“He was the vilest speaker I ever heard: vulgar, ignorant, not seeking to teach his hearers, but rather to stir in men as vulgar as himself the irrational excesses to which such people are prone; a whore among orators. Yet, when he denounced the men who were putting the City in fear, there was a kind of flame in him. He was a man so ignoble that if he remembered anything of the nature of excellence, excellence, I should think it was only so that he could taunt someone with the lack of it. He lived in spite and hate. And now he only invoked the good in the name of hatred; yet for a moment nobility glanced back at him, and made him brave. It was like seeing some mangy cur, who for years has lived on scraps and filth about the market, raising his hackles at a pack of wolves.”
Quote by Mary Renault
Book:The Last of the Wine
Work
The Last of the Wine
This historical novel explores themes of friendship, love, and the human condition through the eyes of a group of young Athenians as they navigate the complexities of war and political intrigue during the Peloponnesian War. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Why Read Moby-Dick?
Source: Why Read Moby-Dick?
Source: Tied to Deceit
Source: The Light in the Heart
