279 47 14MB
english Pages 242 [260] Year 1974
McGraw-Hill Paperbacks
Styl
History Peter Gay
jjctfe
/fait
Books by Peter Gay Style in History (1974)
(with R. K.
Webb) Modern Europe
(1973)
The Bridge of Criticism: Dialogues on the Enlightenment (1970) The Enlightenment: An Interpretation, volume 2, The Science of
Weimar
A
Culture:
Freedom (1969)
The Outsider
as Insider (1968)
Loss of Mastery: Puritan Historians in Colonial America (1966) The Enlightenment: An Interpretation, volume 1, The Rise of
The
Modern Paganism (1966)
Party of Humanity: Essays in the French Enlightenment
(1964) Voltaire's Politics:
The Dilemma
The Poet
as Realist
of Democratic Socialism:
(1959)
Eduard Bernstein's
Challenge to Marx (1952)
TRANSLATIONS WITH INTRODUCTIONS Candide (1963) Voltaire: Philosophical Dictionary, two volumes (1962) Ernst Cassirer: The Question of Jean Jacques Rousseau (1954) Voltaire:
ANTHOLOGIES AND COLLECTIVE WORKS The Enlightenment:
A
Comprehensive Anthology (1973) Eighteenth Century Studies Presented to Arthur M. Wilson (1972) (with John A. Garraty) The Columbia History of the World (with Gerald
J.
(*97 2 ) Cavanaugh and Victor G. Wexler) Historians at
Work, two volumes (1972)
Deism: An Anthology (1968) John Locke on Education (1964)
Style in History
ssXw* ^Rfl^ -««m2& ^«RJ&». SSS»S -wsKs SK£*£
STYLE IN
HISTORY Peter ;i
Gay
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1974 by Peter Gay. All
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Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Gay, Peter, 1923Style in history.
Bibliography: p. Includes index.
Gibbon, Edward, 1737-1794. 2. Ranke, Leopold von, 1795-1886. 3. Macaulay, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Baron, 1800-1859. 4. Burckhardt, Jakob Christoph, 1818-1897. 5. Historiography. 1.
I.
Title.
[D14.G39 1976] 907'.2'022 ISBN 0-07-023063-3
76-2549O
to Bob
Webb
Friend, Collaborator, Stylist
II
It is
our
most style
true, stylus
virum
arguit,
bewrays us."
—ROBERT BURTON, Anatomy
of
Melancholy
PREFACE
has had long Thisthebook, though have often crossed the short,
years,
it
my
intellectual terrain
I
claims and
mapped
concern with style
come
a historian;
remember. Also,
When
readers.
early 1950s,
I
I
is
it
much
I
older than
my
began to do
editor,
Christopher Herold, while
much
as
first
decision to beas
it
long
Hofstadter and Henry Roberts.
they did;
and with pain
thought, as
I
all
knew him
I
—
style abides." It
irreparable.
has
left its
The
this
little
"Men and
in
on
me
in
taught
I
them with have often
dynasties pass, is
friends' style
most graceful
summer
of 1954,
shared a house with the Hofstadters and watched
I
revising the
the
—
my
its
in the
Dick composing the Introduction to
and
first
comfort; the loss of a friend
labor that style exacts from even
was borne
my
book, of Sir Ronald Syme's
But I like to think that some of mark on the pages that follow.
practitioners
when
is
My
less well,
dead
for they are all
completed
can
three were candid, discriminating,
closing sentence in his Tacitus:
but
I
also intimate
and, at the same time, encouraging. In thinking of affection
as
serious writing in the
who were
critics
—Richard
as
my
have been singularly fortunate in
friends
me
And
from many perspectives.
have been interested in
had perceptive
I
During
history.
a
whole manuscript
same summer that
Mimesis.
It
was
a revelation,
I
first
and
his
The Age
of
Reform
for the publisher. It
Erich Auerbach's
read
for years
was
I
sought an oppor-
tunity to apply to historical writings the lessons of this in-
STYLE spired masterpiece,
HISTORY
IN
once philology and sociology. That
at
opportunity came in the early 1960s, I
when
for several years
on historiography to incoming graduate Columbia University. Some of the ideas I develop
offered the course
students at
book
in this
much
in detail
different and,
I
adumbrated
first
more primitive form. In
think, rather
I
in that course in a
those years, the inquiry into historical style was essentially an inquiry into the limitations that class and nation impose on
the historian. Relativists, directly indebted to Karl Karl
Mannheim
indebted to them by their
indirectly
or
reading of Charles Beard, held the
more sophisticated and, In
my own
lectures,
I
in
—objects—
really that
objectivity,
though
rewarding reading
to
field at all,
I
of
J.
but in philosophy;
I
owe
summed up my
sense of historical style in a
amid the
of three lectures,
lectures,
which
I
fostering,
hospitable sur-
Andrews and of Utrecht. have much rewritten and greatly
expanded, form the nucleus of several passages
to the witty icono-
Austin. During the academic year
L.
roundings of the Universities of
These
Perhaps the most
possible.
is
debt to the logical and epistemological writings
clastic lectures
series
kind of perspectival
be studied and understood, and that
Hempel and Ernest Nagel and
1970-1971,
optimistic.
did on historiography in the late 1960s
was not directly in that a particular
a
grew
analysis
the objects of historical study are
difficult, I
was an age of
some measure, more
began to develop
realism, suggesting that
of Carl
It
field.
Then, gradually, historiographical
suspicion.
Marx and
St.
this
book.
I
have incorporated
from an Overseas Fellow's Lecture, which
delivered in the Spring of 1971 at Churchill College,
I
Cam-
bridge, into the Conclusion.
As with
my
other work in the past,
consider myself lucky in
my
critics.
M
I
now once
owe
again
I
particular debts
Preface to
Quentin Skinner, R. K. Webb, and
their intense revise
and
thoughtful
I
my am
general argument also grateful
Henry Gibbons want
to
to
and
Ruth, for
me
to sharpen
Henry Turner
comments on the whole manuscript,
for his helpful criticism
I
wife,
and repeated readings, which compelled
refine
lesser points.
my
to
many
for
his
John Clive of the chapter on Macaulay, and to to
for a productive discussion of general strategy.
thank Betty Paine and Heather Anderson, amateur
my
paleographers, for their ability to decipher
manuscripts.
My
much-revised
D. Neuthaler, bears a heavy
editor, Paul
sponsibility for there being a
book
at
complacent thought on
my
a writer has the readers
he deserves.
all.
I
hope
it is
re-
not a
part to suspect, cheerfully, that
Peter
1974
[xi]
Gay
A
Since this
is,
after
NOTE ON CITATIONS
all,
a
book on
from the
original texts. In the
language
is
short
German,
and long,
passage
is
I
style, I
two
essays
not enclosed in quotation marks,
German and
is
sages will miss nothing I
historians
directly into the text, in italics.
but not a precise translation.
ments
on
whose
have placed excerpts from their work,
the English sentences just preceding
edge of
have quoted copiously
The
it
this
When
the
means that
are a close paraphrase
reader
who
compelled to skip the
more than whatever
has no knowlitalicized pas-
linguistic refine-
was unable to rescue into the English.
CONTENTS Introduction: Style— From
1
Gibbon:
A Modern
Manner
2
Ranke:
*9 21
Scholar Ironist
4°
Respectful Critic
The Dramatist The Scientist The Believer
3
57
59
67 76
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary
The Acrobat The Son The Liberal 4
The Poet
Burckhardt:
On
95
97 114 128
of Truth
The Condottiere The Poet 165 Conclusion:
Matter
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
The The
to
39
141
Style in History
83
Bibliography
219
Index
2 39 [xiii]
Introduction Style— From to
Manner
Matter
—
would seem,
a centaur, joining what nature, Style form and content, has decreed must be kept apart. It it
is
is
woven
into the texture of every art
and every
craft
including history. Apart from a few mechanical tricks of rhetoric,
and
manner
in turn
essays
is
indissolubly linked to matter; style shapes,
shaped by, substance.
is
anatomize
to
style the centaur; the
this
have written these
I
familiar yet really strange being,
book may be read
an extended
as
commentary on Button's famous saying that the the man.
critical
style
Buffon's epigram has a beautiful simplicity that makes
both possibly profound and certainly suspect. lous,
almost inappropriate, to be
necessary,
and
difficult,
stylish
to disentangle
about
It
seems
is
it
frivo-
style, for it is
the multiplicity of
meanings and the thicket of metaphors that have accrued to the word in the course of centuries. Style, dress of
thought and
expressive voice.
its
sinews,
There appear
for style as there are users. lyric
its
to
The
are told,
the
is
crowning glory and
be almost
critic
poet and the political publicist, [3]
we
as
many
its
uses
and the scholar, the each employs style
STYLE in his
own way and
HISTORY
IN own
for his
purposes: to appreciate ele-
gance and depreciate clumsiness, to decipher obscure passages, to exploit verbal ambiguities, to drive
The
who
historian,
does
all
home
a partisan point.
of these things
—though
one
wishes that he would keep his lyricism in check and discard his politics
when he
writes history
He
and other dimensions.
As
fessional reader.
is
a writer,
remaining a
a stylist while
—encounters
a professional writer
he
scientist;
style
an involuntary confession, or
a reader,
he
pretations,
and
he must give pleasure
may be
a conventional
As
a striking illumination.
and
prizes literary excellence, absorbs facts
and explores the words before him
working beneath their surface;
a pro-
under pressure to become
is
without compromising truth. His tool,
style in these
style
may
be,
inter-
truths
for
him, an
for
object of gratification, a vehicle of knowledge, or an instru-
ment Yet
As
I
of diagnosis. this will
profusion
show,
discriminate
it
is
desirable,
is
among
an opportunity
as
much
for the
as a
problem.
sake of clarity, to
the varied meanings of
style,
but
it
impossible, for the sake of understanding, to keep
them
manently segregated. The use of
for
functions need not be a
symptom
a
single
word
is
per-
many
of linguistic poverty;
it
can
be a sign that these functions are related to one another. That the
word
should enter diverse combinations
style
thought, style of
and others
life,
—without
—
style
of
strain reinforces
the impression that the several kinds of style, and style and substance, have
much
another. Style
like
is
to
do with, and to say about, one
Ranke's Venetian ambassadors: widely
traveled, highly adaptable, superbly informed, and,
if
adroitly
interrogated, splendidly indiscreet. For the historian, therefore,
the evidential value of style
giving evidence
—
is
enormous. [4]
—both
in getting
and
in
Style
—From Manner
have said that
I
commentary on Buffon's Le The commentary must be extended,
observation, the epigram
philosophers say, unpack
day, his
its
Matter
book may be read
this
critical
critical, for
to
for,
And
it.
Buffon at once says
an extended
Vhomme meme.
style est
though an important
we must,
so laconic that
is
bon mot was an
as
as the
commentary must be too much and too little. In the
energetic, almost unprecedented
demand
that style not be taken lightly as
but seen
as
mere decoration,
reaching into the very foundations of the writer's
work. 1 Yet style
whole man.
is
not always the man, certainly not the
manner and matter
If
marriage, irrevocably, this does not
mean
that they can never
Much
talk
about
felicities,
and
for the traditional,
be apart from each other. the search for literary
are joined in a Catholic
on
style centers
if
surprisingly elusive, virtue of clarity.
Moreover,
it is
privately deplore
a historical fact (which the historian
but must professionally investigate
may any
like
other) that style has not always been profoundly anchored.
— publishing— who
There have been those politics,
as the
even in
treat
it
in as
Middleton Murry once called
heresy of the
popular of
man
all
delusion half a
A
advertising,
journalism,
in
an afterthought,
Gothic facade irrelevantly plastered onto modern con-
crete walls.
1
in
this practice
"the
and thought it "the most 2 delusions about style/' He anatomized this century ago, but the heresy had been popular in the street"
rare early supporter of this
modern view was Robert Burton;
see his
bewrays us," which is the epigraph of this book. The view I defend here was well put by Marcel Proust in an interview of 1913: "Style," Proust said, "is in no way a decoration as some people believe; it is not even a matter of technique; it is as color is with painters a quality of vision. ..." I should note that in what follows, style is applied to writers only; obviously, composers, painters, architects confront stylistic problems in precisely the same way. See below, p. 189. 2 The Problem of Style (edn. i960), p. 10.
comment, "our
style
—
[5]
—
— STYLE
IN
HISTORY it
was when he wrote
for
mass consumption
long before and remains as popular as 1922.
in still
find
Makers of verbal it
to write
artifacts
convenient to ask researchers to do research, writers
it
Such
up, and stylists to add the fine touches.
Balkanization,
need hardly
I
say, fatally divides
what needs
be united; the products that such procedures throw on the
to
market dise,
we
are, as
all
know, persuasively packaged merchan-
decorated with obsessive puns, exhausted superlatives,
and unauthentic anecdotes. Style here mercial enterprise;
This
it is
by no means the
vast, vulgar subliterature
word
historian that the
is
style
"that novelist has style"
is
—but
is
man but
not only a term of praise also a neutral description
that the very idea of style
is
it
vista.
It
a bewildering
Aesthetically indifferent or aesthetically offen-
sive procedures, as
and
re-
as pleasure.
—
double
He must
infected with a central
must give information as well opens windows on both truth and beauty ambiguity:
the system.
a valuable reminder to the
"that novelist works in the Naturalist style/'
member
com-
a by-product of
long as they have a certain consistency
characteristic form, partake of style. Second-rate poets,
painters
—and
historians
—have
a style.
So do gangsters
per-
petrating gangland killings, songwriters manufacturing popular hits, priests
ized ways.
The
performing religious ceremonies in standardstudy of style has diagnostic value in
instances; to the historian they are
though not to the same
no reason
to subject matter
be
—
a
and
these
valid clues to the past,
historical experiences. If style gives
information not about the historian has
all
all
to
stylist
but about
be disappointed.
his culture, the
When
to evidence, the historian
is
it
comes
—or should
democrat.
Buffon, of course, was not a democrat, in his view of style or of anything else.
He
was speaking of the [6]
literary style of
— Style
—From Manner
the accomplished writer. writer,
I
think,
was
Matter
to
And what he meant the cultivated
this:
to say about the
manner
of the writer
instructively expresses his personal past as well as the culture's
ways of thinking, matic value of
feeling, believing, style
and working. The sympto-
therefore far greater than that of
is
providing insights into literary habits. 3 Style the carpet
—the unambiguous indication,
lector, of place
and time of
the wings of the butterfly
origin. It
is
And
gesture of the witness in the dock
— the
it
marking on
signature, to the
the involuntary
is
infallible sign, to the
To
unriddle the
it
remains too
ellipti-
be conclusive. Both halves of Buffon's epigram, both
and man, require further
nent and, for these style in its
essays,
narrow sense,
explication.
The most promi-
most productive kind of
literary style:
the
style
management rhythm of
sentences, the use of rhetorical devices, the ration.
col-
unriddle the man.
This exegesis makes a beginning, but
style
informed
also the
observant lawyer, of concealed evidence.
cal to
the pattern in
to the
—the unmistakable
alert lepidopterist of its species.
style, therefore, is to
is
is
of
nar-
Gibbon's way of pairing phrases, Ranke's resort to
dramatic
techniques,
Macaulay's
reiteration
of
antitheses,
Burckhardt's informal diction, taken by themselves, as single instances,
mean what
they say on the page.
They
describe a
battle, analyze a political artifice, chronicle a painter's career.
