Free Web Hosting Provider - Web Hosting - E-commerce - High Speed Internet - Free Web Page
Search the Web

Corpasenti Webulance Directory 14
Page 08

All good things found in Corpasenti Webulance are wonderful ideas.

Corpasenti Webulance

Corpasenti Webulance Home

Corpasenti Webulance Sitemap

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 01

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 02

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 03

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 04

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 05

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 06

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 07

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 08

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 09

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 10

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 11

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 12

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 13

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 14

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 15

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 16

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 17

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 18

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 19

Corpasenti Webulance Dir 20

Corpasenti Webulance Directory 14
Page 08

The decay of the peasant proprietors was an inevitable consequence of these frequent and long-protracted wars. In the earlier times the citizen-soldier, after a few weeks' campaign, returned home to cultivate his land; but this became impossible when wars were carried on out of Italy. Moreover, the soldier, easily obtaining abundance of booty, found life in the camp more pleasant than the cultivation of the ground. He was thus as ready to sell his land as the nobles were anxious to buy it. But money acquired by plunder is soon squandered. The soldier, returning to Rome, swelled the ranks of the poor; and thus, while the nobles became richer and richer, the lower classes became poorer and poorer. In consequence of the institution of slavery there was little or no demand for free labor, and as prisoners taken in war were sold as slaves, the slave-market was always well supplied. The estates of the wealthy were cultivated by large gangs of slaves; and even the mechanical arts, which give employment to such large numbers in the modern towns of Europe, were practiced by slaves, whom their masters had trained for the purpose. The poor at Rome were thus left almost without resources; their votes in the popular assembly were nearly the only thing they could turn into money, and it is therefore not surprising that they were ready to sell them to the highest bidder.

While the French explorer, Champlain, was sailing along the shores of the lake which bears his name, another equally adventurous spirit, Henry Hudson, was on his way to the western world. Hoping to open a passage to India by a voyage to the north, Hudson, an English navigator, offered in 1609 to sail under the authority of the Dutch East India Company. Driven back by ice and fog from a northeast course, he turned northwest. Searching up and down near the parallel of 40 degrees, he entered the mouth of the great river which perpetuates his name. He found the country inviting to the eye, and occupied by natives friendly in disposition. The subsequent career of this bold mariner has a mournful interest. He never returned to Holland, but, touching at Dartmouth, was restrained by the English authorities, and forbidden longer to employ his skill and experience for the benefit of the Dutch. Again entering the English service and sent once more to discover the northwest passage, he sailed into the waters of the bay which still bears his name, where cold and hunger transformed the silent discontent of his crew into open mutiny, and they left the fearless navigator to perish amid the icebergs of the frozen north.

"That is very ungracious," I said. "You are as perverse as I was about Byron when the old banker quoted him with tears. I was going to say, and I will say it, that Tennyson, with all his faults, was a great lord of music; and he put into words the fine, homely domestic emotion of the race--the poetry of labour, order, and peace. It was new and rich and splendid, and because it seems to you old-fashioned, you call it mere respectability; but it was the marching music of the world, because he showed men that faith was enlarged and not overturned by science. These two were great, because they saw far and wide; they knew by instinct just what the ordinary man was thinking, who yet wished his life to be set to music. These little men of yours don't see that. They have their moments of ecstasy, as we all have, in the blossoming orchard full of the songs of birds. And that will always and for ever give us the lyric, if the skill is there. But I want something more than that; I, you, thousands of people, are feeling something that makes the brain thrill and the heart leap. The mischief is that we don't know what it is, and I want a great poet to come and tell us."


[ Sec 14 Page 01 ] [ Sec 14 Page 02 ] [ Sec 14 Page 03 ] [ Sec 14 Page 04 ] [ Sec 14 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 14 Page 06 ] [ Sec 14 Page 07 ] [ Sec 14 Page 08 ] [ Sec 14 Page 09 ] [ Sec 14 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Corpasenti Webulance and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Corpasenti Webulance provides no guarantees concerning the quality or content of other sites to which Corpasenti links. In fact, links from Corpasenti are only provided as a courtesy and do not imply any sort of endorsement or approval by Corpasenti.