[At Home And Abroad by Margaret Fuller Ossoli]@TWC D-Link book
At Home And Abroad

CHAPTER II
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In older countries the house of the son grew from that of the father, as naturally as new joints on a bough, and the cathedral crowned the whole as naturally as the leafy summit the tree.

This cannot be here.
The march of peaceful is scarce less wanton than that of warlike invasion.

The old landmarks are broken down, and the land, for a season, bears none, except of the rudeness of conquest and the needs of the day, whose bivouac-fires blacken the sweetest forest glades.

I have come prepared to see all this, to dislike it, but not with stupid narrowness to distrust or defame.

On the contrary, while I will not be so obliging as to confound ugliness with beauty, discord with harmony, and laud and be contented with all I meet, when it conflicts with my best desires and tastes, I trust by reverent faith to woo the mighty meaning of the scene, perhaps to foresee the law by which a new order, a new poetry, is to be evoked from this chaos, and with a curiosity as ardent, but not so selfish, as that of Macbeth, to call up the apparitions of future kings from the strange ingredients of the witch's caldron.


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