Capitolo 3
closing our eyes to the history of ours own times. A conquered people
not you necessarily accept, you/he/she has not commonly accepted perhaps, the language
of his/her master. In his "Ancient Imperialism" and Modern the God the states of Cromer
what in India only an one hundred people in every ten thousand can read and
writes English, and this condition exists after an occupation of one
one hundred and fifty years or more. He adds: "There doesn't couple the
I lead perspective of French that supplants Arab in the Algeria." In to compare the
results of venerable old man and modern methods he would perhaps have had to take in
you explain the fact that India and Algeria have the literatures of them really,
what the most greater part of the external peoples subjugated from Rome didn't have, and these
literatures have been able to strengthen the resistance that the language of the
conquered people have proposed to that some conqueror, but, also when
check is constituted this fact, the difference under resultant conditions is
surprising. You give his/her narrow confinements, inside a small district on the
banks of the Tiber, covering to the closing of the fifth century A.C., less
what one hundred miles plaza, Latin expansion through Italy and the islands of
the Mediterranean, through France Spain, England, northern Africa and
the provinces of Danubian, triumphing on all the other languages of those
regions more entirely that arm Romans triumphed on the peoples to use
them.
In to trace the history we have to hold in the eye of our mind the linguistic one
the geography of Italy, in the moment in which us political geography has to remember of
the peninsula in the territorial expansion in following Rome. I/you/he/she allow us to think to
the beginning, then of a small strip of flat country on the Tiber, it punctuated
here and there in hills crowned with villages. Such cities of hill were
Rome, Tusculum and Praeneste, for example. Each of their was the
fortitude and market-place of the country immediately around him, and