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   20.   -Ratio Tuscanica,: cavum aedium Tuscanicum.-
   21.   When Varro (ap. Augustin. De Civ. Dei, iv. 31; comp. Plutarch Num. 8) affirms that the Romans for more than one hundred and seventy years worshipped the gods without images, he is evidently thinking of this primitive piece of carving, which, according to the conventional chronology, was dedicated between 176 and 219, and, beyond doubt, was the first statue of the gods, the consecration of which was mentioned in the authorities which Varro had before him.   Comp, above, XIV.   Development of Alphabets in Italy.
   22.   I. XIII. Handicrafts
   23.   I. XII. Nature of the Roman Gods
   24.   I. XII. Pontifices

   CHAPTER XV Art

   Artistic Endowment of the Italians
   Poetry is impassioned language, and its modulation is melody.   While in this sense no people is without poetry and music, some nations have received a pre-eminent endowment of poetic gifts.   The Italian nation, however, was not and is not one of these.   The Italian is deficient in the passion of the heart, in the longing to idealize what is human and to confer humanity on what is lifeless, which form the very essence of poetic art.   His acuteness of perception and his graceful versatility enabled him to excel in irony and in the vein of tale-telling which we find in Horace and Boccaccio, in the humorous pleasantries of love and song which are presented in Catullus and in the good popular songs of Naples, above all in the lower comedy and in farce.   Italian soil gave birth in ancient times to burlesque tragedy, and in modern times to mock-heroic poetry.   In rhetoric and histrionic art especially no other nation equalled or equals the Italians.   But in the more perfect kinds of art they have hardly

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