But once
characteristic
and habitual
elements in the historian's
mode
— that
is,
recognizable
of expression, of his style
they become signposts to larger, deeper matters. Partly idiosyncratic
and
partly conventional, partly selected
and
partly
should add that the four historians I have chosen do not in any way exhaust the possibilities of stylistic analysis; in principle, and in practice, the analysis of inferior historians should yield results that would be quite as interesting, if not quite so pleasing. 3 I
[7]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
imposed by unconscious, professional, or
political pressures,
the devices of literary style are equally instructive, not always for the
conclusive answers they supply but for the fertile
questions they raise about the historian's central intentions
and overriding interpretations, the tial
beliefs of his culture
—and,
state of his art, the essen-
perhaps, about his insights
into his subject.
While witness,
have taken
I
style in its strict sense as
my materials have
compelled
me
my
principal
to reach out to other
related forms of expression, to styles in looser senses of the
word. call
Among
the historian's emotional
style,
what
want
to
his tone of voice as
it
the most revealing of these
is
emerges in the tension or repose of his phrases,
his favorite
adjectives, his selection of illustrative anecdotes, his
and epigrams. In classicism,
scribed,
in
I
emphases
a tightly regulated stylistic system like neo-
which expressive means
emotional
style
are
severely circum-
has potent diagnostic possibilities,
accepted canons of rhetoric, say, proscribe "low"
for while
epithets for highly placed personages, the range of permissible
expressions remains large choices.
Gibbon
"artful"
only
characterizing
tells
word
room for instructive the Emperor Augustus as to give
us that Augustus was
Gibbon thought him the pages of
enough
—
artful.
The Decline and
But
for
or,
rather,
that
scattered liberally across
Fall of the
artful begins to trail clouds of
becomes an emblem
—
Roman
Empire, the
meaning behind
it
and
Gibbon's cynical appraisal of the
Empire, a clue not merely to what he saw but what he, as an individual historian, was best equipped to freer,
more
emotional
In the
loose-jointed writing of the nineteenth century,
style retains its capacity to yield
interpreter:
see.
dividends to the
Burckhardt's chilling stories about Renaissance
despots point to perceptions
more general than those the [8]
Style
stories are
—From Manner
to
Matter
They help
designed to illuminate.
to outline the
contours of Burckhardt's historical vision. In our examination
we come
of a historian's emotional style,
man
very close to the
indeed.
Instructive as the historian's selection of expressive tech-
niques and unconscious coloring of narrative
—his
habit of doing research and offering proof style
—provides additional and
may
be,
professional
significant clues. It invites in-
ferences subtler
and more far-reaching than judgments of
competence or
his
Ranke
diligence.
assiduously visited
Macaulay preferred
accessible archives;
his
spend
to
his all
time
his
poring over broadsides and printed collections of popular
Gibbon mastered the history of ancient Rome from modern compilations; Burckhardt studied the Renaissance from contemporary accounts. To know this is to know some-
verses;
thing about the sheer validity of each historian's conclusions,
but
it
toward
also delineates his attitude
his material.
obsessive, almost religious conscientiousness, tinctive signature
on
all his
work,
as a grand, dramatic, divinely
the historian as a sional
man
credulousness,
of
which
Ranke's
left its dis-
reflects his sense of history
guided contest, and his sense of
God
in the world.
Gibbon's occa-
which contrasts so sharply with
his
pronounced, often malicious skepticism, suggests, not professional laxity,
but a
ness of priests
and the
other styles
beyond
The
I
will to believe
especially in the wicked-
lasciviousness of emperors. Like the
have mentioned, professional
style, too,
points
itself.
reality
all
point
these styles
analyst of style hopes to catch, less
—
is,
as
I
to,
the fish
that the
have suggested, nothing
than the historian's total perception of the past, the
constraints
within
which he works and the truths he
uniquely capable of grasping. Yet this exalted region [9]
is
—the
— STYLE ultimate destination of a
complete monopoly,
HISTORY
IN
stylistics
—where matter seems
invaded by manner
is
also.
I
to hold
am
speak-
ing of the historian's style of thinking, a convenient and
content in more than a
telling phrase that relates style to
For a historian's most fundamental
mere metaphorical
sense.
and therefore
examined assumptions about the nature of
the world,
least
its
aspect which
ontological
may
leave
or professional style.
Yet
makeup, its
also
have their expressive
traces in his literary, emotional,
thought
styles of
may
also find other,
more subterranean, channels of communication: a historian need not write, or feel, or work like another, and yet think like him and learn from him. Gibbon was deeply indebted to Tacitus' disenchantment, but Gibbon structured his sentences, chose his adjectives, and pursued his research in ways markedly different from the ways of Tacitus. Burckhardt
pronounced it is
sage, of the
wholes, but
affinity for Hegel's vision of cultural
— fortunately— impossible
had a
to mistake a passage, any pas-
Kultur der Renaissance in Italien for a passage,
any passage, of Hegel's lectures on history. In general, though, intellectual
affinities scatter
than they did in Gibbon and Burckhardt. discussed do not normally
touching. It
is
lie
by
side
significant that
The
more
styles
side as strangers,
many
stylistic
I
clues
have
without
qualities
are
hard to place: does Gibbon's irony or Macaulay's rhetoric
form part of
their literary or their
emotional
style?
Do
Burck-
hardt's stories serve to disclose his view of the world, his
private pessimism, his wish to keep his readers interested, or all
three?
These questions suggest
their answer: styles are a
network of clues to one another, and, together, to the to the historian at work.
[10]
man
Style
This brings
me
lives in several
—From Manner
Matter
to
to the second half of Buffon's epigram.
worlds at once, most notably in his private
sphere, in the comparatively intimate realm of his craft, in the
Man and
wide public domain of his culture. 4 Like the various
dimensions of
these worlds intersect and continuously
style,
impinge upon one another: the private person internalizes
commands
the standards of craft and the
and
large serves culture
ideals.
A
mature
and obediently expresses
literary style
ments, variously combined;
and
private
social,
of culture; craft by
and
its
overriding
a synthesis of all these ele-
is
once individual
therefore, at
it is,
public, a
combination of inherited
ways, borrowed elements, and unique qualities.
That
is
why
the student of style can treat this synthesis analytically and sort out the threads of
some Romantics were
as
If,
which the
stylistic tapestry is
inclined
simply the outward garb of inner
mation about
a
Romantics were wrong. this
is
the style on which
Writers are not born
an unceasing
own
voice.
5
psyche,
writer's
To I
the spontaneous
it
would
yield infor-
nothing more. But these
begin with, literary style
shall concentrate
stylists;
effort to
to think, style were
states,
overflowing of the springs of creativity,
composed.
—and
— can be learned.
they fashion their style through
overcome dependence and find
Normally, the apprentice writer
their
—and —discovers the here,
as
elsewhere, the historian acts like other writers style appropriate to
him by
first
following and then discarding
admired models; imitation seems to be an
essential
phase in
intend to explore these worlds, and their meaning for. the analysis of historical causation in a forthcoming book, Art and Act: On Causes in History Manet, Gropius, Mondrian. 5 See Burckhardt's comment to his friend Friedrich von Tschudi: "My way is, through dependence to independence." See below, p. 161. 4 I
—
["]
STYLE
the process of self-discovery.
part, straight
comes
To
Not even
come wholly from
does writing
most
HISTORY
IN
out of other books.
say that style can be learned It
is
learned. It
is
an act of
it
comes, for the
The
higher naivete
the heart;
the fruit of labor that conceals labor.
later,
enough.
in the beginning, then,
more accurate
is
therefore not precise
to say, rather, that style
must be
only in part a gift of talent; beyond that
will
and an
exercise of intelligence. It
that expressiveness pays to discipline. Style
Words,
of the practical reason.
is
it
is
the tribute
an instrument
is
many
of course, do
things:
they convey information, they disclose affection, they utter
warnings; they are, often, the unedited transcription of emotions into verbal form. to
an end; though,
and
side
its
But
we
as
style
well
is
the application of
know,
it
too has
its
means
passional
involuntarv revelations.
That is why styles have histories, even in individual writers. Gibbon is perhaps an exception: while even he found it necessary to experiment, he cast all his writings, early and late, into the same unmistakable mold. But, then, Gibbon was never young. 6 For nearly addition to being an style chronicles
Gibbon,
"is
all
other writers, style has been, in
endowment,
and analyzes that conquest. "Style," wrote
the image of character." 7 Here
cation of the uses that stylistics gives
him
This
is
discover.
'
I
am
a conquest; the study of
may have
is
the
first indi-
for the historian:
it
access to a writer's private, psychological world.
not the only world that the study of
Writing tempted
is
an
activity
style serves to
pursued within the texture of
to enter a protest against the trite
and
lavish praise of
the happiness of our boyish years, which is echoed with so much affectation in the world. That happiness I have never known, that time I have never regretted."
The Autobiography
(1961), p. 68. ' Autobiography
,
p.
of
Edward Gibbon,
27.
[12]
ed.
Dero A. Saunders
— Style
—From Manner Apart from
a literary tradition. writers,
a
handful of innovators, most
like the
Dadaist poets,
who
at incomprehensibility find their vocabulary within the
how
context of a society, no matter hensibility
is
their
way
of
with the others in their tion
Matter
even the greatest, speak in a language that others
have made familiar. Even those,
aim
to
may be
select; their
communicating
circle.
A
incompre-
—comprehensibly
writer's attitude to his tradi-
compliant, ambivalent, or rebellious.
He may
way before, way before. Whatever
write as he does because others have written his or because others have not written his his attitude,
he cannot be indifferent to the atmosphere that
his choice of profession
compels him to breathe.
Just as individual styles have a history, style itself has a history. In every epoch, writers
modes
available to them.
rules laying
down
have had specified expressive
They have always been
subject to
permissible language, to conventions chan-
neling their private preferences, to hierarchies appropriate to
any theme. Until modern times
—
—which,
in
this
context,
means the 1890s there have been some things historians must say and others that they would have found it unthinkable to say.
The boundaries within which pelled to
maneuver
of history.
That
historians have
been com-
are of peculiar importance for the history
history
is
the history of the emancipation
of a craft from powerful, normally overpowering, masters.
Through long
centuries, historians
have lived in
many
houses,
borrowing their speech and convictions from their hosts: the theatre in Greece, the law courts in
Rome,
the monastery in
the Middle Ages, the salon in the Enlightenment. Ancient,
medieval, and early as pieces of rhetoric;
employ accepted
modern
historians proffered their works
they had to satisfy moral demands and
literary devices.
[•3]
The
tradition of eloquence,
STYLE and distorted
reinforced
HISTORY
IN
in the early
modern
era
by memories
down to the when historians
of antique oratory, pervaded historical writings
and even the seventeenth century,
sixteenth
added
to this antique rhetorical tradition the eloquence of
The
the pulpit.
philosophe-historians' dependence
was actually
society in the eighteenth century
on
a giant step
toward independence: history became a respectable genre
among
Then,
own
some
losses.
literary
other respectable literary genres. the nineteenth century, historians
in
their
polite
house, the university
—
not,
I
moved
into
might add, without
But, whatever the losses, the
modern autonomy
of the historian has markedly increased
the range of his
stylistic options.
As more aspects of the past have become
more ways
accessible to inquiry,
have become permissible.
The
of speaking about the past
relation of the historian to his
work has changed; the craftsman has become Yet
debt that the individual historian owes
in principle, the
to his craft
—
its
dominant
exploratory techniques
The
modern
traditions,
its
current debates,
its
—has neither increased nor diminished.
study of historians'
medieval, or
a professional.
style, therefore,
whether of ancient,
practitioners, gives access to the world
of their craft.
But
it
also gives access, finally, to culture itself, of
craftsmanship
is
only a specialized, and sometimes recalcitrant,
representative. This said
insatiably
He
reading
2nd
what Macaulay had
desirous
Mommsen
is
mind when he
natural that he lively,
novelty
and excitement." 8 Reading
much about
the Greece of his day, just as
of
or
Namier
Thomas Babington Macaulay, edn., ed.
it
in
wrote for a nation susceptible, curious,
Herodotus 'tells us
8
is
of Herodotus that he "wrote as
should write.
which
Lady Trevelyan,
tells
"History,"
us
much about
The Works
8 vols. (1871), 5:124.
[14J
of
the Ger-
Lord Macaulay,
Style
—From Manner
to
Matter
many or England of their day. Conversely, it also tells us much about their perception of their culture: we cannot read Mommsen's Romische Geschichte, with its stunning anachronisms,
Momm-
Junkers in togas, without sensing within
its
sen, the objective scholar,
and frustrated
political
Mommsen,
another
We
animal.
the passionate
cannot read Namier's
Structure of Politics at the Accession of George lll resolute anti-intellectualism,
its
y
with
affectionate portrayal of
its
the political microcosm of mid-eighteenth-century England,
without detecting in Namier, the minute researcher, a hidden
Namier, the lover of English
must be
The if
information that style provides
social
we have
lost the
his utterance, will
men
place that
with is
as
remain opaque.
It
them
much
full
is
bearing of
has long been a
common-
often use words to conceal their meaning
we must
first
and ambiguity. 9 In such
we
solve the style before
a clue to style as style
nately this
symptom
the
solve other puzzles: there are times
its aid,
by no means
key that will unlock their message, the
veils of indirection, difficulty,
circumstances,
is
words were addressed to the chosen few,
intentions of the writer, and with
behind
infatuated that he
a foreigner.
infallible; if past
and
civility so
is
when
can,
politics
a clue to politics. Fortu-
not a logical but an existential
of the mutual dependence of style
may
hence, of the possibility that they
circularity,
and
life
a
and,
reciprocally illumi-
nate each other.
While one school and
his disciples, has
tween the
lines,
historian,
a
9
On
words
as
of intellectual historians,
made
Leo Strauss
a cottage industry of reading be-
reading the lines themselves remains, for the
rewarding enterprise.
concealment, see below,
Erich Auerbach,
p. 26.
[15]
in
his
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
may
Mimesis, has shown the path that
from philology to sociology.
It
is
easy to demonstrate, as he
does, that the barbarous Latin of a mirrors, with
its
game:
But with
Auerbach shows that
his analysis of Tacitus'
stylisrics
may
social perceptions. In describing a
Tacitus puts elevated words in the tineers, sprinkles his report
Rome
of his day.
10
mouth
more
trap
world elusive
mutiny, he notes, of one of the
mu-
with ethical adjectives, and em-
ploys the rhetorical devices current in the
Merovingian chronicle
impoverished vocabulary, the desperate decay
of antique culture.
view,
take the historian
among
cultivated orators
Auerbach deduces from such
guistic habits Tacitus' blindness to the social
and economic
pressures bubbling beneath the surface of events.
more than the political the demands of famished
failure as
bias of
fronting
soldiers;
Roman who does orders as full human
lin-
He
sees this
an aristocrat conhe
sees
it,
rather,
and cannot, see
as characteristic for a
not,
the lower social
beings. In sum, the
much
study of style provides a diagnostic instrument as
for
the historian's social and cultural as for his psychological and professional worlds, a decisive clue to their meanings, their
limitations
—and
their insights.
must add a final word. Style, I said earlier, is sometimes less than the man; often it is more than the man. In examining the styles of four great historians, I am in no way committing
I
myself to the fashionable usually been
10
relativist
that have
implications
drawn from Buffon's epigram. Historians have
Erich Auerbach, Mimesis:
The Representation
of Reality in
Literature (1946; trans. Willard R. Trask, 1953), pp. 33-40. to this passage; see below, pp. 30-31.
