The storm has died away, and we are still restless,Uneasy, as if the storm were about to

Chapter 24, Problem 24

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The storm has died away, and we are still restless,Uneasy, as if the storm were about to break. Almostall the affairs of men remain in a terrible uncertainty.We think of what has disappeared, and we are almostdestroyed by what has been destroyed; we do notknow what will be born, and we fear the future. . . .Doubt and disorder are in us and with us. There is nothinking man, however shrewd or learned he may be,who can hope to dominate this anxiety, to escape fromthis impression of darkness.Pretend you do not know when Valry wrote this poem.What might you be able to conclude about the time in whichValry lived from this passage?

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