Tacitus Particularly Mentions This; And Speaking Of
The Germans Of His Time, He Says, "They Have An Idea That There
Is
something divine about a woman."[126] It is this feeling, handed down to us
from our Teutonic ancestors, that
Contributes mainly to make the European
so superior to all the Asiatic nations, where woman still remains a
degraded being, and 'tis this feeling that gives to us the palm above all
Greek and Roman glory. What are the modern European nations, the English,
French, Italians, Switzers, even Spanish and Portuguese, but the
descendants of these warlike Teutonic tribes who swept away the effeminate
Romans from the face of the earth? and do we not see the Teutonic policy
and usages, defective and degenerated as they sometimes are, the best
safeguard of liberty against the insidious interpretation of the Roman law,
which is founded on the pretended superiority of one nation, the inferred
inferiority of all the rest?
With regard to theatricals, I have witnessed the representation of a
tragedy, lately published, called Sappho, by a young poet of the name of
Grillparzer. This tragedy is strictly on the Greek model. Its versification
in iambics is so beautiful that it is regarded as the triumph of the
Classics over the Romantics; and by this piece Grillparzer has proved
the universality of his genius; for he wrote a short time ago a dramatic
piece in the romantic style and in the eight rhymed trochaic metre called
die Anhfrau (the ancestress) where supernatural agency is introduced.
This I have read; it is a piece full of interest; still it was thought too
outre by the Classiker.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 528 of 558
Words from 143443 to 143716
of 151859