[16]
I
Western
shall return
Style
—From Manner
to
Matter
long been engaged in a great, or at least persistent, debate over the essential nature of their craft, and Buffon has been
taken as supporting the view that history cannot be a science,
but must be an
man and But
style.
—
reports in that idiosyncratic
and
is
may be an
a personal report
even possible that while reflects
a scientist.
I
do not want
to insist here: there
manner we
literary
is
man, the man
it
now much I
to decide this matter
Conclusion. But on this
no reason why
is
his
call
objective report. It
style reflects the
will return to it in the
want
encounter between a
a subjective
the past, which he reshapes through his private
and
vision
art
style
must be the
undistorted reflection of the historian's private neurosis, social location, or historical epoch. If
science
and competence
at
all,
he has any professional con-
he
is
bound
about the time of which he writes than the time lives.
11
results are style
is
in
which he
Individual stylists develop in rebellion against their
their
past,
more
to say far
environment, even against themselves, and the not always predictable. While in
instructive,
not
all
all
its
styles are instructive to
degree: like other writers, a historian usually has
aspects
the same
two
styles,
formal and informal, and both are an intermixture of expression and self-control. There recipe, setting
may it
down
disclose. All
will contribute
I
in
advance
claim
some
is
that
is
no
rule book,
self-
no prepared
what the study of style discloses much, and that
just it
light to the heated debate over the
nature of history. examine this point at greater detail in the Conclusion; meanwhile, it should be obvious that I reject E. H. Carr's popular simplistic relativism: "When we take up a work of history, our first concern should be not with the facts which it contains but with the historian who wrote it. Before you study the history, study the historian." What Is History? (1962), pp. 24, 54. While elsewhere in his book, Can retreats from this extreme position, it is these formulations that have gained wide currency and undeserved acceptance. 11 I
.
.
shall
.
[»7l
1
Gibbon
A Modern Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
The Scholar he architecture guide
is
is
familiar,
its
structure classical.
Gibbon, surveying the ruins of the
Roman
The Re-
public:
Every barrier of the
Roman
had been levelled by every fence had been extirpated
constitution
the vast ambition of the dictator;
by the cruel hand of the Triumvir. After the victory of Actium, the fate of the Roman world depended on the will of Octavianus, surnamed Caesar, by his uncle's adoption, and afterwards Augustus, by the flattery of the senate. The conqueror was at the head of forty-four veteran legions, conscious of their own strength, and of the weakness of the constitution, habituated, during twenty years' civil war, to every act of blood and violence, and passionately devoted to the house of Caesar, from whence alone they had received, and expected, the most lavish rewards. The provinces, long oppressed by the ministers of the republic, sighed for the government of a single person, who would be the master, not the accomplice, of those petty tyrants.
The
people of
Rome,
viewing, with a secret pleasure, the humiliation of the aristocracy,
demanded only bread and public shows; and were supplied with both by the liberal hand of Augustus. The rich and polite Italians,
who had almost
embraced the philosophy of Epicurus, enjoyed the present blessings of ease and tranquillity, and sufuniversally
[21]
.
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
be interrupted by the memory of their old tumultuous freedom. With its power, the senate had lost its dignity; many of the most noble families were extinct. The fered not the pleasing
dream
republicans
and
of spirit
ability
battle, or in the proscription.
With rier
.
.
field
of
("Every bar-
vintage Gibbon.
is
singularly appropriate to
is
the
in
1
every fence"), this passage
;
antique gravitas tragic
had perished
measured, almost military tread
its
.
to
its
Its
grand and
theme: the transition of a great power from one form
While Gibbon
finds
room
for his
unconquerable cynicism, dwelling with evident
relish
on the
of
government
to another.
which "the people of Rome" view "the
"secret pleasure" with
humiliation of the aristocracy," he tactfully refrains from the
kind of derisive joke that marks so survey,
though rapid,
is
stately; it
and military history
cal
it
much
is
of his narrative. His
striking
how much
politi-
conveys to the reader, with
its
introduced glances at the past ("After the victory
skillfully
of Actium.
.
"The
."
.
provinces, long oppressed.
.
.
.")
and
("The rich and polite embraced the philosophy
informative parenthetical clauses
its
Italians,
who had almost
of Epicurus.
care that
.
.
."
)
.
Stateliness
—
does not
it
drawing up a
list
adoption
entail tedium.
at the
but he takes the curse implicit,
—and Gibbon takes
need not
Gibbon
moment
.
.
,
off his
enumeration by the tense,
by the
("by
His sentences are long
.
—Gibbon's melodic
.
Empire, ed.
J.
B. Bury, 7 vols. (1896-1902), [Chapter
[22]
.
,
line
Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and
if
uncle's
his
and the music
flattery of the senate")
of his rhythmic repetitions ("vast ambition
1
essentially
of Augustus' accession,
antitheses of his parallel clauses .
is
of structural changes that characterized the
Rome
situation of
universally
cruel is
hand")
rarely terse
Fall of the
iii],
1:59-60.
Roman
Gibbon:
—but he
A
Cynic among Ancient
varies their
apparent pace by introducing, at proper
moments, the dramatic caesura this
Politicians
of the semicolon. Yet, while
passage unmistakably belongs to Gibbon, he has here
dressed himself in borrowed plumage.
The
passage
is
a close
paraphrase, slightly rearranged and slightly rewritten, of a
chapter in Tacitus' Annals:
When
and Cassius there was no longer any army of the Commonwealth, when Pompeius was crushed in Sicily, and when, with Lepidus pushed aside and Antonius slain, even the Julian faction had only Caesar left to lead it, then, dropping the title of triumvir, and giving out that he was a Consul, and was satisfied with a tribune's authority for the protection of the people, Augustus won over the soldiers with gifts, the populace with cheap corn, and all men with the sweets of repose, and so grew greater by degrees, while he concentrated in himself the functions of the Senate, the magistrates, and the laws. He was wholly unopposed, for the boldest spirits had fallen after the destruction of Brutus
in battle, or in the proscription, while the
remaining nobles, the
readier they were to be slaves, were raised the higher
and promotion, so
by revolution, they preferred
that, aggrandised
the safety of the present to the dangerous past. inces
dislike
that
condition of
by wealth
affairs,
for
Nor
did the prov-
they distrusted the
government of the Senate and the people, because of the rivalries between the leading men and the rapacity of the officials, while the protection of the laws was unavailing, as they were continually deranged by violence, intrigue, and finally by corruption. 2
Reading these two paragraphs
Suzanne Curchot, the only professed to love, and
girl
who knew
knew her Gibbon, should note 2
in
Tacitus, Annals, trans. Alfred John ribb (1876, and often reprinted), Book
tandem, we can see why
whom Gibbon
had
briefly
her classics as well as she
that Tacitus was the "model
Church and William Jackson BrodI,
[23]
chap.
2.
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
and perhaps the source" 3 of much that went into the Decline
and
Fall.
Gibbon, of course, was not a favorite
he was engaging
and wholly respectable eighteenth-century
although in his time,
plagiarizing;
when
own way: he was
the civilized orders
in
practice,
writing an imitation. In his
still
had much Latin,
if less
Greek, free allusion to the classics was a popular literary and artistic device. It
placed the author in a mutually congratu-
latory relationship with his readers,
mented
for
he thus compli-
not forgetting what had been drilled into them
in their youth. trasts
whom
The
parallels, and,
even more, the subtle con-
which these imitations could mobilize, invited the permitted daring yet restrained criticism
liberal play of wit,
of contemporary affairs and, with their resonances of well-
beloved and half-remembered
texts,
of recognition. Alexander Pope's tions
employed ancient forms
poured new acid into old closer than theirs,
its
gave the intimate shock
and Samuel Johnson's imita-
to write
bottles.
modern
satire;
they
Gibbon's imitation was
echoes were louder; he was employing
ancient substance to write ancient history. But his deliberate and, to the educated, obvious dependence on an ancient
model was designed would have
to
make
a point that a freer paraphrase
dissipated.
But what point? And why Tacitus? He was, of course, a copious and eloquent reporter on events in the early Roman Empire. Yet some of Gibbon's contemporaries, notably Voltaire,
from
whom Gibbon
credit Tacitus'
learned a great deal, refused to
somber reportage. They thought
it
too pessi-
in G. M. Young, Gibbon (1932), p. 133. For an analysis of Gibbon's dependence on Tacitus, see Peter Gay, The Enlightenment: An 3
Quoted
Interpretation,
vol.
1,
The
Rise of
Modern Paganism (1966),
156-159.
[M]
pp.
117,
Gibbon: mistic about
human
A
human
actions.
ness that
Cynic among Ancient
Yet
nature, too chilling in
it
made him
It is idle to
was,
it is
its
account of
suggest, precisely Tacitus' cold-
I
so appealing
and
so useful to
speculate which of the two,
was the colder;
Politicians
model
Gibbon.
or imitator,
important to recognize that the sources
of their mental temperature differed. Tacitus was an outraged
Gibbon an erudite cynic. Like all human beings, both historians had something to hide: Tacitus, a tormented moralist,
politician's guilt;
Gibbon,
a professional bachelor's conflicts.
If
Tacitus appears like a glacier concealing a volcano,
is
the glacier concealing an iceberg.
But
their affinity,
their shared coldness,
is
Gibbon
more than
a
matter of temperament and of psychological mechanisms.
matter of method and of essential world view. Both
It is a
historians concentrate
on
a purely
human
scene. Their causal
baggage conspicuously omits supernatural intervention, divine providence, abstract forces; the principal, practically the sole, subject matter of their histories therefore thought
it
is
man and
his passions.
Both
the supreme task of the historian to
probe historical actors to their depths. David
one of the leading historians
in the
Age
Hume,
himself
of the Enlighten-
ment, appreciatively called Tacitus a "penetrating genius," 4
and
it
was Tacitus' penetration that attracted Gibbon to him.
"Proprium humani ingenii
est
odisse quern laeseris"
5
—
this
was the kind of disenchanted psychologist's epigram that a Hume, Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding, in The Philosophical Works of David Hume, ed. T. H. Green and T. H. Grose, 4
4
David
vols.
(
1882), 4:100.
nature to hate the man whom you have injured." Agricola, 42. It was this classical remark that Macaulay remembered in his History of England, when he spoke of the petty persecution to which the Anglican parson subjected the dissenters: "He too often hated them for the wrong which he had done them." The Works of Lord Macaulay, 2nd edn., ed. Lady Trevelyan, 8 vols. (1871), 1:261. 5
"It
is
characteristic of
human
[25]
STYLE could
Tacitus
HISTORY
IN
formulate and a Gibbon relish
he was not given
repeat, for, unlike his master,
if
scarcely
to the laconic
dictum. But as there are several styles of coldness, there
methods of penetration; Gibbon's
are several
affinity
Tacitus was fundamental rather than superficial, his
debt I
less to
the forms of Tacitus' style than to
its
stylistic
substance.
do not want to suggest that penetration and coldness
— the
gift of analysis.
to strike through the
For
it
takes a cool head
masks that
thoughts and their actions.
men
Now
significant
raw material, are
'The
pensable.
and
a clear
as then, despite
are
a truth,
much
deceptive as they are indis-
as
to express our
fore,
wants
almost a truism, about the
The
most
true use of speech," wrote Oliver Goldsmith,
Tacitus had said, finds injured.
carbon dat-
historians'
Gibbon's acquaintance and himself something of not so
mind
put on to disguise their
and family reconstitution, words
ing
are
but two aspects of a single capacity
distinct qualities; they are
"is
with
it
a historian,
as to conceal
human animal
them," 6
which, as
natural to hate the person he has
chief use of the historian's penetration, there-
was to dig beneath appearance
to reality.
Secularists are of course not alone in arguing that appear-
ance and
reality are distinct
and often
philosophers saw the natural world of
mere
screen.
But
in conflict: medieval
human
experience as a
for the Christian the reality
concealed by
appearance was a higher world of religious fulfillment, while the secularist treats this hidden reality as the
mundane world
of secret reasons. Tacitus saw Caesar Augustus as dominating
men while, and by, proclaiming that he is obeying them. The private motives of the ruled were significant for him too; while they are
less accessible,
they are threads in the fabric
Oliver Goldsmith, "On the Use of Language," Essay V, in The Oliver Goldsmith, ed. Peter Cunningham, 4 vols. (1854), 3:159. 6
[26]
Works
of
Edward Gibbon After the portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds
COURTESY THE
NEW YORK
PUBLIC LIBRARY
— A
Gibbon: of reality
—
civilians
Politicians
want cheap
food,
want power, and everyone wants peace.
easy to see
is
want bonuses,
soldiers
politicians It
Cynic among Ancient
why
Voltaire, a philanthropist masquerad-
ing as a cynic, should wince at Tacitus' savage portraits. But to depreciate Tacitus
sour debunker
miss
the
subtlety, the sheer virtuosity, of his psychological insight.
His
Augustus
men not The social
deceives theirs.
is
to
fraud;
he
but largely
for
gigantic fraud, but not simply a
a
is
a
as
solely for his
own
process pursues
its
profit,
devious course behind
the arcana that a shrewd government has set up; political
speeches must be read with care to disclose the gulf that
yawns between profession and
But appearance and separable; they are also, and practice.
not always cleanly
reality are
often, subtly intertwined. Tacitus' curt antitheses
nem at
faciunt,
pacem appellant" 7
"Solitudi-
—intimate that rhetoric
serves
once to disguise and, for the perceptive reader, to under-
score, the terrors of politics
Such
disillusioned perception of complexity requires a large
measure of veiled
and of war.
critical distance.
from
As long
as there are areas decently
criticism, this perception
is
blunted. Gibbon, like
his intellectual allies, the philosophes, insisted that inquirers
must be
employ
at liberty to
their critical
faculties
every-
where, including, and especially, in the two sacred regions of politics
and
religion.
Recalling, in his Autobiography,
the
Gibbon sonorously
an-
miserable slavery of his schooling,
nounced that "Freedom is
the
first
Fall he
is
the
first
wish of our heart; freedom
8 blessing of our Nature."
made
it
And
in the Decline
and
plain that freedom was also the indispensable
instrument of the scholar. Every pious averting of eyes, every
p.
7
"They make
8
The Autobiography
a desert
and
of
call
it
Edward
peace." Agricola, 30. Gibbon, ed. Dero A. Saunders
69.
[29]
(1961),
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
compulsory panegyric, cripples the pursuit of Moreover, to be
real
and
as well as external; it
freedom must be internal
effective,
must embrace, not merely immunity
from harassment and guarantees against
dom from
historical truth.
starvation,
but
free-
and from unquestioning
constricting prejudgments
acceptance of authority. Whatever his ultimate merits, Taci-
way of writing and, even more, his way of thinking provided Gibbon with a model for this kind of double freedom. Gibbon's Tacitean remark, "Augustus was sensible that mantus'
kind
is
ment
governed by names," 9 reads
like a delicate
acknowledg-
of his debt.
we
In our self-conscious, self-analytical age, ridden as
with the suspicion that our several loyalties impose limits this
on our
vision,
we
it
is
kind of inner freedom can be at
true that total
suppositions
is
it
is
seems
of, self-deception.
for like
Surely
a dispassionateness
the historian without pre-
beings;
man
like Aristotle's
beast or a god. Yet pressures
worst kind
all realistic. It
detachment implies
human
not granted to
strict
doubt that the demand
are apt to
just another, in fact the
are
without a
city,
either a
too easy to underestimate the
all
toward objectivity that craftsmanship can apply.
