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VIII

THE NEW CLASSICAL SCHOOL

Curiously enough, George Bessenyei (1747–1811), the man who was to cause a great literary revival in Hun­gary, happened to live in Vienna, the very centre from which Germanising influences usually spread towards Hungary.

The Queen-Empress, Maria Theresa, anxious to in­crease the dignity and splendour of her Court, and also to consolidate the empire, organised a magnificent Hun­garian Lifeguard in Vienna. Every Hungarian province was requested to select two representatives, from the most distinguished young gentlemen, and to send them to Vienna. One of the two officers sent by the province of Szabolcs was Bessenyei, a strikingly handsome, stately and chivalrous youth, full of talent and of character, but somewhat lacking in culture. The moment he began to move in the polished circles of the Viennese Court, he became conscious of his shortcomings, and at once began to educate himself.

The new idea of rationalism, originating in Paris, had just begun to spread in Vienna. The cultured men who impressed the young Lifeguard officer, were devoted to the new ideas, and fervently admired Voltaire and the Encyclopedists. To be a Voltairist was the fashion of the day, and formed one of the require-