[Marius the Epicurean<br> Volume One by Walter Horatio Pater]@TWC D-Link book
Marius the Epicurean
Volume One

CHAPTER VI: EUPHUISM
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[92] So the famous story composed itself in the memory of Marius, with an expression changed in some ways from the original and on the whole graver.

The petulant, boyish Cupid of Apuleius was become more like that "Lord, of terrible aspect," who stood at Dante's bedside and wept, or had at least grown to the manly earnestness of the Eros of Praxiteles.

Set in relief amid the coarser matter of the book, this episode of Cupid and Psyche served to combine many lines of meditation, already familiar to Marius, into the ideal of a perfect imaginative love, centered upon a type of beauty entirely flawless and clean--an ideal which never wholly faded from his thoughts, though he valued it at various times in different degrees.

The human body in its beauty, as the highest potency of all the beauty of material objects, seemed to him just then to be matter no longer, but, having taken celestial fire, to assert itself as indeed the true, though visible, [93] soul or spirit in things.

In contrast with that ideal, in all the pure brilliancy, and as it were in the happy light, of youth and morning and the springtide, men's actual loves, with which at many points the book brings one into close contact, might appear to him, like the general tenor of their lives, to be somewhat mean and sordid.


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