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Rosegger: An Appreciation
THE unmistakable trend of our time is the civilisation—which, in its
modern form, is largely urbanisation—of the whole habitable globe. From its
centres outwards it is thrusting itself upon places, men, processes—ultimate
sanctuaries, never before reached by alien trespassing. Most men are looking
on at its destruction of the old order with shrugging acceptance of the
inevitable, or hailing the chaotic stuff of the new in its making with so far
unjustified joy. With a wit worn somewhat threadbare with use they
invariably counsel the few eccentrics who deny its inevitability and question
its beneficence to quit the hopes and mops of Mrs. Partington for the discreet
submission of the wiser Canute. Then they grow properly grave, and declare
that this modern civilisation, for all its shortcomings, has been well described
as a banquet, the like of which, for those below as for those above the salt, has
never been spread before. However that may be, there is no question that here
and there a guest is sometimes moved to look round on the company and scan
its several types with a sudden sense of their significance. Some of these,
good and bad, are common to all late civilisations, he perceives, others as
hatefully peculiar to our own as certain diseases. Where, in God’s name, were
there ever till now men like these, who bend a complaisant spectacled gaze on
a world going under, content if they may but first secure their museum sample
(including one carefully chosen, perfectly embalmed, stuffed and catalogued
peasant) of every species? Or their younger kindred—men whose intellect
obeys no inspiration save curiosity nor law save its own limit, whose
inventions, therefore, cannot foster good and beauty but only spoil these in
Nature and men’s souls? As for that splendid group beyond, one may question
if Athens, Rome, or Byzantium, whose sumptuous culture of brain and body
achieved an almost criminal comeliness by Christian standards, ever equalled
them: question, too, whether their selfish perfection or the travesty of it in this
mob of women dull with luxury, of men brutalised by the scramble of getting
it for them—be less desirable for the race! Thankfully his eye passes from
them to those who turn such a cold shoulder upon their vulgarity: a little
company, fine-edged, polished and flexible with perpetual fence of wit and
word, hardly peculiar to our day perhaps, but rather such as might have
played their irresponsible game on the eve of any red revolution. Now and
The Forest Farm
Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Titel
- The Forest Farm
- Untertitel
- Tales of the Austrian Tyrol
- Autor
- Peter Rosegger
- Verlag
- The Vineyard Press
- Ort
- London
- Datum
- 1912
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 169
- Kategorien
- Geographie, Land und Leute
- International