Tacitus was an aristocrat, an accomplice in the terrible reign of Domitian, a
Roman
of his day.
and he was deeply attached
Rome's
to
values at a discount in his lifetime.
shown, Tacitus'
historical
work
is
world view that entailed a specific
Yet none of are
this
compromises
He was And,
not an atheist,
traditional values, as
Auerbach has
the product of a specific set of social perceptions.
10
his masterly anatomies; they
something better than subtle apologies
for himself
or
9
Gibbon, Decline and Fall [iii], 1:71. Erich Auerbach, Mimesis: The Representation of Reality Literature (1946; trans. Willard R. Trask, 1953), pp. 33-40. 10
[30]
in
Western
—
"
A
Gibbon: for his order.
Cynic among Ancient
One need
Politicians
not be a metaphysical skeptic to be
a methodological skeptic;
one need not be
a cynic to claim
the right to question everything. Gibbon's skepticism, even
more than
Tacitus' skepticism earlier, was a method, not a
conclusion.
To
the extent that
it
was
a conclusion,
it
did not
follow inescapably from his method.
What Gibbon
learned from Tacitus, then, was a kind of
discriminating disenchantment.
He
was persuaded that
it
was
a kind of lesson that Christian historians could not teach;
the critical temper was available only to pagans, ancient and
modern.
It
when he
was
this
singled
temper that Gibbon glimpsed
him out
as
Hume,
pher
is
a
Voltaire,
man who
n To Gibbon,
and the other philosophes, the philoso-
has conquered prejudices and given the
critical spirit free play.
And
to
Gibbon, Tacitus was such
man. 12 In the company of Seneca, the a few others,
he had "purified"
his
leaving behind the "prejudices"
and improving
his "excellent"
and the pursuit of
who
perhaps the only ancient
could truly be called a "philosophical historian. as to
in Tacitus
truth.
that in the centuries
13
It
when
Plinys, Epictetus,
a
and
mind with "Philosophy,"
of "popular superstition,"
understanding through study
was plain
—
at least to
Christianity
Gibbon
had shaped men's
minds, history, like philosophy, had obediently served as
handmaiden
to
a
glittering
eighteenth century, civilized
what Gibbon 11
superstition.
men
But now,
in
the
were living once again in
liked to call an "age of light
and
Essai sur V etude de la litterature, in Miscellaneous
liberty,"
Works
of
14
an
Edward
Gibbon, Esq. 2nd edn., ed. John Lord Sheffield, 5 vols. (1814), 4:66. To Gibbon, Tacitus was "the first of historians who applied the science of .
.
.
,
philosophy to the study of facts." Decline and Fall [ix], 1:213. 12 See Gay, Enlightenment, vol. 1, chapter 3, "The Climate of Criticism." 13 Gibbon, Decline and Fall [xv], 2:68. See Harold L. Bond, The Literary Art of Edward Gibbon (i960), pp. 9-13, 125. 14 Autobiography, p. 175. See below, p. 39.
[31]
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
supremely adapted to the writing of truthful
age, therefore, history.
F^om
this perspective,
antique model
Gibbon's ch oice of Tac itus
(rather than, say, Livy or Caesar)
as his
acquires
considerable diagnostic significance. It amounts to a decisive rejection of the Christian view of the world, a view that
own
continued to pervade the writing of history in Gibbon's
Much
century.
—
the philosophes liked to think so
as
—Christian
rather, to say so
mous with mendacious
history was
or,
by no means synony-
or superstitious history. In the seven-
teenth and early eighteenth centuries, an impressive band of
most scrupuscholarship with the most unimpeachable piety, and to
devout erudits found lous
serve their
God by
While most
it
possible to reconcile the
refining the
methods
of these scholars found
obligatory, to assert the
supremacy of
of historical research. it
God
made room
ultimate causal agent, they analysis of historical causation
reasonable, in fact in history as
for
the
by recognizing that
its
mundane
God
often
worked through "secondary causes": the passions and the reason of men, the practice of statecraft, the application of intelligence in military affairs. lar
and
At the same time, many popu-
influential histories, like Bossuet's Discours sur Vhis-
toire universelle of 1681, infallible
historical
continued to present Scriptures
document, use events decisive
as
for
an the
ancient Hebrews or the early Church to determine historical periodization,
and take the course of history
as
God's way of
rewarding the faithful and punishing the heretic. As late as the 1750s,
when Gibbon was meditating
his future vocation,
the most popular histories of the ancient world were the
volumes of the French Jansenist Charles Rollin, who had published an expansive Ancient History and an equally expansive
Roman
History in the 1730s, and whose historical [32]
A
Gibbon: views were,
if
histories loaded
same time that
more subservient to religious imperaDavid Hume rightly thought Rollin's
down with his
work
''puerilities/' yet
"is so well
that with superficial people
style,
The
Politicians
anything,
than Bossuet/s.
tives
it
he noted at the
wrote with respect to
passes for sufficient." 15
history that in the 1750s passed with superficial people
sufficient
for
Cynic among Ancient
wholly neglected recent scholarship whether
pious or impious, quoted Seneca, Livy, and the
ment with as
a set
indiscriminate credulity, and treated secular history
of demonstrations for the veracity of Scriptures.
While "profane
history," Rollin wrote, "treats only of nations
who had imbibed ship,"
it
all
the absurdities of a superstitious wor-
nevertheless "proclaims universally the greatness of
the Almighty, his power, his justice, and above
wisdom with which
rable
Old Testa-
the admi-
all
his providence governs
the uni-
verse." Nearly every page of history displays "the precious
footsteps
God
and shining proofs of
disposes
all
this great truth,
namely that
events as supreme Lord and Sovereign; that
he alone determines the
and the duration of the government of kingdoms
fate of kings
empires; and that he transfers
from one nation to another, because of the unrighteous
deal-
and wickedness committed therein." History properly begins with "the dispersion of the posterity of Noah," and all ings
history
is
simply the working out of a divine mysterious plan,
of which only part has been revealed, in Scriptures. in short,
is
principally a proving
ground
16
for theology,
fying tale calculated to keep the reader safe in the
History,
an
edi-
bosom
of
1759, in The Letters of David Hume, ed. J. Y. T. Greig, 2 vols. (1932), 1:297; Hume to Robertson, (Summer 1759), Letters, 1:315. 16 Charles Rollin, Ancient History, "Preface," in an anonymously translated two-volume eighteenth-century edition, published by George Virtue 15
Hume
(n.d.),
1
to
William Robertson, February
:i—ii.
[33]
8,
STYLE the Faith.
The measure
of the aid that an ancient writer like
Gibbon with
Tacitus could give forcefully
HISTORY
IN
when we
his liberation
emerges most
read the popular puerilities of Gibbon's
rivals.
Yet Gibbon's use of antiquity had
He
was compelled to maneuver
predicaments for him.
its
in a
convoluted maze of
tellectual forces. In taking Tacitus (as
in-
Suzanne Curchot had
model but also for a source, Gibbon was distancing himself from the most advanced scholarship of his day, a scholarship that Gibbon was equipped perceptively noted) not only for a
to appreciate better than
any other philosophe. While erudite
historians were beginning to discriminate with the
fingered delicacy
among
most
the sources on which they had to
surerely,
Gibbon was almost credulous in accepting the word of 17 writers he admired. Gibbon was a philosophe; his world view
—
his secularism, his hostility to "superstition," his
mitment
Hume,
to
criticism,
his
love
of Voltaire, of Diderot.
identified himself, consciously
of
Yet
and
freedom
—was
as a historian,
com-
that
of
Gibbon
bravely, with the erudits,
the scholars
whom
graceful stylists like Voltaire found tedious
beyond the
call of
duty.
While the "learning and language
Greece and Rome," he
later
by
Gibbon followed the
a
philosophic age,"
of
remembered, were "neglected erudits,
who
neglected neither, and amassed an impressive range of eru-
17
Arnaldo
D.
Momigliano, "Gibbon's Contribution to Historical Method" (1954), in Momigliano, Studies in Historiography (1966), pp. 40-55, passim. At the same time, as a look at his scholarly notes reveals, it will not do to minimize Gibbon's scholarship. See, especially, The English Essays of Edward Gibbon, ed. Patricia B. Craddock (1972). See
[34]
"
A
Gibbon: dition.
18
He
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
studied ancient coins and inscriptions, mastered
Roman He was
the geography of the specialized scholarship.
Empire, digested masses of
beholden not merely to con-
genial skeptics like Bayle, but also to Benedictines like Mabil-
lon and Montfaucon, Jansenists like Tillemont, Huguenots
Beausobre.
like
He
devoured their learning: he accepted their
settling of disputed dates,
their collections of elusive ful, in his
their reading of uncertain texts,
characteristic feline
ments often sound Decline and
Fall,
an
And he was duly grateway that made his acknowledg-
documents.
Reaching the year 519 in and, with that date, the end of his use like
insult.
Tillemont's great ecclesiastical history,
one of
farewell in
Gibbon
"And
his typical footnotes:
take leave forever of that incomparable guide is
bids his
here
his for
mentor I
must
—whose bigotry
overbalanced by the merits of erudition, diligence, veracity,
and scrupulous minuteness.
The
tone of this valedictory reveals more than a failure of
generosity;
it
ship. Just as
throws light on the paradox of Gibbon's scholar-
he could not accept the cavalier
"pedants"
for
19
of
characteristic
his
literary
intellectual
contempt allies,
the
philosophes, he could not accept the pronounced piety of his professional
allies,
the erudits.
of his Autobiography
While he populated
and the footnotes of
Fall with references to his seventeenth-
century authorities, he was all
of
all
them had worked not
and
his
the pages
Decline and
early eighteenth-
too vividly aware that nearly to blacken the
name, but to
At once dependent and independent, Gibbon the philosophical historian had to sustain the glory, of the Christian religion.
18
Autobiography,
the philosophes'
p.
123.
contempt
Gibbon for
than erudition. 19 Gibbon, Decline and Fall
for his part,
learning;
[xlvii],
they
5:132m
[35]
I
think, rather overstates
detested
pedantry
far
more
STYLE take a leap that
HISTORY
IN
Gibbon the scrupulous
even to contemplate. Yet he took critical history of
it.
Manicheanism with
scholar found
it
hard
Studying Beausobre's
he found that the
care,
book "discusses many deep questions of Pagan and Christian theology: and from this rich treasury of facts and opinions I
deduced
my own
the author."
20
consequences, beyond the holy circle of
Tacitus, preeminent
among
others, helped
him
to step out of the holy circle.
Tacitus was, of course, far from being Gibbon's only antique
While much Enlightenment history concentrated recent past, on Charles XII of Sweden or Louis XIV
inspiration.
on the
of France, classical antiquity exercised a continuing fascination
on the eighteenth-century mind. Today, when
learning
is
university,
much
classical
dying and has fled to privileged sanctuaries in the it
takes historical imagination to reconstruct
of a living force
Autobiography amply
it
how
was only two centuries ago. Gibbon's
testifies to its vitality;
the writings of his
—Diderot or Hume, Adam Smith or Samuel —confirm that Gibbon was not Johnson, Lessing contemporaries
or Jefferson
unique in feeling
its
power but
typical,
though
it
add that Gibbon experienced the lure of antiquity
is
fair to
as particu-
"Rome," he wrote, "is familiar to the schoolboy and the statesman," 21 but to no one so familiar as to him.
larly irresistible.
His famous discovery of covery.
Calm
as
Rome
October 1764 was a redishe normally was, his Italian diary shows him in
feverish with excitement; arriving in the city
walked about in a "songe d'antiquite' 22 sense
coming home. He
on October
—he was
later recalled in his
20
2,
he
in a very real
Autobiography:
Autobiography, pp. 135-136. Autobiography, p. 175. 22 October 2, 1764. Gibbon's Journey from Geneva to Rome: His Journal from 20 April to 2 October 1764, ed. Georges A. Bonnard (1961), p. 235. Evidently the metaphor pleased him; on October 9, 1764, he wrote to his 21
[36]
Gibbon:
A
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
My
temper is not very susceptible of enthusiasm, and the enthusiasm which I do not feel I have ever scorned to affect. But at the distance of twenty-five years
can neither forget nor express
I
my mind
the strong emotions which agitated
and entered the Eternal
I
first
City. After a sleepless night
a lofty step, the ruins of the
Romulus
as
approached trod,
I
with
Forum; each memorable spot where
stood, or Tully spoke, or Caesar
was at once present to my eye, and several days of intoxication were lost or enjoyed before I could descend to a cool and minute investigation. 23
tempting to discount the passage;
It
is
its
diction so elevated:
Gibbon does not
with a lofty step at that.
And
are in the
rhythm of
not a set piece;
it
is
so familiar
walk, he treads, and
.
.
.
were
lost or
enjoyed")
his formal speech, his set pieces. it
is,
in
and
the pairs of verbs (''neither
forget nor express/' "several days
is
fell,
own
its
Yet
this
way, an outpouring of
emotion, recollected in genuine excitement. Gibbon knew
Rome
better than
most Romans he saw about him. Behind
modern and Renaissance Rome, the Rome
of Caesar
and of
Cicero was vividly and accurately present to his schooled
mind's eye.
He was
indeed the best-prepared traveler ever to enter the
"Eternal City."
He had been
over the ground before,
times, poring over maps, imagining historic
many
moments, hearing
the immortal orations. In general, his reading, a voracious affair,
ously
had been continuously
—
When
classical.
—
I
am tempted
he was compelled
to say gluttonto
forego
the
ancients during his service with the militia, he regretted
and remembered Rome
it
as a
time of starvation: "After
this
it
long
fund of entertainment for a mind somewhat prepared for it by an acquaintance with the Romans, that I am really almost in a dream." The Letters of Edward Gibbon, ed. J. E. Norton, 3 vols. (1956), 1:184. 23 Autobiography, p. 152. father from
that he
had "found such
[37]
a
STYLE fast,
at
the longest which
I
HISTORY
IN
have ever known,
I
once more tasted
Dover the pleasures of reading and thinking, and the
hungry appetite with which philosophical works
The foundations had been
is still
opened
I
present to
a
volume of Tully's
my memory/' 24
of this passion for Cicero as for the others
laid long before.
As
young scholar
a
in
Lausanne,
he read Cicero through, and
after finishing this great author, a library of
eloquence and reason,
formed a more extensive plan of reviewing the Latin classics under the four divisions of (1) historians, (2) poets, (3) orators, and (4) philosophers, in a chronological series from the days of Plautus and Sallust to the decline of the language and Empire of Rome; and this plan, in the last twenty-seven months of my residence at Lausanne ... I nearly accomplished. Nor was this review, however rapid, either hasty or superficial. I indulged myself in a second and even third perusal of Terence, Virgil, Horace, Tacitus, etc., and studied to imbibe the sense and spirit most congenial to my own. 25 I
We can always rely on Gibbon The
ancients were
to his
men
to supply the telling phrase.
of a "sense 'and spirit
own." They were congenial,
first,
because they furnished
a continuously interesting subject of study.
that Gibbon's work, which took write,
is
I
as well as
for all of
need not
insist that
teenth-century writers thought and wrote
And
I
him perhaps twenty
about antiquity; nor need
ancient world.
most congenial insist
years to
other eigh-
much about
the
them, antiquity had been ideal
theme. Gibbon did not need to teach his readers to
love antiquity
—
that they did without him.
