Youth and Egolatry by Pío Baroja
page 92 of 206 (44%)
page 92 of 206 (44%)
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VI THE HISTORIANS Miss Blimber, the school teacher in Dickens's _Dombey and Son_, could have died happily had she known Cicero. Even if such a thing were possible I should have no great desire to know Cicero, but I should be glad to listen to a lecture by Zeno in the portico of the Poecile at Athens, or to Epicurus's meditations in his garden. My ignorance of history has prevented me from becoming deeply interested in Greece, although now this begins to embarrass me, as a curiosity about and sympathy for classical art stirs within me. If I were a young man and had the leisure, I might even begin the study of Greek. As it is, I feel that there are two Greeces: one of statues and temples, which is academic and somewhat cold; the other of philosophers and tragedians, who convey to my mind more of an impression of life and humanity. Apart from the Greek, which I know but fragmentarily, I have no great admiration for ancient literatures. The _Old Testament_ never aroused any devotion in me. Except for _Ecclesiastes_ and one or two of the shorter books, it impresses me as repulsively cruel and antipathetic. |
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