Poetry And American Decline.

From “Horatius”:

Over many years, I have read the opinion expressed that there is truth in poetry.
Do the above stanzas reflect, reasonably, the decline of American Civil Society? I am aware that they were not originally intended to, but do they reflect the current state of our Nation? I hope I don’t have to point out the validity of poetic comparisons between Rome & America.

:dubious: I very much doubt the above stanzas reasonably reflect anything historically valid about Roman civil society.

I see exactly what you’re getting at and I agree wholeheartedly that this has relevance to present-day America.

I think that, to some extent, the idea that people have become less civil to one another in the US is true. But while as in ancient Rome this was more of an issue of class-complacency, in the US it is probably more of a matter of crime investigation going from beating up suspects to honest investigations plus crime moving from organized to random and hence, the world is more dangerous to the common citizen. Personally, I can’t bring myself to condemn trial-only-by-evidence, though I will contest the desire to break up organized crime. But neither of those is really an issue of the US becoming a country of asses.

I would, though, contend that being jaded pricks vs. being all loving brothers is a bad thing.

While I see what you’re trying to say, to me it reeks of “Let’s go back to The Good Old Days.” And we all know that The Good Old Days never really existed.

Who wrote the poem in the OP, and when?

It’s Macauley’s “Horatius”, from his work, “Lays of Ancient Rome” It’s most famous for the following lines, from Horatius’ speech:

Based on what I’ve seen in this thread, Macauley was not a very good poet.

Indeed.

Ask a black person how much better things were in the Good Old Days in the US, when a black man could be lynched for looking at a white woman. Or ask a woman how much better things were when she had no legal recourse if her husband raped her.

For one thing, everybody thinks they’re as good as everybody else now.

I’m being semi-facetious here.

Macauley’s “Lays” used to be required reading in schools until like the 1950s. I like him, but I guess it’s a matter of taste. Here’s the complete Lays:

http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext97/lrome10.txt

No, we each believe that we’re better than everyone else–on an individual basis.

Egoism & egotism, replacing bigotry. Aren’t we lucky? :dubious: