General History of Civilization in Europe: From the Fall of the Roman Empire to the French Revolution |
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Page 8
... desire to lead his pupils to a more intimate acquaintance with the living spirit of history , the true meaning and significance of its mere facts . In this view resort is often had to such works as this of Guizot and others , which ...
... desire to lead his pupils to a more intimate acquaintance with the living spirit of history , the true meaning and significance of its mere facts . In this view resort is often had to such works as this of Guizot and others , which ...
Page 17
... desire to investigate . I say fact , and I say it advisedly : civilization is just as much a fact as any other - it is a fact which like any other may be studied , described , and have its history recounted . It has been the custom for ...
... desire to investigate . I say fact , and I say it advisedly : civilization is just as much a fact as any other - it is a fact which like any other may be studied , described , and have its history recounted . It has been the custom for ...
Page 19
... desire to know ? Why , what they have done to forward the progress of civilization - what part they have acted in this great drama , —what influence they have exercised in aiding its advance . It is not only by this that we form a ...
... desire to know ? Why , what they have done to forward the progress of civilization - what part they have acted in this great drama , —what influence they have exercised in aiding its advance . It is not only by this that we form a ...
Page 28
... desire that takes possession of him at the very moment he makes it ? It is the desire to promulgate his sentiment to the exterior world - to publish and realize his thought . When a man acquires a new truth - when his being in his own ...
... desire that takes possession of him at the very moment he makes it ? It is the desire to promulgate his sentiment to the exterior world - to publish and realize his thought . When a man acquires a new truth - when his being in his own ...
Page 31
... desire of which lies in the nature of his reason . Humanity in all its social efforts has always been governed by the idea of a perfection never yet attained . All human history may in one view be regarded as a series of attempts to ...
... desire of which lies in the nature of his reason . Humanity in all its social efforts has always been governed by the idea of a perfection never yet attained . All human history may in one view be regarded as a series of attempts to ...
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Common terms and phrases
absolute power affairs ancient appears attempt authority barbarian barbarism became bishops burgesses called cause character Charlemagne Charles Charles VII Christian Church ciety circumstances clergy common condition council course crusades desire ecclesiastical elements emperors endeavored England epoch established European civilization exercised existence fact feudal system fiefs fifteenth force France free cities free inquiry French Gaul Germany human mind ideas importance independence individual influence institutions intellectual interest Italy justice king lecture legitimate sovereignty liberty Louis XIV manners means ment moral municipal nations nature never opinions party period political Pope possession prevailed principle progress reform regard reign relations religion religious respect result revolution Roman empire Rome Saracens sentiments sixteenth century social system society sovereigns Spain spirit States-general struggle Suevi superior temporal theocracy things tion truth twelfth century unity various Visigoths William of Tyre
Popular passages
Page 48 - At the end of the fourth century, and the beginning of the fifth, Christianity was no longer a simple belief, it was an institution — it had formed itself into a corporate body.
Page 25 - Wherever the exterior condition of man becomes enlarged, quickened, and improved ; wherever the intellectual nature of man distinguishes itself by its energy, brilliancy, and its grandeur ; wherever these two signs concur, and they often do so, notwithstanding the gravest imperfections in the social system, there man proclaims and applauds civilization.
Page 249 - The period of our inquiry must extend from the beginning of the sixteenth to the middle of the seventeenth century ; for this period embraces, so to speak, the life of this event from its birth to its termination. All historical events have in some sort a determinate career. Their consequences are prolonged...
Page 4 - NEW YORK: D. APPLETON & COMPANY, 200 BROADWAY. MDCCCXLH. V ENTERED, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1842, BY D. APPLETON & COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District Conrt of the United States, for the Southern District of New York.
Page 15 - BEING called upon to give a course of lectures, and having considered what subject would be most agreeable and convenient to fill up the short space allowed us from now to the close of the year, it has occurred to me that a general sketch of the History of Modern Europe, considered more especially with regard to the progress of civilization — that a general survey of the history of European civilization, of its origin, its progress, its end, its character, would be the most profitable subject upon...
Page 30 - Human societies are born, live, and die, upon the earth ; there they accomplish their destinies. But they contain not the whole man. After his engagement to society there still remains in him the more noble part of his nature ; those high faculties by which he elevates himself to God, to a future life, and to the unknown blessings of an invisible world.
Page 188 - This is true to a certain extent; though some of these assertions may be disputed. But what cannot be disputed is this influence, this general effect of the crusades upon the human mind on the one hand, and the state of society on the other. They drew society out of a very narrow road, to throw it into new and infinitely broader paths; they began that transformation of the various elements of European society into governments and nations, which is the characteristic of modern civilization.
Page 18 - ... to run — a destiny for it to accomplish ; whether nations have not transmitted from age to age something to their successors which is never lost, but which grows and continues as a common stock, and will thus be carried on to the end of all things. For my part...