“The effect of the mortification of the domestic affections upon the general character was probably very pernicious. The family circle is the appointed sphere, not only for the performance of manifest duties, but also for the cultivation of the affections; and the extreme ferocity which so often characterised the ascetic was the natural consequence of the discipline he imposed upon himself. Severed from all other ties, the monks clung with desperate tenacity to their opinions and to their Church, and hated those who dissented from them with all the intensity of men whose whole lives were concentrated on a single subject, whose ignorance and bigotry prevented them from conceiving the possibility of any good thing in opposition to themselves, and who had made it a main object of their discipline to eradicate all natural sympathies and affections.”
Quote by William Edward Hartpole Lecky
Work
History of European Morals from Augustus to Charlemagne
This scholarly work delves into the transformation of ethical standards and societal norms during a pivotal period in European history, examining the moral landscape from the Roman Empire to the early Middle Ages. more
Author
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