He
filled
out the
outlines of their love with his gripping gift for narrative, his
24 25
Autobiography, p. 135. Autobiography, pp. 99-100.
[38]
Gibbon:
A
Cynic among Ancient
who remained Gibbon's
blessed specificity. Suzanne Curchot,
him with her in history,
and throwing over the chaos
— or
notorious
cost
—chapters
and Fall
Decline
Christianity.
and brought him more
effort
anything else he ever
than
the
the two most
and sixteenth, the chapters on
Gibbon immense
controversy
all,
the
of
immense gap
this bridge joining
modern world." 26 After
are the fifteenth
They
Necker, thanked
usual perceptiveness for "filling an
ancient to the
famous
Mme.
had become
friend long after she
Politicians
They
wrote.
are
Gibbon's natural history of Christianity, the historian's coun-
Hume's Natural History of Religion. He had flattered himself, Gibbon wrote, "that an age of light and liberty would receive, without scandal, an inquiry into the human terpart to
causes of the progress and establishment of Christianity." 27
These scandalous chapters on Christianity belong within larger frame.
ness of
They come
Roman
Roman
wholly disinterested.
we
Gibbon has
statesmen, the dignity of
decency of
the
after
are entitled to
With an
extolled the great-
Roman
Such
toleration.
ethics,
and
was
not
praise
conscious as
artist as
in
the
hymn
his first
to
Roman
norm
against
Rome
and Rome,
at
Gibbon
the beginning,
more than perfuncstrategically placed. They estab-
which the Christian millennium appears
as a dismal falling off.
nines
greatness
his
three chapters. These are
tory stage settings; they are lish a
Gibbon
assume that the very placement of
chapters has a purpose and reveals an intention. intones
a
is
To be
not perfect: Gibbon
his
protagonist,
even under the Anto-
sure,
has
is
its
recounting a tragedy, tragic
flaw.
In
some
Young, Gibbon, p. 134. See Mme. Necker's long and brilliant appraisal of the first volume of the Decline and Fall, in her letter to Gibbon of September 30, 1776, reprinted in Gibbon, Miscellaneous Works, 26
Quoted
in
2:176-180. 27 Autobiography,
p.
175.
[39]
STYLE memorable
phrases,
HISTORY
IN
Gibbon
describes the sense of unease, the
emptiness amidst prosperity, the drift in political
"A
seeping away of cultural vitality:
fatal
cloud of
the
life,
critics,
of
compilers, of commentators, darkened the face of learning,
and the decline of genius was soon followed by the corruption of taste/'
made
it
28
Yet these
flaws of ancient civilization only
human. Gibbon presents
Rome
his
believable hero pitted
ious subversion of Christianity as a
His scholarship
against a believable villain. tagonists
seem
combat seem
believable; his style
just
—
facing the insid-
made
made
his
pro-
his version of their
in fact, inescapable.
The
Ironist
was at Rome," so runs the famous recollection, worth
It recording as
I
sat
barefooted
once again, "on the fifteenth of October 1764,
musing amid the
friars
ruins of the Capitol, while the
were singing vespers
that the idea of writing the decline started to
my
in the
and
mind." 29 Gibbon thus
temple of Jupiter, of the city
first
glimpsed his
life
fall
first
work, the bold enterprise of narrating in exhaustive detail
and with scholarly precision the tragedy of the greatest of historic empires, in the guise of
know
—Gibbon himself
he began to
tells
us
an ironic confrontation.
—
all
We
that he enlarged his canvas
on the task he was imposing on himself. And we may note, as he labors on his successive volumes, an as
reflect
28
Gibbon, Decline and Fall
29
Autobiography,
p.
pi],
1:58.
154.
[40]
— Gibbon:
A
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
But the stance he
increasing complexity of causal judgment.
took at the beginning of his great work long preceded
and did not change noble
monument
as
it
progressed:
it
it
was the sight of a
and of
of his beloved antiquity in ruins,
superstitious intruders desecrating, with their noisy piety, the
ancient pagan temple, that gave his diffuse ambition the
concentration he had so long sought. It was only afterwards that his choice of subject and his
mode
of treatment
assumed
the massive shape of inevitability.
Gibbon
insinuates his ironic perception into the very
first
paragraph of his masterpiece. In introducing his hero, Rome,
he
resorts to a device
he rarely uses
—
short sentences: "In the
Rome
second century of the Christian /Era, the empire of
comprehended the civilized portion of
the earth, and the most
fairest part of
mankind." From the
outset, then,
establishes the grandeur of his protagonist.
pears secure:
"The
Gibbon
The empire
frontiers of that extensive
ap-
monarchy were
guarded by ancient renown and disciplined valour. The gentle,
but powerful, influence of laws and manners had gradually
cemented the union of the provinces/' Rome's "peaceful habitants"
—and here
the imperial nest
the irony emerges, the
first
in-
cuckoo in
"enjoyed and abused the advantages of
wealth and luxury." And,
just as these peaceful inhabitants
challenged jealous fate by squandering, instead of husbanding, their
unprecedented prosperity, their polity rested on
preme sham: "The image with decent reverence.
of a free constitution
The Roman
was preserved
senate appeared to possess
the sovereign authority, and devolved on the emperors executive powers of government." 30
Gibbon, Decline and Fall
[i],
1:1. Italics mine.
[41]
all
the
The Roman people saw
only the image, the appearance, of political
30
a su-
reality;
fiction
"
STYLE and
fact
HISTORY
IN
were at war, though politicians prudently kept the
warfare below the surface.
Rome's happiness.
Deceit, in fact, lay at the very heart of
While Gibbon
is
willing to dwell
mainly to provide
on that
fragile happiness,
brilliant contrasts for his chiaroscuro;
this
is
it is
the deceit that really engages his attention and occupies
the center of the stage he
most important, forum various
modes
world, were
all
of
setting.
is
The most
for that deceit
obvious,
"The
the temple:
is
and
Roman
worship which prevailed in the
considered by the people, as equally true; by
the philosopher, as equally false; and by the magistrate, as
Gibbon
equally useful." And,
points out, they were useful:
'Toleration produced not only mutual indulgence, but even 31
Roman
was not a
religious
concord.
passivity;
it
a subject
on which Gibbon expatiates with the greedy pleasure
of a
liberal
was an active manipulation of popular sentiment,
gourmet
irreligion
toleration
"Notwithstanding the fashionable
of duplicity:
which prevailed
both
in the age of the Antonines,
the interests of the priests and the credulity of the people were sufficiently
respected."
wrought
parallels
credulity
of
euphony and
the
Here,
as
so often,
("the interests
people")
irony, at the
serve
of his
Gibbon's highly
the priests
two
favorite
.
.
.
the
masters,
same time.
and conversation, the philosophers of antiquity asserted the independent dignity of reason; but they resigned their actions to the commands of law and of custom. Viewing, with a smile of pity and indulgence, the various errors of the vulgar, they In their writings
diligently practised the ceremonies of their fathers, devoutly fre-
quented the temples of the gods; and sometimes condescending to act a part on the theatre of superstition, thev concealed the
31
Gibbon, Decline and Fall
[ii],
1:28.
[42]
:
A
Gibbon:
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
sentiments of an Atheist under the sacerdotal robes. Reasoners of such a temper were scarcely inclined to wrangle about their
modes of faith, or of worship. It was indifferent to them what shape the folly of the multitude might choose to assume; and they approached, with the same inward contempt, and the same external reverence, the altars of the Libyan, the respective
Olympian, or the Capitoline
The
but
self-serving
tellectuals
Jupiter.
32
politically useful
hypocrisy of the in-
was matched and exploited by the shrewdness
of their governors
Imperial government
.
.
.
may be
disguised by the forms of a
Roman
defined an absolute monarchy
commonwealth. The masters
of the
world surrounded their throne with darkness, concealed
and humbly professed themselves the accountable ministers of the senate, whose supreme decrees they dictated and obeyed. 33 their irresistible strength,
These passages
worth pondering
are
analytical insights are
ancients
—
rulers
do not
moment. Their
by no means unique to Gibbon. The
Cicero, Ovid, Juvenal
exposed the political
for a
utility of a
believe.
among
others
—had
public worship in which the
Gibbon's
favorite
modern master,
Montesquieu, had devoted an essay to the "religious of antique
Roman
state while others
David
already
statesmen: "They
had made the
made
politics"
a religion for the
state for religion/'
34
And
Hume
studied piety
had anticipated Gibbon's description of the that Rome's most admirable writers and thinkers
did not scruple to practice as a kind of patriotic service:
32
Gibbon, Decline and Fall [ii], 1:30. Gibbon, Decline and Fall [ii], 1:68. 34 Sur la politique des Romains dans la Andre Masson, 3 vols. (1950-1955). 33
[43]
religion, in
CEuvres completes, ed.
STYLE If
HISTORY
IN
there ever was a nation or a time in which the public religion
lost all authority
we might
over mankind,
Rome, during the Ciceronian
expect, that infidelity
would openly have erected its throne, and that Cicero himself, in every speech and action, would have been its most declared abettor. But it appears, that, whatever sceptical liberties the great man might take, in his writings or his philosophical conversation, he yet avoided, in the common conduct of life, the imputation of deism and profaneness. Even in his own family, and to his wife Terentia, whom he highly trusted, he was willing to appear a devout religionist. 35 in
There
religious is
new
thus nothing
is
(which
is
age,
in
the substance of Gibbon's
really political)
He
Gibbon's ironic treatment.
sociology.
is
new
has adopted the smile of
and indulgence that he imagined on the
pity
What
Roman
faces of
philosophers, to expose, in his history, the needy irrationality of mankind; but with him,
Yet that smile, though
has
it
become
persistent, does
a smile of derision.
not become monot-
Gibbon knows how to vary it; if, as Gibbon the mark of style to express the writer's mind,
onous, for it
is
as
he knew, the task of
times,
style to
Gibbon compresses the
said, it
is,
hold the writer's audience. At ironic tension
between public
lies
and private convictions into
esis
("with the same inward contempt, and the same external
reverence,"
the
"masters
of
a
the
simple contiguous antith-
Roman
humbly
world"
professed themselves "the ministers of the senate," whose decrees they "dictated
and obeyed"). At other times, the
antithesis
("viewing, with a smile
is
less
direct
.
.
.
,
they
diligently practiced"; ancient philosophers "asserted the in-
dependent dignity of reason; but they resigned yy
).
And
there are times
when Gibbon
David Hume, The Natural History of Religion, question, see Gay, Enlightenment, 1:145-155.
85
this
[44]
their actions
puts aside his in-
in
Works, 4:347.
On
Gibbon: and
direction
may be
Cynic among Ancient
his sly polarities:
"Imperial government
.
.
.
monarchy disguised by the forms However much Gibbon indulges him-
he never forgets
his obligations to his readers.
Gibbon's irony informs of rhetoric
and
practice in
Roman
reality in
themes: the incongruity
his large
Roman
politics, of potential
culture, of pious humility
pride in the Christian Fathers.
had some occasion
But
it
One
and
and impious
we have
penetrates, as
words and
to observe, his very choice of
structuring of clauses. is
Politicians
defined an absolute
commonwealth. "
of a self,
A
instance of his pervasive irony
the strategic frequency with which he uses the word artful.
It fits
Gibbon's wily Augustus to perfection, but he applies
to others as well. It
is
a
carrying heavy loads of gests
word
both
—
it
skill
is
good word
an
capable of
ironist,
meaning on both shoulders;
and concealment,
craft in
it
sug-
both senses of the
the opposite of "natural," both in the sense of
straightforward and of crude. Using plies that
for
it
he has seen through
as
it
his subject
covery with his readers. In Chapter
3
he does, Gibbon im-
and
is
sharing his dis-
and
of the Decline
Fall,
the words "artful," "artfully," "arts," and "artificial," always in the ironic sense, occur at least six times. In addition,
word with
varies the
"subtle," "studied," "crafty,"
sented," a
"professed,"
dissembled,"
i(
illusion,"
synonyms:
a rich array of
among
"disguised,"
Gibbon
"fictitious,"
the adjectives; "repre"deceived,"
"affected,"
"seemed," among the verbs; "comedy" and
among
the nouns.
The whole
chapter, in fact,
abounds with phrases designed to secure the same balance of the sentences does more than describe,
effect. it
The
embodies
the dignified political charade of the early empire.
Gibbon
was "compelled to accept" a large grant of power from the senate; the "tender respect of Augustus
writes that Augustus
for a free constitution
which he had destroyed" [45]
is
explained
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
by the character of "that subtle tyrant." In these phrases, and
many
Gibbon imprisons the conflict between word and deed, constitutional rhetoric
others like them,
thought and action,
and despotic
pious profession and
fact,
them
into the narrowest space; he crowds
What
est possible explosive effect.
heimer said of the intimate States
character,
to achieve the great-
the late
hostility
and the Soviet Union
vicious
Robert Oppen-
J.
between the United war
of the cold
in the years
aptly applies to Gibbon's taut antitheses: they are
two
scor-
pions in a bottle.
The
adjective artful
Other adjectives insincerity
—
in
drew
its
Gibbon draw
or, at least,
bon's chapters on the irritating to believers
from
rise of
and
from
force
its
their force
patent sincerity.
from
their patent
their studied ambiguity. Gib-
the Christian religion were so
so enjoyable to unbelievers in part
because they contain such two-edged words in profusion. Christianity,
Gibbon
writes,
was
"pure and humble"
a
men's minds; the
ligion that "gently insinuated itself into
materials historian
on which the "candid but rational"
must base
re-
his inquiries are "scanty
ecclesiastical
and suspicious"
the remarkable victory of the Christian faith under such
untoward circumstances was ible,
and
if
we may
assisted, in part,
by the
"inflex-
use the expression, the intolerant zeal"
of the Christians; the professors of the
new
religion
distinguished by an
the
truth
gion"
36
"exclusive
zeal
unexceptionable adjectives
highly offensive,
if
read in another.
for all,
if
of
were reli-
read in one way;
Gibbon here
exercises his
irony in behalf of one part of his readership against another part. Dividing,
he conquered.
™
Gibbon, Decline and Fall [xv], 2:1-2. Italics mine. Gibbon's phrase "candid but rational" is worth noting his passion for antithesis is apparently so powerful that he cannot resist constructing one even when there is no
—
opposition requiring the "but."
[46]
A
Gibbon:
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
Uniting, he conquered as well; the ironic polarities, which
have already noted, catch the
I
rather than repose
—
mood
to perfection.
of his style
—
tension
Emperor Constantius em-
braced a "generous but artful system of policy"; Julian was
moved
emperor by "prudence
to resist his proclamation as
as well as loyalty"; Clovis' wife, a Catholic,
found
it
to "her
nterest, as well as her duty, to achieve the conversion of a
Pagan husband, and Clovis insensibly listened
and
of love
sion
religion";
on the truth
vanity."
37
Mohammed
of the
to the voice
rested the truth of his mis-
Koran "in the
spirit of
There are countless instances of
each invariably following the same formula.
enthusiasm or technique,
this I
cannot exag-
importance for Gibbon and for the understanding
gerate
its
of his
mind: Gibbon
closely couples a higher
motive and implies that the former while the latter only implies
is
this,
complice and
to
the actual
a lower
the ostensible reason
is
moving
and
force.
