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The death of Alexander quickened this process of decay. The boy-emperor, barbarian though he remained after all of Aristotle’s tutoring, had yet learned to revere the rich culture of Greece, and had dreamed of spreading that culture through the Orient in the wake of his victorious armies.... But he had underrated the inertia and resistance of the Oriental mind, and the mass and depth of Oriental culture. It was only a youthful fancy, after all, to suppose that so immature and unstable a civilizaton as that of Greece could be imposed upon a civilization immesaurably more widespread, and rooted in the most venerable traditions. The quantity of Asia proved too much for the quality of Greece. (en) |