Yet for all their differences, the man who created and the woman who lost Alexandria have one element in common: monumental greatness; and between them is suspended, like a rare and fragile chain, the dynasty of the Ptolemies. It is a dynasty much censored by historians, but the Egyptians, who lived under it, were more tolerant. For it had one element of greatness: it did represent the complex country that it ruled. In Upper Egypt it carried on the tradition of the Pharaohs: on the coast it was Hellenistic and in touch with Mediterranean culture. After its extinction, the vigour of Alexandria turns inwards. She is to do big things in philosophy and religion. But she is no longer the capital of a kingdom, no longer Royal.
E.M. Forester, Alexandria (1922), 17
A digital form of the sadly lost fashion for copying out memorable passages from texts. I kept losing my actual book.
Sunday, 28 June 2026
The man who created and the woman who lost Alexandria have one element in common: monumental greatness
Labels:
Alexander the Great,
Cleopatra,
Egypt,
Forster,
Ptolomy
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