And
because he
he compels the reader to become
draw the unpleasant, generally
his ac-
cynical,
inference for himself. Gibbon's irony, a splendid instrument for
unmasking
others,
was
at the
did screen for protecting his
own
same time an equally privacy.
In a well-deserved tribute, Byron pictures dious, meditative, his
splen-
Gibbon
as stu-
and learned, shaping
weapon with an edge
severe,
Sapping a solemn creed with solemn sneer;
The
lord of irony.
Yet, though "lord of irony" was an appropriate
bon, irony was far from being his only 37
title for
Gib-
stylistic resource, just
Gibbon, Decline and Fall [xix], 2:263, 4° 2 4:106, 5:343. It is clear from Gibbon's letters that this way of thinking was perfectly natural to him. Writing to his father about Commodore Acton, whom he had met in Italy, he refers to his religious conversion as springing "either from motives of interest or devotion." October 9, 1764, Letters, 1:184. >
[47]
STYLE as the discovery of
Rome had
Gibbon himself
experience.
HISTORY
IN
been
far
from
his only
two events
celebrates
— and 1780—
as serviceable to his historian's vocation.
of the
Hampshire grenadiers
House
his stint in the
Commons between
of
.
.
/'he wrote
it
prudence, 39
the
first
and most
We may doubt that his
empire/'
virtue
essential
far 40
an
of
from onerous military did
much more
what he had already experienced through
But they widened and gave
"has
first,
he wrote of the second, "were a school of
interlude or his silent "senatorial life" to amplify
of the
him "a clearer notion of the phalanx and the ancient Rome. 38 "The eight sessions that I sat
in Parliament/'
historian."
"The captain
gave
legions" of
civil
1774 and
Roman
not been useless to the historian of the because
in his adult
the militia between 1760 and 1762,
service with
his
life
shaping
than
his books.
on the outside world the Decline and Fall a sure sense
his angle of vision
his descriptions in
They permitted him to see. Exotic landscapes cities rouse Gibbon to word painting in which he
of intimacy.
and great
subdues his sarcasm and slows the pace of his narrative to obtain, crete,
and convey,
a view, at
of novel scenes.
intense political
once comprehensive and con-
moments
In contrast, battles or
combat induce him
to speed
up
of
his narrative
step and to enlist each detail in the service of the whole.
Thomas Mann once interesting, a
said that only the exhaustive
dictum that
Mann
himself did
less
is
truly
to justify
than Gibbon.
Gibbon, of course, was more than a courtly jester.
He
a painter, a narrator,
thought of himself
as
a philosophical
historian in the tradition of Tacitus. Accordingly
" s
Autobiography, p. 134. Childe Harold's Pilgrimage. 39 Autobiography, p. 174. 40 Autobiography, p. 184.
The
passage
[48]
from Byron
and
is
in
he amply
Book
III
of
Gibbon:
A
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
and Fall with observations about human nature, about politics, warfare, and religion. These are neither funny nor colorful; they are witty but didactic: "The public favour seldom accompanies old age"; 41 and "Civil gov-
supplies his Decline
.
.
.
ernments, in their
first
institution, are voluntary associations
mutual defense"; 42 and again, "Bigotry and national
for
aversion are powerful magnifiers of every object of dispute." It
as a philosophical historian that
is
Gibbon
43
establishes his
presence in every sentence of his history; he rarely steps out
man-
on stage
to speak a line in the
agement
of the pace, his value-charged epithets, his psycho-
logical
and
pronouncements
sociological
the philosopher's
person, but his firm
first
mind behind
the narrative surface.
And
always weighing, comparing, judging. cal historian that, in
year 476,
from
Gibbon
Chapter
stops
alert the reader to
it is as
is
a philosophi-
having reached the
38,
He
critical
the historical narration to deliver
high vantage point some "General Observations on
his
the Fall of the historian,
Roman Empire
in the
West." As a secular
he has insisted throughout on the
human and
geo-
graphic causes of historical events, but he has nowhere listed
them; now, looking back, he makes
explicit the causal nexus
of the awful spectacle he has been recounting. city,
which swelled into an empire," he notes,
as a singular prodigy, the reflection of a
The
fall
much; now, with the
—
half of his
—
first
and,
it
abounds: the cancer of decay in the
42
43
will turn out, the better
majestic recitation complete, he thinks out
loud about the ironies with which
41
philosophic mind."
of a city, he intimates, deserves such reflection quite
as
victor's
"The rise of a "may deserve,
adoption of his captives'
Gibbon, Decline and Fall Gibbon, Decline and Fall Gibbon, Decline and Fall
[ix],
[lx],
[49]
Rome
vitals of prosperity,
vices, the
2:207. 1:224. 6:368.
[xviii],
the history of
the
conversion of the
STYLE army from the protector
for imperial security into
Finally, as a philosopher
moment
this
whether the
HISTORY
IN
—and
philosophe
nemesis.
—Gibbon
can at
step back from history altogether, to speculate of
fall
Rome
implies the
fall
of
As always, Gibbon's philosophic stance
tion.
its
modern is
civiliza-
firmly within
the cosmopolitan and rational ambiance of the Enlighten-
ment:
"It
exclusive
is
the duty of a patriot to prefer and promote the
interest
philosopher
and glory
may be
of
his
native
country; but a
permitted to enlarge his views, and to
consider Europe as one great republic, whose various inhabitants
have attained almost the same
cultivation/' It
is
to this great republic that
addressing his history, and
concerning
''the
level of politeness
now
is
and
Gibbon has been
addressing his reassurances
probable causes
of
our actual security."
Because civilization has been steadily diffused,
men may
"acquiesce in the pleasing conclusion that every age of the
world has increased, and
still
increases, the real wealth, the
happiness, the knowledge, and perhaps the virtue, of the
human
race/'
Yet Gibbon shares not only the Enlighten-
ment's optimism, he shares
its
pessimism in the same measure
same reason; like d'Alembert, like Hume, like Wieland, Gibbon guards his castle of hope with the moat of
and
for the
company
Gibbon holds a law of compensation: every advance must be paid for some way. And so Gibbon modifies his hopeful conclusion
caution. In the to in
of the philosophes,
with a footnote in which he
reflects that
"the merit of
dis-
covery has too often been stained with avarice, cruelty, and fanaticism;
and the intercourse
communication his
paean to progress, the
44
will
of disease
produced the
and prejudice." 44 In the midst of
ironist
Gibbon, Decline and Fall appear later, Macaulay shared
of nations has
is
as alert as ever.
4:161, 163, 164, 169, 16911. As this philosophic view; see below, p. 131. [xxxviii],
[50]
A
Gibbon: It
is
as
Cynic among Ancient
tempting
as it
is
Politicians
perilous to discover in the Decline
and Fall Gibbon's whole past
—
a past that
we have
pieced
together from other sources. Yet that whole past went into
immense and
the making of his history. It draws on that
accurate scholarship he acquired, in spite of his dreary days
Magdalen College, Oxford, during
at
Lausanne;
it
draws, too, on that impressive library he assem-
bled with such greedy appetite.
and urbane
spiritedness
controversies
his
his conversations
timate way
diligent years at
his
it
with
It
embodies the polemical
self-possession lesser
like
incorporates his ironic perception of
perception of an observer as penetrating as he a craftsman is
whose highest
ideal
far better calculated to see
in
Warburton and Burke. And in the most in-
scholars
with equals like
he had perfected
is
life;
the
self-protective,
accuracy but whose vision
is
blemishes than virtues, decep-
tions rather than sincerity. His
famous abortive infatuation
with Suzanne Curchot, and the equally famous sentence with
which he records
whom
girl
a
his renunciation of a brilliant
his father
man whose
would not permit him
to marry, suggest
robustness was rhetorical, and whose
was largely borrowed. "I sighed
The
and charming
obedience, one senses,
as a lover;
came
I
obeyed
virility
as a son/'
readily; the sigh
was
45
a sigh
of relief.
While, without vision,
for
strain,
it
is
Gibbon, then, gravity and
and while both together define
coexisted
his historical
with levity that Gibbon was most at home.
laughs, not to keep from 45
levity
Autobiography,
p.
109.
He
weeping but because so much of
The words
comment, "A matrimonial
are
justly
famous;
less
familiar
is
has ever been the object of my terror rather than that of my wishes." Autobiography, p. 157. In his letter of farewell to Suzanne Curchot, Gibbon placed his familiar antitheses into temporal sequence, thus for once giving an impression of courtesy rather than cynicism: "Mademoiselle. Je ne puis commencer! Cependant il le faut. 1758, Je prends la plume, je la quitte, je la reprends." October 24, Letters, 1:106.
his
later
alliance
[51]
STYLE history
is
laughable.
HISTORY
IN
What
Byron called
"solemn sneer"
his
The
never far from the surface of Gibbon's consciousness.
is
history of
Rome's decline and
though
fall,
inciting the philosophical historian to his also
reflections,
many moments
has
comedy. Gibbon's irony
human
mixture in the
humor
sheer
reflects
his
a serious event
most philosophical
of high, and of low,
awareness of this rich
on the
past; his sarcastic wit fastens
that, to his
mind, the
scatters across the pages of history.
human
spectacle so freely
Again and again, Gibbon
the genial author seems to be leering companionably at his
when a troop of ManicheAlexius Comnenus, the emperor
reader: in the early twelfth century,
ans desert the standard of
"dissembled
till
the
moment
a friendly conference;
of revenge; invited the chiefs to
and punished the innocent and
by imprisonment, confiscation, and baptism." 46
—
especially, of course, the Christian religion
—
It
guilty
religion
is
that activates
Gibbon's most sneering humor. "His reflections," the formidable eighteenth-century classicist Richard Porson tartly, but fairly,
complained, "are often
just
and profound; he pleads
eloquently for the rights of mankind, and the duty of toleration;
nor does his humanity ever slumber, unless
are ravished, or the Christians persecuted." to
crowd
his
and shrewd
footnotes not merelv with J
appraisals,
but also with
jokes.
47
when women Gibbon likes
erudite
citations
About the
deposi-
tion of an antipope at the Council of Constance, he writes:
"Of the
three popes, John the twenty- third was the
tim: he fled and was brought back a prisoner: the
first vic-
most
scan-
dalous charges were suppressed; the vicar of Christ was only
accused of piracy, murder, rape, sodomy, and incest." 48 4 r>
47
48
Gibbon, Decline and Fall [liv], 6:122. Quoted in Michael Joyce, Edward Gibbon (1953), Gibbon, Decline and Fall [lxx], 7:289.
[52]
p. 137.
He
A
Gibbon: quotes David
Cynic among Ancient
Hume
which had presumed Geoffrey had
all
on the
Politicians
of the chapter of Seez,
fate
to elect a bishop without authorization:
the clerics castrated and their testicles brought
him in a platter. Gibbon cannot refrain from adding his gloss: "Of the pain and danger they might justly complain, yet, since they had vowed chastity, he deprived them of a to
superfluous
Arab
treasure."
scholars,
49
Gibbon
controversies
among
''Among the Arabian
philoso-
Speaking notes:
of
phers, Averroes has been accused of despising the religion of
the Jews, the Christians and the of these sects his
would agree that
in
Mahometans.
.
.
two instances out
contempt was reasonable." 50 But
it is
.
Each
of three
needless to go on
own bouquet, admiring accord with his own taste
quoting; each reader can gather his the wit or deploring the malice, in
and convictions. Seriously as Gibbon's
humor
deserves to be taken,
not obstruct our view of his craftsman's virtues
—
it
must
the magnifi-
cence of his design, the polish of his performance, the precision of his scholarship, the judiciousness of his opinions,
however extravagantly expressed. military,
and
religious
history,
Brilliantly parading political,
Gibbon presided over the
arranged but happy marriage of erudition and philosophy.
Coercing potentially incompatible qualities into a peaceful
kingdom enabled Gibbon literature.
His
summary
to build a
monument
of the fall of
of historical
Rome, "the triumph
of barbarism and religion," does less than justice to his judg-
49
Gibbon, Decline and Fall [lxix], 7:21611. Gibbon, Decline and Fall [lii], 6:33n. The jokes get into the text as well. Speaking of the younger Gordian, Gibbon writes, "Twenty-two acknowledged concubines, and a library of sixty-two thousand volumes, attested the variety of his inclinations; and from the productions which he left behind him, it appears that both the one and the other were designed for use rather than for ostentation." Decline and Fall [vii], 1:176. 50
[53]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
ment. Gibbon actually included among the causes of the fall
the long peace, which engendered effeminacy and
economic
tellectual sterility;
Romans
in-
which made most
exploitation,
unwilling to defend what did not really belong to
them; the lack of freedom, which deprived institutions of
Not even
to defend.
sympathy with the religious history
religious
wholly
is
just;
with
him above
—
of the time. For
the
simplicities
of
hard
temper incapacitated him
curiosity raised
some
it
the widespread charge that his lack of
irony
his rancor to
—
and
his sheer
nuanced
appraisals
Gibbon, take him
indeed,
for
marked, at times
his
all
ferocious, animosity, his professional probity
at least
made
the very size of the empire, which
flexibility;
all
all
simplicities
all
in
all,
—were
simply not enough.
Yet Gibbon's irony remains highly
wonder whether with Gibbon
inclined to
itself
to
matter,
worked hard "literary
or
matter yielded to
and
and below poetry, degenerated into
At the outset
my a
adapted
an Essai sur
Fall, to his native
"conscious," as he recalled later, "that
fare,
He certainly will. He lost his
but then returned, with a
short draft of the Decline
He
style
in 1761 in French, with
la litterature,
declamation." 52
raises a final,
style.
submitting his style to his
at
maidenhead" 51
VEtude de
and
His modern reader, accustomed to leaner
ironic, question. is
visible
style,
first
and
English
above prose
verbose and turgid
continued to experiment with his history.
was dark and doubtful, even the title of the work, the true era of the decline and fall of the empire, the limits of the introduction, the division of the chapters, and the order of the narrative. Many experiments were made before all
.
51
52
.
.
Autobiography, p. 127. Autobiography, p. 159.
[54]
Gibbon: I
A
Cynic among Ancient
Politicians
could hit the middle tone between a dull chronicle and a
Three times did I compose the first chapand twice the second and third, before I was tolerably
rhetorical declamation. ter,
satisfied
with their
Yet, though he
effect.
that he was "tempted to cast
testifies
the labor of seven years," great history gave as a
him
53
he
also testifies that writing his
great pleasure.
happy man and attributed much
work;
let
gloomy sages
Abdalrahman, count
He
describes himself
of that felicity to his
Solomon, or the Spanish caliph
like
their
away
happy days few and lament the
commonly imseldom impartial. If I may speak
vanity of this world: "Their expectations are
moderate, their estimates are
of myself (the only person for
my happy
tainty),
number"
the scanty
and
I
shall
whom
I
can speak with
hours have far exceeded, and
—
fourteen days
not scruple to add that
—
far exceed,
"of the caliph of Spain;
many
them
of
the pleasing labour of the present composition/' little
are
54
pressions
were deep,
splendid.
"The
his
style of
what he
symptoms
due to
We
reason to quarrel with this self-appraisal, for
so clearly succeeded in doing
cer-
have
Gibbon
out to do. His
set
few,
his
re-
sublimations
an author," he wrote, "should be
the image of his mind," 55 and he forged his style into exactly that.
