[Gutenberg 53084] • A Manual of Italian Literature

[Gutenberg 53084] • A Manual of Italian Literature
Authors
Cliffe, Francis Henry
Publisher
Forgotten Books
Tags
italian literature -- history and criticism
ISBN
9781331639732
Date
2015-09-27T00:00:00+00:00
Size
0.19 MB
Lang
en
Downloaded: 54 times

Excerpt from A Manual of Italian Literature

Indeed, it is scarcely far-fetched to say tha Greece was avenged for her slavery by the not less complete slavery of Rome to her intellectual supremacy. The Roman poets, dazzled by the brilliancy of their Athenian prototypes, fancied that only by imitating, could they hope to excel. A more unfortunate idea never took possession of a nation. It destroyed everything in their writings that was spontaneous and redolent of their native soil. Whatever is really endowed with life and intrinsic value in their works, has had to struggle into existence through the suffocating atmosphere of foreign fashions and foreign trains of thought. This evil was apparent in other branches of litera ture, but it was very far from injuring them as it injured poetry. Virgil was assuredly one of the greatest poets that ever lived, and yet how much of his poetry is second-hand, or, at best, adapted from others. The adaptations are Often executed with marvellous skill, but this fact only enhances our regret that he should have made Of his Eneid but an echo of Homer; and of his Eclogms but a repetition of Theocritus. His Georgia, indeed, escaped being only a decoction from Greek herbs, because in them he wrote of what he had actually seen and experienced, and they are, in truth, his masterpiece. Indeed, if we deduct the extraordi nary beauty Oi the style, which is above praise.

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