern lands, a furious persecutor

Of Christian folk in Russia and round about.

To contain the extent of that demonic

Force, Christ the God-man will require the strength

Of all the States of your old league, North and South,

And of others that do not yet exist.

Together, they will battle the Beast and serve

As a haven to those persecuted

By it.  After its defeat and downfall and

The resurrection of the Church in those lands,

The hold of the Blessèd Trinity upon

The States will be released, and they will begin

To separate again.  At this time, your people

In Dixie will be introduced to the true

And undefiled Christian Faith in large numbers,

Which to most of them has been a thing unknown.

How they choose to respond to this highest gift

And invitation of the Holy Ghost

Will determine how the future unfurls

For them.  But come, let us be on our way

To your dwelling.  There is much else to speak of

And to show you as we go.  Sing with me

The hymns of Paradise as we begin.”

Friday, January 16, 2026

‘Applauding Techno-Tyranny’

 

President Trump has recently declared his intention to stop minting the penny because doing so causes the federal government to incur a financial loss.  How much of a loss are we talking about here?  In 2024, penny minting cost FedGov $85 million (minting the nickel cost it about $18 million).

However, we also know that Mr Trump is keen on expanding the use of digital cryptocurrencies in the States, and particularly in FedGov’s acquiring a large reserve of them.  But the cost requirements to build out the infrastructure necessary for this new electronic currency are enormous.  We are firsthand witnesses of this here in Louisiana, as the two new data processing centers in Richland and West Feliciana Parishes will cost a combined $12 billion.

This is in addition to the natural resource costs involved:  rare minerals to make the microchips; natural gas, uranium, etc., to create electricity; water to cool the chips, etc.

Forgive the pun, but something doesn’t add up.  If concerns about costs are the reason to quit producing the penny, then how on earth can one justify the humongous costs of building and maintaining everything needed for digital currency?

The answer to that question is disquieting; Dr Joseph Farrell gives it:

‘Just this last Monday you might recall that I blogged about a story that Google, Amazon, and various countries, have signed on to a pledge to triple the power output of the world by means of nuclear power production by 2050. The question was, "why?", and my answer was that they need all this power to run their planned AI datacenters and their new "digital" currency system and the "cashless" world, never mind the seiniorage costs of doing so, which (I also pointed out), they never mention in their proclamations of how wonderful all this will be. As I strongly intimated in that blog, I suspect the actual costs of such a system, when compared to the seiniorage costs of the current system of paper money and specie production, are ridiculous. The Bottom Line is, they need all the increased power consumption for something, and that something, I suggest, is for their Artificial Intelligence data centers, like Elon Musk's "Colossus" center outside of Memphis, Tennessee . . .’ (‘MUSK’S COLOSSUS: HIS “NEW GOD” AT MEMPHIS’, gizadeathstar.com).

The risks involved in this new monetary system are very high for those who accept it:

‘Regardless of what the actual cost of all of this will be, the mere fact of the "gimongous" nature of the numbers themselves - gigawatts, thousands of gallons of water per minute, tens of thousands of computer chips, a building to house it all - suggest that this is a considerable amount of power of the political sort it gives its owner. And it raises again the question of why:  in a "cashless digital currency" world, he who owns such centers controls the money, and does so in a way that was only a dream for Meyer Amschel Rothschild, for that very same system will presumably be able to determine, on a case to case basis, how much an individual's "money" is "worth" or even if it is usable based on his or her "score" against rules that the AI owner himself establishes’ (Ibid.).

The risks go beyond merely the financial:

 . . .

The rest is at https://thehayride.com/2025/03/garlington-applauding-techno-tyranny/.

--

Holy Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!

Anathema to the Union!