Yet that
style,
interposing
its
highly wrought screen
between the writer and the reader, revealed, precisely in the measure that it mirrored his mind, more than he wished it to reveal.
His wit, his humor, his irony
—
scalpels
wielded with the deftness of the trained surgeon
that he
—
suggest
that his vision, though panoramic in scope, was telescopic in
depth. 53
54 55
He
lacked that oceanic feeling for unmixed motives.
Autobiography, p. 173. Gibbon, Decline and Fall Autobiography, p. 173.
[lii],
6:2611.
[55]
STYLE Is
it
right
to
HISTORY
conclude, then, that while for this learned
gnome, there was much anyone, there was also of seeing?
IN
in the past that
much
he saw better than
in the past that
That the question should
irony of Gibbon's history.
[56]
he had no way
arise at all
is
the final
2
Ranke The Respectful
Critic
—
—
The Dramatist ate
I
in
Book VII
approaches a
Ranke
of his Franzosische Geschichte, critical
moment
in
French
history:
the
mJ assassination of Henri IV. For scores of pages, Henri
IV, one of Ranke's favorite world-historical
figures,
nated his account; now, in 1610, the king
is
has domi-
bursting with
imaginative plans for France and for the European balance of power. is all
Yet Ranke now stops
jedoch ich halte inne: "It
too easy," he writes,
pondering
possibilities,
probable; suffice
He
it
to find oneself in the realm of the im-
to say that this prince
was
filled
with great
saw his star hovering over him, destined to do something marvelous— Wie leicht ist es, Moglichkeiten erwagend, in das Reich des Unwahrscheinlichen zu geratenl Genug, dass dieser Furst von grossen Gedanken voll war. Er meinte noch seinen Stern iiber sich zu sehen und bestimmt zu ideas.
sein,
fancied that he
still
etwas Wundervolles auszurichten. 1
But one
of Henri's nightmares
hideous
destiny
ein
grassliches
1
was about Geschick
Leopold von Ranke, Franzosische Geschichte, Werke (1868), 9:107.
[59]
to
come
true; a
—emerging
vol.
2,
in
from
Sammtliche
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
dark underground regions, awaited him. Ranke reports the unfolding of that destiny; he characterizes the assassin with a
few derisive epithets
wilder
as
wild uneducated fellow
a
Mensch ohne Erziehung
He
Ravaillac's motives.
—and
ein
then speculates about
opts for religious mania.
But he im-
mediately adds that the assassination, though the act of a
madman, happened
to
be a windfall for Henri's mortal
enemies, for the Jesuits, the Spaniards, and for dissident
French grandees. Having raised retreat
from
Instead, he
it;
he
tells
offers
this point,
Ranke seems
to
no comment, expresses no opinion.
three stories.
away Normandy who, they
The
say,
first is
about a nun in
far-
proclaimed Henri's death at
who insisted that she had heard it from the The second reports that Pope Paul V saw
the very hour, but birds in the
air.
the thrust of Ravaillac's knife as a divine chastisement for the king's worldly loves
and ambitions. The
third sets out the
sentiments of the Spaniards in the words of the Cardinal of
Toledo, telling the assembled Council of State: "If with
us,
who can be
Wenn
against us?
Gott fur uns
God ist,
is
wer
wider uns?" 2
ist
With tion,
Ranke
close.
complacent, even triumphant, rhetorical ques-
this
He
brings
sets the
Book VII next book,
of his History of France to a
"The Regency
Maria Medici," into motion with a graph:
'There was one
man
less
stark,
in the
of the Queen,
one-sentence para-
world
Ein
Mann
weniger war in der Welt."
The
effect
is
stunning.
Ranke has staged
a
memorable
scene in a few tautly written paragraphs; he has individualized the
main
actors with a handful of choice adjectives;
he has
aroused grave suspicions about a major power and an august institution with three pointed anecdotes.
2
Ranke, Franzosische Geschichte,
vol.
[60]
2, in
By
ringing
down
Werke, 9:108—110.
the
Ranke: The Respectful Critic curtain, not with the victim
and by ushering
but with the suspected
in the next act with a tight-lipped, ostenta-
tiously understated reference to the actor
the world stage forever,
most monumental the closing his
Ranke has secured
stature. Just as
moments
who for
has just
left
Henri IV the
Hamlet, dead, dominates
of his play, so Henri, dead, dominates
country as Louis XIII begins his nominal reign.
The
stage metaphors
I
have used in
passage are anything but fortuitous. line the point is
villains,
I
I
my
analysis of this
intend them to under-
wish to make. Ranke's modern reputation
The most
rent by conflicting appraisals.
casual student of
knows Ranke as the founder of scientific history. Even those, like some of his English critics, who have thought him bereft of ideas and too much enamored of facts, have drawn the familiar portrait of a cool scientist, only distorting it, slightly, into caricature. 3 Ranke's American admirers, though more inclined to extol his achievement than
historiography
to read his books, hailed
him
as the great
emancipator
who
had disentangled history from metaphysics and theology; Herbert Baxter Adams, one of the founders of American graduate training, characteristically called Ranke the ''father 4 of scientific history." Popular introductions to the historical
discipline
history
have hardened
who wants
stereotype:
to
arrangement of
facts in
neat cate-
5 Allan Nevins recommends Ranke. But other cur-
rents of opinion have long crisscrossed the
repute: for
some
historians,
Ranke,
a discount, spoiled his realism
far
See Herbert Butterfield, Man on His Past: of Historical Scholarship (1955), p. 100.
Georg G.
Iggers,
of Ranke's
from holding ideas at
The Study
of
The
History
of History: The National the Present (1968), p. 63. to History (rev. edn., 1962), p. 42.
The German Conception Thought from Herder To
Tradition of Historical 5 Allan Nevins, The Gateway
map
with his theology; for others,
3
4
the reader of
''systematized erudition, inexorable logic, a
scientific attention to the
gories,"
this
[61]
STYLE he was, precisely
an
as
achievement"; 6 for
he was an apologist hard to imagine
is
Idealist,
still
others,
coherence of his work, but
this
in
passage with which
more than
In
more than
and
how Ranke all
style.
"one of the summits of their
number
power, especially
for
dramatist, and theologian
The
HISTORY
IN
I
German
increasing,
power.
once without ruining the just
began
is
what
I
wish to argue.
characteristic of Ranke's
sixty years of indefatigable scribbling
sixty works,
It
could have been scientist,
at is
is
human
Ranke displayed the
we
gifts
and nor-
mally associate with storytellers or playwrights: speed, color, variety, freshness of diction,
and superb
He
control.
cunningly
absences; he takes care never to spoil climaxes with
uses
elaborate explanations; he establishes his characters with the precision of a novelist.
Ranke
is
an active
storyteller in the
German vein; as we hear the author's of Wilhelm Raabe or Gottfried Keller, so
nineteenth-century voice in the tales
we
see
Ranke
As Ranke's sent his
itself,
diaries suggest, these
own
years on,
unrolling his narrative and arranging his scenery.
metaphors accurately repre-
sense of his craft; repeatedly, and from his early
he returns to the imperative need
he notes,
mind must them above
strives to
for form.
Nature
produce form, and the works of the
same direction; form alone raises the commonplace and the traditional Nur durch strive
in the
Form erheben sie brachten. 7 Form alone,
die
sich iiber die eternal, pure
Menge
des Hervorge-
die ewige, reine
—grants
immortality to the tendencies and conversations making up daily
life.
8
Like Goethe, Ranke
insists
pline alone brings excellence to
that self-imposed disci-
all art,
to the shaping of
6
all
Friedrich Meinecke, "Leopold von Ranke: Gedachtnisrede," January 23, 1936, in Meinecke, Die Entstehung des Historismus (edn., 1959), p. 585. 7 Ranke, Tagebiicher, ed. Walther Peter Fuchs (1964), p. 158; from the
1830s. 8
Ranke, Tagebiicher,
p. 180;
from the end of the 1830s.
[62]
—
—
Ranke: The Respectful Critic noble writing
Alle Vortrefflichkeit in der Kunst, alle Bildung
eines edlen Stojfs in angemessener
Form
geht aus der Be-
schrankung hervor, die sich der Geist selbst cantly,
Ranke
drama
thinks of the
Poesie langer
als
literary artist
is
will
9
Signifi-
the genre peculiarly
man; equally
significantly,
outlive prose
Lebt wohl
qualified to penetrate into the inner
he wonders whether poetry
as
setzt.
Prosa? 10 In Ranke, the shaping hand of the
never far from the constructive effort of the
historian.
Any
of his histories
may
serve to illustrate Ranke's tech-
niques, for, certainly by the 1830s, his techniques were fully
matured. His treatment of Martin Luther in his Deutsche
Geschichte im Zeitalter der Reformation structive, for
Luther
is
makes sense
to
is
the giant in the
Ranke only
against the back-
ground of the German Reich around 1500, political, social,
religious disturbances. In
a realm rent
Book
I,
by
Ranke's
on Luther; he looms over its pages like brooding presence or, rather, absence as Ranke concen-
Reformation a
and
particularly in-
one of Ranke's, and one of Protestant
Germans', greatest heroes. While Luther tale, his rebellion
is
is
silent
—
trates
on the
—
politics of the
a climactic scene of
Reich and gradually builds up to
harrowing disorganization. Then Luther
steps onto center stage, but not into action, not yet. Luther is
so important, his character expands to such vast dimensions,
that
Ranke
feels
compelled to devote scores of pages to
Luther's early years.
There
is
never anything mechanical
about Ranke's allocation of space.
It reflects his
assessment
of the dramatic potential that his material contains.
His Reformation gives evidence of another decision,
dic-
tated like his allocation of space by dramatic considerations. 9
Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 169; from 1814. Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 180; from the end of the 1830s.
10
[63]
STYLE Ranke
likes to
HISTORY
IN
plant early information he will use
later.
Long
before he recounts the famous proclamation that puts Luther outside the protection of the laws, he analyzes the declining
power of the
legal device of outlawry;
long before he reaches
when Luther nails Wittenberg, Ranke analyzes
the epoch-making day in October 1517, his theses to the
church door at
the dubious proliferation of sacraments and the shabby prof-
Then, when he comes
iteering in indulgences.
moments
themselves,
Ranke
narration, undistracted
is
free to devote all his space to
by explanation.
made Ranke use own account than
to the historic
It
the same tactical
is
reason that
certain historical personages less
on
as prefigurations.
their
Erasmus
plays
John the Baptist to Luther, the savior: in Ranke's detailed discussion of Erasmus and of Erasmus' quarrel with the Church, he quarrel. still
is
rehearsing for a greater figure and an even greater
Erasmus' noble
failure prepares the reader for Luther's
nobler success, and
Ranke who has
it is
so thoughtfully
prepared him.
No
doubt, Ranke's free employment of dramatic devices
places
him
craft as a
camp
of those historians
branch of the storytelling
art.
who
treat their
By no means
all
power from suspense; epic and tragedy depend on the unfolding of tales whose end is known,
stories
alike
in the
derive their
while the classic detective story, the murder mystery, usually begins with the end
—the murder. But, however accepted the
technique, a well-told tale raises problems for
all storytellers,
including the historian, whose stories must meet the unique
requirement of having to be
true.
the imperial election of 1519
who was
it
We
know,
was Charles
after
V
of
all,
that in
Burgundy
elected emperor over his competitor Francis
I
of
France. Ranke's account of that election shows the dramatist at work;
he
enlists
the very foreknowledge of his readers to
heighten the tension. Ranke refuses to trick them into [64]
for-
Leopold von Ranke COURTESY THE
NEW YORK
PUBLIC LIBRARY
——
—— —
Ranke: The Respectful Critic getting for a single
moment
would have been
cheap and probably ineffective device. In-
stead,
been
a
how
he demonstrates
The
different.
the election,
is
that Charles was victorious; that
nearly the
outcome might have
counterfactual alternative, Charles' losing
held before the reader's eyes and keeps
interested until Charles' election
Ranke produces
his
effects
He
space and sequences.
words with care and
is
him
a certainty.
not merely by manipulating
achieves them, also, by choosing his
feeling;
Ranke's self-effacing ideal of
Selbstausloschung certainly does not extend to his adjectives.
He
describes the Spanish Inquisition early in the sixteenth
century as taking the "most terrible
He
furchtharsten
7
form.
considers that the prayerbooks written at the height of
Mariolatry
were "peculiar
"naive" and "credulous
monuments
sonderbare"
to
He
wundergldubig" devotion.
a
sees
the Catholicism of the age as an odd mixture of "spiritual
and worldly power, imagination and cism, tender devotion and coarse
and superstition." And he wonders
arid
rohe if
a
—
scholasti-
violence,
religion
dilrre
—
"manly
could have flourished under such circumstances. hesitate to find
room
appreciatively of
The
To
.
religion"
he speaks
deutsche Ehrlichkeit.
Scientist
Ranke
whether he was a
.
Nor does he
for his patriotism in his history:
German honesty
characterize
.
as a dramatist raises the
scientist as well.
no law holding that
[67]
course, there
is
must be unreadable; itself compromise the
a scientist
the giving of pleasure does not in
Of
doubt
STYLE telling of truth.
It is
HISTORY
IN
worth noting, moreover, that Ranke
chose to focus his historical research on the
rise
of the great
powers, the three centuries between the emergence of Martin
Luther and the death of Frederick the Great, times of outsize
and
figures
make
stirring events that
tedious.
Yet Ranke
it
would take some
resorts to the
dramatic style so con-
sistently that these explanations explain too little.
brated
commitment
effort to
His
cele-
to science remains in question.
Ranke's aspiration to become a scientist of the past arose early and,
once acquired, never wavered. That aspiration
is
hard to disentangle from his mystical leanings, his Romantic tastes, his
admiration for Fichte's philosophy, none of them
calculated to strengthen the vein of empiricism in anyone.
The
origins of the eminently effective intellectual instrument that
Ranke made of himself will occupy us in the rest of this essay. But it is clear that whatever its principal impulses, the methods and results of Ranke's way as a historian were aimed straight at science:
the systematizing of research, the with-
drawal of ego from presentation, the unremitting effort at objectivity, the submission of results to critical public scrutiny.
11
Ranke's two best-known aphorisms, which have been
much quoted and much to the scientific
misunderstood, are in essence appeals
method. In the preface to
his first book, the
Geschichten der Romanischen und Germanischen
V biker von
151^ he repudiated all pretensions to word-painting, and assigned himself a humbler task; he would write history "as it had really been wie es eigentlich gewesen." It was the modest pronouncement of a scientist intent on doing his work, and on concentrating on what could be reliably known; 1494
it
bis
was a programmatic declaration in the tradition initiated 11
See
Ranke, Tagebiicher,
p.
233,
and
1810s.
[68]
related
aphorisms of the late
— Ranke: The Respectful Critic by Bacon, exemplified
in
Newton's famous assertion that he
did not feign hypotheses, and transmitted by the Enlighten-
—
ment
disclaimed.
one of
by the way,
ancestors,
all
The second
his lectures to
King Maximilian of Bavaria, was the
individuals, their due,
This, as
we
will see,
is
would have
aphorism, which Ranke threw out in
affirmation of a professional all
whom Ranke
:
must
the historian
and
see
them
give
own
in their
a devout call for
all
empathy, but
ages,
terms. it is
at
the same time a call for objectivity, for the separation of the inquirer from his inquiry: "Every epoch
and in
its
its
value in no
existence
Epoche
way depends on what
itself,
in
its
very self
immediate to God, has produced, but
it
Ich aber behaupte, jede
unmittelbar zu Gott, und ihr
ist
dem was
nicht auf
is
y
Wert
beruht gar
aus ihr hervorgeht, sondern in ihrer
Existenz selbst, in ihr em eigenen Selbst. ..." Ranke's career
was an extended commentary on these two patient, purposeful his
working out of
a
program conceived
youth. Ranke's professional history
rarities, a fully
The
life
of
achieved
life
sayings,
is
the in
that greatest of
work.
