[The Marble Faun<br> Volume I. by Nathaniel Hawthorne]@TWC D-Link book
The Marble Faun
Volume I.

CHAPTER XVIII
7/18

We forget that a chasm extends between it and ourselves, in which lie all those dark, rude, unlettered centuries, around the birth-time of Christianity, as well as the age of chivalry and romance, the feudal system, and the infancy of a better civilization than that of Rome.

Or, if we remember these mediaeval times, they look further off than the Augustan age.

The reason may be, that the old Roman literature survives, and creates for us an intimacy with the classic ages, which we have no means of forming with the subsequent ones.
The Italian climate, moreover, robs age of its reverence and makes it look newer than it is.

Not the Coliseum, nor the tombs of the Appian Way, nor the oldest pillar in the Forum, nor any other Roman ruin, be it as dilapidated as it may, ever give the impression of venerable antiquity which we gather, along with the ivy, from the gray walls of an English abbey or castle.

And yet every brick or stone, which we pick up among the former, had fallen ages before the foundation of the latter was begun.


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