登陆注册
4607100000010

第10章

Justinian's glorious legacy was already forgotten. The old mechanism which had kept society together in the fifth century was worn out, broken, rejected. There was no literature, no philosophy, no poetry, no history, and no art. Even the clergy had become ignorant, superstitious, and idle. Forms had taken the place of faith. No great theologians had arisen since Saint Augustine. The piety of the age hid itself in monasteries; and these monasteries were as funereal as society itself. Men despaired of the world, and retreated from it to sing mournful songs. The architecture of the age expressed the sentiments of the age, and was heavy, gloomy, and monotonous. "The barbarians ruthlessly marched over the ruins of cities and palaces, having no regard for the treasures of the classic world, and unmoved by the lessons of its past experience." Rome itself, repeatedly sacked, was a heap of ruins. No reconstruction had taken place. Gardens and villas were as desolate as the ruined palaces, which were the abodes of owls and spiders. The immortal creations of the chisel were used to prop up old crumbling walls. The costly monuments of senatorial pride were broken to pieces in sport or in caprice, and those structures which had excited the admiration of ages were pulled down that their material might be used in erecting tasteless edifices. Literature shared the general desolation. The valued manuscripts of classical ages were mutilated, erased, or burned.

Ignorance finished the destruction which the barbarians began.

Ignorance as well as anarchy veiled Europe in darkness. The rust of barbarism became harder and thicker. The last hope of man had fled, and glory was succeeded by shame. Even slavery, the curse of the Roman Empire, was continued by the barbarians; only, brute force was not made subservient to intellect, but intellect to brute force. The descendants of ancient patrician families were in bondage to barbarians. The age was the jubilee of monsters.

Assassination was common, and was unavenged by law. Every man was his own avenger of crime, and his bloody weapons were his only law.

Nor were there seen among the barbaric chieftains the virtues of ancient Pagan Rome and Greece, for Christianity was nominal. War was universal; for the barbarians, having no longer the Romans to fight, fought among themselves. There were incessant irruptions of different tribes passing from one country to another, in search of plunder and pillage. There was no security of life or property, and therefore no ambition for acquisition. Men hid themselves in morasses, in forests, on the tops of inaccessible hills, and amid the recesses of valleys, for violence was the rule and not the exception. Even feudalism was not then born, and still less chivalry. We find no elevated sentiments. The only refuge for the miserable was in the Church, and it was governed by men who shrank from the world. A cry of despair went up to heaven among the descendants of the old population. There was no commerce, no travel, no industries, no money, no peace. The chastisement of Almighty Power seems to have been sent on the old races and the new alike. It was a desolation greater than that predicted by Jeremy the prophet. The very end of the world seemed to be at hand.

Never in the old seats of civilization was there such a disintegration; never such a combination of evils and miseries.

And there appeared to be no remedy: nothing but a long night of horrors and sufferings could be predicted. Gaul, or France, was the scene of turbulence, invasions, and anarchies; of murders, of conflagrations, and of pillage by rival chieftains, who sought to divide its territories among themselves. The people were utterly trodden down. England was the battlefield of Danes, Saxons, and Celts, invaded perpetually, and split up into petty Saxon kingdoms.

The roads were infested with robbers, and agriculture was rude.

The people lived in cabins, dressed themselves in skins, and fed on the coarsest food. Spain was invaded by Saracens, and the Gothic kingdoms succumbed to these fierce invaders. Italy was portioned out among different tribes, Gothic and Slavonic. But the prevailing races in Europe were Germanic (who had conquered both the Celts and the Romans), the Goths in Spain, the Franks and Burgundians in France, the Lombards in Italy, the Saxons in England.

What a commentary on the imperial government of the Caesars!--that government which, with all its mechanisms and traditions, lasted scarcely four hundred years. Was there ever, in the whole history of the world, so sudden and mournful a change from civilization to barbarism,--and this in spite of art, science, law, and Christianity itself? Were there no conservative forces in that imposing Empire? Why did society constantly decline for four hundred years, with that civilization which was its boast and hope?

Oh, ye optimists, who talk so glibly about the natural and necessary progress of humanity, why was the Roman Empire swept away, with all its material glories, to give place to such a state of society as I have just briefly described?

And yet men should arise in due time, after the punishment of five centuries of crime and violence, wretchedness and despair, to reconstruct, not from the old Pagan materials of Greece and Rome, but with the fresh energies of new races, aided and inspired by the truths of the everlasting gospel. The infancy of the new races, sprung however from the same old Aryan stock, passed into vigorous youth when Charlemagne appeared. From him we date the first decided impulse given to the Gothic civilization. He was the morning star of European hopes and aspirations.

