Palmer helped translate several
Eastern Orthodox spiritual texts, the most notable being the
Philokalia, a collaboration with
Kallistos Ware and
Philip Sherrard. They made available for the first time, in English, the bulk of that
Eastern Orthodox text on the
hesychasm tradition. He also translated for English readers a book on Greek poetry,
The Marble Threshing Floor (1956), a study of
Dionysios Solomos,
Costis Palamas,
Constantin Cavafis,
Angelos Sikelianos, and
Giorgos Seferis. Palmer's attraction to Eastern Orthodox teachings caused him to go on a pilgrimage in 1948 to
Mount Athos, Greece, the center of Eastern Orthodox monasticism and inner spirituality. A chance encounter upon his arrival at Mt. Athos resulted in a meeting with a Fr. Nikon, who became Palmer's spiritual father, or
starets in the Eastern Orthodox tradition. By 1950, Palmer officially joined the Orthodox Church. Palmer first translated, with Evgeniia Kadloubovsky, two small volumes of the
Philokalia from the Russian. The publisher
Faber and Faber was reluctant to publish such an obscure book, but one of their directors,
T. S. Eliot, convinced them to do so based on his own deep impression of the spiritual teachings in that book. Faber and Faber finally relented, expecting to lose money, but instead found that it was a commercial success. In 1971, Palmer invited Ware and Sherrard to join him in a more complete translation of the
Philokalia from the original Greek. Before Palmer's death in 1984, they were able to translate and publish four of the five volumes of the
Philokalia. Palmer made almost yearly pilgrimages to Mt. Athos. ==Political career==