Dame Ethel devotes the second half of her book to her
adventures in Egypt, including the laying-out of a nine-hole golf course in the
Nubian desert and her investigation into the nature of a hermaphrodite. But she
does not say whether the hermaphrodite played golf, or what was its handicap!
-Agate,
Ego (82)
Romanticism: In Romanticism thought and feeling are fused; its bent is
toward exploration and discovery at whatever risk of error or failure; the
religious emotion is innate and demands expression. Spirit is a reality but
where it is placed varies and is secondary: the divine may be reached through
nature or art. The individual self is a source of knowledge on which one must
act; for one is embarked—engagĂ©, as
the 20C existentialists say. To act, enthusiasm must overcome indifference or
despair; impulse must be guided by imagination and reason. The search is for
truths, which reside in particulars, not in generalities; the world is bigger
and more complex than any set of
abstractions, and it includes the past, which is never fully done with.
Meditating on past and present leads to the estimate of man as great and
wretched. But heroes are real and indispensible. They rise out the people,
whose own mind-and-heart provides the makings of high culture. The errors of
heroes and peoples are the price of knowledge, religion, and art, life itself
being a heroic tragedy.
–Barzun, Dawn to
Decadence (491)
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