Let us now turn to his glorious deeds. What were the services he rendered to Europe and Christian civilization?

It was necessary that a truly great man should arise in the eighth century, if the new forces of civilization were to be organized.

同类推荐
  • 随自意三昧

    随自意三昧

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Letters to Dead Authors

    Letters to Dead Authors

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 湘雨楼词钞

    湘雨楼词钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 屈原全集

    屈原全集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 兰言述略

    兰言述略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 清风知意

    清风知意

    两个原生家庭的孩子,两处截然不同的人生,在橘子汽水味的青春时光里碰撞摩擦出了不一样的喜怒哀乐悲欢离合。记忆里那些明朗的夏日,是否真实存在?懵懵懂懂的少年心里什么时候有了第一个秘密?海盐味的夏风里啊,我握住的是哪只湿热的柔软小手?谈一场青春的恋爱吧,璀璨珍贵,无关风月。他以为自己知道她的全部,但是他不知道自己就是她的全部。“你好,我叫俞逸。”“你好,我叫许依依。”
  • 屋檐下

    屋檐下

    秋兰和文芳是关系友好的妯娌,欺软怕硬重男轻女的满江嫂(婶)只敢对付大儿媳妇秋兰却不敢惹二儿媳妇文芳,这时附近又搬来了秋兰的“老熟人”徐丽霞,而徐丽霞却有着悲惨的遭遇。上世纪八十年代,福建漳州传统的燕尾厝屋檐下的人们为感情、为生活、为养育子女尝尽了生活的酸甜苦辣······
  • 时方歌括

    时方歌括

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 沧雪魔界

    沧雪魔界

    道无情,魔有义,这是一个凡人成魔的故事!热血拼搏、王者之路,自己加冕。
  • 焰如云惊鸿影

    焰如云惊鸿影

    她总是冷着一张脸,用面无表情和极度理智筑起一层厚厚的外壳,然后把自己包裹严实。把一切勾心斗角、明枪暗箭,都挡住。这外壳没有人能打碎——在遇见他之前。他爱笑,但笑容总是隔着一段刚刚好的距离,端的是潇洒风流公子如玉。生得一双妖娆的桃花眼,却泼了最浓的墨,没有光——在遇见她之前。她爱云焰花,却不知道云焰还有一个名字,叫惊鸿影。和他们何其相似。十年相交,从挚友到挚爱,再到刻骨铭心。哪怕注定坎坷多磨,也爱得轰轰烈烈。“晓看天色暮看云,行也思君,坐也思君。”(明·唐寅·一剪梅)“喜欢我就直说,废话真多。”
  • 重生后我把夫君休了

    重生后我把夫君休了

    大婚夜被人设计,第二天她便被新婚夫君休出门。半年后,她查清真相,带着一个粉雕玉琢的娃儿揪出了幕后黑手。原来当初陷害她的人竟然是……“娘亲,他说他是我爹爹。”宝宝指着俊美邪气的妖界之王满眼好奇,她冷冷一瞥,眼神陌然,“宝贝,我们走,不要跟陌生人说话。”
  • 圣墟

    圣墟

    在破败中崛起,在寂灭中复苏。沧海成尘,雷电枯竭,那一缕幽雾又一次临近大地,世间的枷锁被打开了,一个全新的世界就此揭开神秘的一角……
  • 异能娇妻重生攻略

    异能娇妻重生攻略

    当体内的封印被解除,宋康宁一步步重新得回了自己与生俱来的能力。生活在八十年代的她,助亲友、怼敌,活得率性、快乐、风生水起!
  • 卡耐基成功创富之道

    卡耐基成功创富之道

    每一个人都渴望成功,渴望致富,这是因为成功与致富意味和代表着众多美好的事物。成功能使你获得别人的赞美,赢得社会的认同;成功还能为你身边所有的人做更多的事情。致富则会给你带来个人的发展;致富还可以让你免于许多烦恼、恐惧、挫折和失败,使你找回自信,重塑自我。
  • 影帝老公:我才不会喜欢你

    影帝老公:我才不会喜欢你

    【超甜宠文】甜死人不偿命~ 负责的片场男一号竟然是自己梦寐以求的男神!真是追星女孩的福利!追星女孩不可思议的去某乎提问:每天上班都能看见男神是怎样的体验?高票回答:满满,我知道你每天看见我很开心,我也是,那么恋爱快乐,我的女朋友大人。