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Italian Modernism, Social and Religious
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2011
Extract
During the past year a prolonged stay in Italy gave me occasion to visit most of the larger cities between Naples and the Alps, and supplied the opportunity of personal contact with many of the men who are now at the helm of Italian social, religious, and philosophical movements, while at the same time I was able to obtain first-hand acquaintance with the thoughts and desires of the Italian laborer. I soon became aware of the variety, intensity, and complexity of the issues which are now agitating Italian public life. It is true that Latin blood warms more rapidly, and reaches a higher temperature in controversy, than that of the Anglo-Saxon. But no superficial grievances are those over which conflict now rages; both in politics and in religion the contending parties feel that the joust of the tournament-field has become a battle for existence.
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- Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1911
References
1 It is but just to state that this charge was met by a denial from the Vatican, —with small effect, however, in allaying public feeling.
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