A new translation of two of Weber’s more famous lectures, in which the nature of academic and political life are, in surprisingly practical detail, analyzed. There swirls an aura of disillusionment that finds, for its origin, Weber’s insistence on the quotidian, materialistic nature of the two professions—academic research and teaching, and political life—about these works: they present less-than-glamorous portraits of the academic’s work and the politician’s. There is historical analysis in these talks that is insightful, particularly in the case of the politician and the political machinery to which she or he is so often beholden, as Weber derives parliamentary democracy and constitutional authority from monarchy. Also of note are Weber’s comparisons between continental Europe and Britain, and between Europe and the United States. They are fascinating historical documents, as well, and one’s appreciation of Weber’s thought is made more magnified, or certainly it is visited by a greater clarity, with an understanding of the historical context into which they fit. There is something, too, slightly Nietzschean in Weber’s insistence on redemption—I am overlaying interpretation, of course, onto the work—despite disenchantment: “We should set to work and meet ‘the demands of the day’—of our life’s work—both professionally and personally. This is easy to do, though, as long as we each find and obey the daemon that holds in its hands the threads of our own life.” Even today, one hundred years from the past, and beset by troubles uniquely our own, Weber’s voice resonates with something of value. Why do research? Why be called to cast the year’s of one’s life at the “slow and difficult drilling of holes into hard boards,” as Weber evocatively calls politics? Perhaps because “to achieve what is possible in the world, one must constantly reach for the impossible.” But do not mistake Weber for those hollow ‘life-coaches’ that market their wishful thinking, peddling the deception of empty words capturing even more vacuous dreams: “Only those who are certain they won’t be shattered when the world turns out to be too ignorant or evil for what they are trying to give it—those who can say, even when faced with all that, ‘And yet!’—only they are truly called to do the work of politics.”