[The Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2) by John Holland Rose]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of Napoleon I (Volume 1 of 2) CHAPTER XII 51/58
It soon began to feel the rigorous methods of the Emperor. Poetry and all other modes of expression of lofty thought and rapt feeling require not only a free outlet but natural and unrestrained surroundings.
The true poet is at home in the forest or on the mountain rather than in prim _parterres_.
The philosopher sees most clearly and reasons most suggestively, when his faculties are not cramped by the need of observing political rules and police regulations.
And the historian, when he is tied down to a mere investigation and recital of facts, without reference to their meaning, is but a sorry fowl flapping helplessly with unequal wings. Yet such were the conditions under which the literature of France struggled and pined.
Her poets, a band sadly thinned already by the guillotine, sang in forced and hollow strains until the return of royalism begat an imperialist fervour in the soul-stirring lyrics of Beranger: her philosophy was dumb; and Napoleonic history limped along on official crutches, until Thiers, a generation later, essayed his monumental work.
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