Fall of Rome

Michael Pollak mpollak at panix.com
Wed Mar 7 18:07:28 PST 2001


On Wed, 7 Mar 2001, Brad DeLong wrote:


> >Yeah, and then Rome fell.
> >
> >Seth
>
> Not for another 600 years

Unless you identify the fall of Rome with the fall of the Republic, which would seem only proper for a decline of republican virtue argument. That fall happened right about this time.

Michael

__________________________________________________________________________ Michael Pollak................New York City..............mpollak at panix.com

"The world has now grown old, and does not abide in that strength in which it formerly stood. This we would know, even if the sacred Scriptures had not told us of it, because the world itself announces its approaching end by its failing powers. In the winter there is not so much rain for nourishing the seeds, and in the summer the sun gives not so much heat for ripening the harvest. In springtime the young corn is not so joyful, and the autumn fruit is sparser. Less and less marble is quarried out of the mountains, which are exhausted by their disembowelments, and the veins of gold and silver are dwindling day by day. The husbandman is failing in the fields, the sailor at sea, the soldier in the camp. Honesty is no longer to be found in the market-place, nor justice in the law-courts, nor good craftsmanship in art, nor discipline in morals. Think you that anything which is old can preserve the same powers that it possessed in the prime vigour of its youth? Whatever is tending towards its decay and going to meet its end must needs weaken. Hence the setting sun sends out rays that hardly warm or cheer, the waning moon is a pale crescent, the old tree that once was green and hung with fruit grows gnarled and barren, and every spring in time runs dry. This is the sentence that has been passed on the earth, this is God's decree: that everything which has had a beginning shall have an end, that everything which has flourished shall fall, that strong things shall become weak, and great things shall become small, and that when they have weakened and dwindled they shall be no more. So no one should wonder nowadays that everything begins to fail, since the whole world is failing, and is about to die."

-- Saint Cyprian, circa 250 C.E. __________________________________________________________________________



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