Home   [800x700]    About


[Footnote 118: The survivor Boccace died in the year 1375;   and we cannot place before 1480 the composition of the   Morgante Maggiore of Pulo and the Orlando Innamorato of   Boyardo, (Tiraboschi, tom. vi. P. ii. p. 174 - 177.)]   

   Chapter LXVII:   

   Schism Of The Greeks And Latins.   
   Part I.   
   Schism Of The Greeks And Latins. - Reign And   Character Of   
   Amurath The Second. - Crusade Of Ladislaus, King Of   Hungary. - His Defeat And Death. - John Huniades. -   Scanderbeg. - Constantine Palaeologus, Last Emperor Of The   East.   
   The respective merits of Rome and Constantinople   are   
   compared and celebrated by an eloquent Greek, the father of   the Italian schools. ^1 The view of the ancient capital, the seat   of his ancestors, surpassed the most sanguine expectations of   Emanuel Chrysoloras; and he no longer blamed the   exclamation of an old sophist, that Rome was the habitation,   not of men, but of gods. Those gods, and those men, had long since vanished; but to the eye of liberal enthusiasm, the   majesty of ruin restored the image of her ancient prosperity.   The monuments of the consuls and Caesars, of the martyrs   and apostles, engaged on all sides the curiosity of the   philosopher and the Christian; and he confessed that in every   age the arms and the religion of Rome were destined to reign over the earth. While Chrysoloras admired the venerable   beauties of the mother, he was not forgetful of his native   country, her fairest daughter,

Chapter available in: Next