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Caesars (Serapis Classics)) eBook

by Thomas de Quincey
language: english
Publisher: DANCE ALL DAY Musicvertriebs GmbH (Verlagsaccount), November of 2017 ‧
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The condition of the Roman Emperors has never yet been fully appreciated; nor has it been sufficiently perceived in what respects it was absolutely unique. There was but one Rome: no other city, as we are satisfied by the collation of many facts, either of ancient or modern times, has ever rivalled this astonishing metropolis in the grandeur of magnitude; and not many—if we except the cities of Greece, none at all—in the grandeur of architectural display. Speaking even of London, we ought in all reason to say—the Nation of London, and not the City of London; but of Rome in her palmy days, nothing less could be said in the naked severity of logic. A million and a half of souls—that population, apart from any other distinctions, is per se for London a justifying ground for such a classification; à fortiori, then, will it belong to a city which counted from one horn to the other of its mighty suburbs not less than four millions of inhabitants [Footnote: Concerning this question—once so fervidly debated, yet so unprofitably for the final adjudication, and in some respects, we may add, so erroneously—on a future occasion.] at the very least, as we resolutely maintain after reviewing all that has been written on that much vexed theme, and very probably half as many more. Republican Rome had herprerogative tribe; the earth has its prerogative city; and that city was Rome.

Caesars (Serapis Classics))

by Thomas de Quincey

Property Description
ISBN: 9783963135125
Publisher: DANCE ALL DAY Musicvertriebs GmbH (Verlagsaccount)
Release Date: November of 2017
Language: English
Format: eBook
File Format and Compatibility:
Categories: eBooks in English > History > Ancient history
EAN: 9783963135125
Acessibilidade: Ver características de acessibilidade indicadas pelo editor

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas de Quincey

A child prodigy, an avid reader as a child, and a precocious classicist, Thomas de Quincey (1785-1859) did everything to escape the epithets they wanted to attach to his epitaph. In his adolescence, he ran away from school to spend winters in poverty, wandering the streets; in his youth, he entered Oxford but left without a degree because he failed his final exam. Addicted to opium and drowning in debt, he wrote more than two hundred articles on philosophy, history, aesthetics, literary criticism, and politics, many of which are collected in books. Confessions of an English Opium Addict (1821) or Murder as One of the Fine ArtsWith subversive and refined writing that is a true lesson in dark humor and rhetoric, its echoes resonate to this day in the fascination of the arts—and the public—with terror, crime, and the dark side of life.

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BY THE AUTHOR