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claim to our attention and   regard. The most civilized nations of modern Europe issued   from the woods of Germany; and in the rude institutions of those barbarians we may still distinguish the original   principles of our present laws and manners. In their primitive   state of simplicity and independence, the Germans were   surveyed by the discerning eye, and delineated by the masterly   pencil, of Tacitus, the first of historians who applied the   science of philosophy to the study of facts. The expressive   conciseness of his descriptions has served to exercise the diligence of innumerable antiquarians, and to excite the   genius and penetration of the philosophic historians of our   own times. The subject, however various and important, has   already been so frequently, so ably, and so successfully   discussed, that it is now grown familiar to the reader, and   difficult to the writer. We shall therefore content ourselves   with observing, and indeed with repeating, some of the most   important circumstances of climate, of manners, and of   institutions, which rendered the wild barbarians of Germany   such formidable enemies to the Roman power.   Ancient Germany, excluding from its independent limits the province westward of the Rhine, which had submitted to the   Roman yoke, extended itself over a third part of Europe.   Almost the whole of modern Germany, Denmark, Norway,   Sweden, Finland, Livonia, Prussia, and the greater part of   Poland, were peopled by the various tribes of one great nation,   whose complexion, manners, and language denoted a common   origin, and preserved a striking resemblance. On the west,   ancient Germany was divided by the Rhine from the Gallic,   and on the south, by the Danube,

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