Page:A history of Hungarian literature.djvu/266

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252 HUNGARIAN LITERATORE insane revellers there appears an awful guest, the Plague. The Apostle Peter holds aloft the Cross, and preaches to the terrified Roman world the gospel of Christianity and asceticism . What fate awaits the new ideal is shown in the next vision, where Adam, as Tancred the Crusader, sees how a perverted religion exalts celibacy and stigmatises pure love as a crime ; he sees how in the Byzantine Christian world Christianity has degenerated into a religion of petty dogmas, ridiculous contraversies and brutal intolerance. Men have lost the spirit, and heed but the letter. What has become of the sacred re ligion of love and self­ sacrifice ? Adam (still in the visi on) yearns for someiliing altogether different from this, which has filled him with nothing but bitter disappointment. " I am exhausted and long for rest. In the following scene Adam is the astronomer Kepler, absorbed in his studies, and keeping aloof from the world. But science alone cannot yield bim satisfaction : in his quiet laboratory he yearns for great reforms, and heroic deeds, which should fashion the world anew. And the age o f colossal events arrives, the age which sees the ancient world totter to its foundations and sink with a great crash into ruin. The day of the Freneh Revolution has dawned, and Adam reappears as Danton. But the prediction concerning the Freneh Revolution, that, like Saturn, it would destroy its own children, is fulfilled. The Revolution turns agaiost its heroes and Danton dies on the scaffold. Then we come to th e present age. Ad am, who had wished for a State founded on liberty and order, finds bimself in such a State : he has become a citizen of London. Yet disappointment awaits bim eve n here. The world