Madamest M:
Your European adventures
are keeping me in fine envious green!
Something I left out of
this summer’s travelogue. The two
statues outside the very Romanesque National Archives in DC. These silent sages speak endless volumes, yet
who is paying heed?
Does this news report
sound familiar?
"The peoples to the east
continue to thwart us and are ever a problem for us. They foment dissent, undermine and threaten our allies,
and disrupt our operations. They refuse
cooperation. Military action may be
necessary."
Report on present day
Iran? Nope. Same area, but the year was circa 250, and it was our
predecessors, the Romans.
Well over three years
into this joint blog, and do you not tire of my endless harping on this
theme? I am not primarily an ancient or classical
historian per se, but the same regretful sighs hold forth! But perhaps this public catharsis keeps the
down-in-the-dumperies (how do you like this phraseology, lol) at bay! :)
And let us hope that
Arnold Toynbee did not have it perfectly right when he said (I’m
paraphrasing): “When the last
person who remembers the last terrible war is gone, the next terrible war
becomes inevitable.”
Because
I’m just as hopeful as everybody that a new and better age can write better
patterns in the human condition, and that the past does not dictate the future!s That it can instruct so as to steer new paths away from colossal tragedies.
2 comments:
Ah the wisdom of our civilization ancient roots. I never noticed those figures before...:)
They are on the "backside" of the National Archives building, so are easy to miss.
Post a Comment