Ranke the dramatist was,
in
its
externals,
He was
born in 1795 in a small Thuringian town, into a family that had traditionally entered the
singularly undramatic.
Lutheran ministry. His parents were deeply
religious
tied as closely to their soil as to their faith. It
and were
was an envi-
—
—
ronment familial, pious, and disciplinarian against which Ranke never rebelled. Yet he did not enter the ministry, as his parents had wished: the classics, philology, and German literature
burgeoning in the midst of the Napoleonic wars
interested
him more than dogma. He was
faith,
but
it
sure of his religious
was diffused rather than concentrated. His voca-
tion lay elsewhere.
When
he obtained
his doctorate at the
University of Leipzig in 1817, he wrote his dissertation on [69]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
Thucydides' political ideas, though this was not a dark hint of great things to
that drew
Ranke
come:
it
was
to his topic. His turn to history
Frankfurt an der Oder. Teaching the boys
first
that he
must know them
came
later,
Gymnasium
during the seven years he spent teaching in a
Ranke decided
not history,
classical philology,
in
the ancients,
well:
it
was the
application of his cardinal principle that thorough knowl-
edge of the sources
is, if
condition for everything
not everything, the indispensable preelse.
His
first
book, on the Romanic
and Germanic peoples between 1494 and 1514, was published late in 1824. It earned him the recognition he craved not,
—
perhaps, so
much
for himself as for his craft,
him more and more. Early
in 1825,
which possessed
he was appointed Aus-
serordentlicher Professor of History at the University of Berlin.
Though
the post did not carry tenure with
it,
it
showed that
Romanischen und Germanischen Volker an important work; it gave Ranke entree to
the Geschichten der
was recognized
as
stimulating society and influential
access to the royal library, with
all,
of
officials. It its
gave him, above
forty-eight
volumes
documents crammed with tantalizing materials on the
tory of Italy, Spain, the papacy, barely
What gier
12
he called his "archival curiosity"
which we might
"archival obsession"
touched by anyone. archivalische
Neu-
just as well call "archival greed," or
—had been aroused
only to be frustrated. In Berlin
whetted further. The
his-
result, his
it
was
earlier, in
gratified,
Frankfurt,
only to be
second book, on the Ottomans
and the Spanish monarchy, induced the Prussian government to give
of the
leave to study the famous relazioni
Venetian ambassadors. These secret reports, submitted
to their 12
Ranke extended
government over three centuries by those
To Ferdinand Ranke (August
Hoeft and Hans Herzfeld (1949),
31, 1839), in p. 268.
[70]
Neue
brilliant
Brief e. ed. Bernhard
Ranke: The Respectful Critic accredited spies, politely called "ambassadors," were copious,
candid, highly personal yet beautifully informed.
them famous, but torian
it
I
have called
was Ranke who made them so
had touched them
before.
The
use he
—no
made
of these
documents constituted more than the exploitation familiar historical material;
familiar historical
Ranke went on over
for
three
it
his-
un-
of
was the application of an un-
method. his leave late in 1827.
years,
He
hunting documents
remained abroad Vienna,
in
in
Rome, in Venice. He had good connections and he used them to good purpose, securing access to archives Florence, in
that had been kept locked before.
He
was patient, tenacious,
diplomatic. His letters to his brothers and to Karl Freiherr
vom
Stein
zum
Altenstein, the Prussian minister of educa-
tion, read like the diary of a discoverer;
Ranke poured
into
them his tension, his pleasure, his pride at being the first to see what had so long been concealed or neglected. Aptly enough, he likened himself to Columbus, 13 but his triumphs were
as
much
the fruit of a pedant's diligence as of a con-
quistador's boldness.
Up
early,
he would spend the best hours
of the day in the archives, showing copyists the
documents
he wanted, and moving on, reading, finding new day
treasures,
after day.
His long searches in Italy set the pattern for
later leaves of
absence; he punctuated his teaching with research trips to
London,
to Paris, to Brussels, to
many months. For
The Hague,
often lasting
a short time after his return to Prussia,
he
toyed with politics: late in 1831, he became editor of a semiofficial
—which
is
to say, moderately conservative
—political
journal, the Historisch-Politische Zeitschrift. In the four years 13
See Theodore von Laue, Leopold Ranke:
P- 34-
[71]
The Formative Years (1950),
STYLE of
its
HISTORY
IN
tenuous existence, Ranke supplied
with most of
it
its
copy, including his instructive essay on the great powers. But,
—and useful—
fascinating
past politics that
he found present
as
would give shape
politics, it
to his long
was
When
life.
he
was appointed Ordentlicher Professor at the University of Berlin in 1834, his course was
set,
and he followed
deviations for over half a century. in 1871,
fame.
he continued to exert
Once
Even
after his retirement
brothers remained close,
and
became
did not marry until 1843,
men
forty-eight,
he was an attentive husband and affectionate
relaxed, as
He
him
lived
to
on
1886, past his ninetieth year, his intellectual powers
near their peak to the end, a lifelong order
He
and though
appears as a pleasing restful interlude that helped
until
to his
father, his family
replenish his seemingly inexhaustible energies.
its
ties
his celebrated seminars.
when he was
his
and good pay,
closer, his
his ties to other
he wrote and traveled and taught
life
and widen
his influence
settled in a post of high prestige
his ties to the Prussian state
without
it
—
or,
perhaps more to
my
monk
in the historical
point, a lifelong technician in
laboratory.
The
uniform, almost monotonous curve of Ranke's external
existence
That
documents
his greatest
his
devotion to the science of history.
works should
now be
dated
is
a tribute to
the exacting vocation he helped to transform.
Ranke
nized that history
He
after
all,
decessors;
that his it
is
a
progressive discipline.
own work was
recog-
claimed,
superior to that of his pre-
was hardly strange that the unearthing of new
documents, or the application of auxiliary techniques which, as
it
were, create
new documents, should [72]
allow lesser prac-
—
—
Ranke: The Respectful Critic titioners, fortunate to
superior to his. It that history
be born after him, to write histories
a familiar fact,
is
always being rewritten.
is
he noted in the 1840s,
The
way
only
to reduce
this persistent
need for revision
tine sources
Riickkehr zu der urspriinglichsten Mitteilung,
and thus
rise to
is
pure perception
to return to the
sich zu reiner
most
pris-
Anschauung
zu erheben. 14 Ranke was often amazed to find and pleased to record
how much
him
craftsmen allowed
was the
first
interpret,
of their past other countries and other
to read;
to discover;
how many
how many documents he
events he was the
at least, the first to interpret
or,
Ranke,
factual foundation.
who
prised nor displeased to see
motives than
his,
much
it
him
to
on any sound to set the
heavy
motion, would have been neither
train of history into
But had someone
did so
first
sur-
disappear beyond his horizon.
would use other locohe would not have believed him. Ranke told
that
it
could never have imagined that there were ways of reading
documents not dreamt of
in his philosophy of history.
Ranke's contribution to historical science, then, lay in his exalted view of documents. This was less a matter of technical
innovation than of personal
and on
style.
He
applied, consistently
what earlier scholars had confined to and used for narrowly defined purposes.
a large scale,
specialized subjects,
Probably
it is
the French Benedictine Jean Mabillon
who
has
the best claim to be the father of the scientific study of docu-
ments; his seded.
De
re
diplomatica of 1681 has never been super-
In Germany, a distinguished group of eighteenth-
century scholars, centered at the University of Gottingen, applied the most minute attention to the authentication of past records; in 1788, one of the group found
possible to
Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 241; from the 1840s. The idea of Anschauung recur in Burckhardt very prominently; see below, pp. 176-179.
14
will
it
—
[73]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
be rather patronizing to Gibbon the sources.
15
And
in Ranke's
buhr wielded source criticism
for his relative naivete
own
day, Barthold
barely recognizable
Georg Nie-
to penetrate the veil of legend
behind which the history of the early in
about
Roman
Republic moved
Ranke, who greatly admired
form.
Niebuhr, generalized these practices into a principle. That
was the unique, privileged status of the contempo-
principle
document;
rary
time tion,
alone held the key to historical truth.
it
come, he prophesied
will
when
historians will
in the preface to his
The
Reforma-
no longer write modern history
from derivative treatments or even from contemporary torians will
—except
insofar as these
had
direct
knowledge
his-
—but
depend wholly on the reports of eyewitnesses, and on the
most authentic, most immediate sources
kommen, wo Berichte,
Ich sehe die Zeit
wir die neuere Geschichte nicht nicht
selbst
mehr auf
die
der gleichzeitigen Historiker, ausser
insoweit ihnen eine originate Kenntnis beiwohnte, geschweige
denn auf
die weiter abgeleiteten Bearbeitungen zu griinden
haben, sondern aus den Relationen der Augenzeugen und den echtesten,
unmittelbarsten
Ranke shaped
Urkunden aufbauen werden. 16
his prefaces into the record of his
researches; they are enthusiastic travel reports
who his
visited,
not
city after city,
but library
documentary by
a traveler
after library. In
second book, on Ottoman-Spanish relations in the
six-
teenth and seventeenth centuries, published in 1827, he notes
with evident pride that, had he been compelled to depend on history books, even
mented 15
See
Method,"
on those that were
urkundlicheren Arnaldo (1954),
D. in
relatively well docu-
—he would not have written
his ac-
Momigliano, "Gibbon's Contribution to Historical Momigliano, Studies in Historiography (1966), pp.
40-55. 16 Leopold von Ranke, Deutsche Geschichte im Zeitalter der Reformation, vol.
1,
in
Werke (1873),
i:ix-x.
[74]
—
—
Ranke: The Respectful Critic count. Fortunately, he had found other aids, often extremely valuable yet
unknown
still
Hilfsmittel, oft
von ausgezeich-
—the Venetian
netem Wert und dock noch unbekannt zioni.
17
rela-
Collected together with other despatches and letters
and placed into the Venetian
state archives,
these reports
come a little mysteriously on the international market; some of them had ended up in the royal library at Berlin, others in the ducal library at Gotha. Ranke had examined them all, delighting in their informativeness and
had
later
mourning
Waren
their incompleteness:
nur niemals Liicken
Ranke felt poor mitten wir uns arm yet still rich enough
darinl In the midst of wealth,
dem Reichtum
fiihlen
travel confidently past. It
among
events
in
—
to
now
three centuries in the
18
was from
mediate
this perspective
—that Ranke launched,
career, into
sole authority of the im-
at the very beginning of his
an aggressive critique of those among
who had
cessors
—the
crediting partial
written
histories
his prede-
out of other histories,
and passionate chroniclers
like Guicciardini
with a historian's detachment, and falsely assigning their writings the status of a document.
Ranke
certainly
would
have taken Tacitus not as an authority to be followed but as
a witness
to
be interrogated. In the light of the
charge that he was an ideologist for
which
I
will return
—
it is
most consistent German historians, nationalistic
Germany
—
a charge to
instructive to note that his critics
later
first
and
were the so-called "political"
and partisan scholars who wanted to
propel the historical profession into an active part in the
17
Leopold von Ranke, Fiirsten und Volker von Sudeuropa (fourth, enlarged edition of Die Osmanen und die Spanische Monarchie inn 16. und 17. Jahrhundert, 1877), in Werke, 35:v-vi. See above, pp. 70-71. 18 Ranke, Fiirsten und Volker, in Werke, 35:xii.
[75]
STYLE
Germany and
unification of
To
these enthusiasts
— Ranke's
IN
HISTORY
the glorification of her stature.
—Droysen,
Sybel, Treitschke,
famous objectivity was
excessive,
and others
downright
irre-
However we judge the indictments brought by his critics, however we appraise his objectivity, it is certain that Ranke at least took science seriously. He did not become the accomplished writer he became to compromise, or merely
sponsible.
to
decorate,
that science.
If
dramatist, the sources of his alone;
literary
he was indeed
commitment
a
to style
formidable
cannot be
they go to the heart of his vocation as a
historian.
The Believer Recounting in L
the bloody massacre of French Huguenots
August 1572, Ranke places the responsibility
for
the crime directly at the door of Catherine de Medici.
She acceded to the scheme of the ruling clique to ruin the
many Huguehowever many
Protestant party; she did her utmost to lure as nots to Paris as possible; she was aware that
would come, the
fanatical, easily roused
Parisian populace
would be superior
and
well- organized
to them; she
awakened
in her miserable son, Charles IX, all the fanaticism slumber-
word that called the people to that she had wanted only six persons killed,
ing within him; she spoke the
arms; she insisted
and would take only
their
deaths on her conscience, but
some 50,000 were slaughtered Katharina hat gesagt, habe nur sechs Menschen umzubringen gewiinscht; nur
actually sie
[76]
Ranke: The Respectful Critic
Tod nehme
deren
sie
auf ihr Gewissen;
—
es sind bei 50,000
umgebracht worden. 19 The cadences have the of sober reportage;
up
Ranke keeps
his longer sentences
themselves,
it
with emphatic semicolons.
would seem,
rhythm
his sentences short or breaks
The
enough
are extraordinary
nounce judgment on the perpetrators
Day
efficient
of the St.
events to pro-
Bartholomew's
But then Ranke's tone changes. The plot seemed to have fulfilled its purpose: the Huguenot leadership had been decimated, while Catholic princes, lay and ecclesimassacre.
astical,
and
sent their congratulations to the triumphant Catherine
to her puppet, her son.
And
Ranke muses, can such
yet,
murderous actions ever
truly succeed?
the deepest mystery of
human
Do
they not contradict
the incomprehensible,
affairs,
innermost, inviolable principle of the eternal world order?
Men
can deceive themselves; they cannot shake the laws of
the spiritual world order on which their existence order,
which
rests.
That
rules the course of the stars, governs all existence
—Konnen aber wohl Attentate von so gelingen? Widerstreiten sie nicht
dem
blutiger
tieferen
menschlichen Dinge, den unbegriffenen, in
Natur jemals
Geheimnis der
dem Innern
wirk-
samen, unverletzlichen Prinzipien der ewigen Weltordnung?
Die Menschen konnen
sich
verblenden;
das
Gesetz
der
Weltordnung, auf dem ihr Dasein beruht, konnen nicht erschuttern. Mit der Notwendigkeit beherrscht es sie,
geistigen sie
die
den Gang der Gestirne
without uttering a
regelt.
false note,
Ranke the believer. The work from which
I
20
Without missing
Ranke the
historian has
a step,
become
have been quoting was published
19
Leopold von Ranke, Die Romischen Pdpste in den letzen vier Jahrhunderten, vol. 2, in Werke (1878), 38:44-45. 20 Ranke, Die Romischen Pdpste, vol. 2, in Werke, 38:45. See Ranke, Tagebiicher, pp. 119-120; from the late 1830s.
[77]
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
between 1834 and 1836; from the long vista of Ranke's productive life, it was a relatively young man's book. It was also one of
most widely read works, and
his
contributed to lish
its
style doubtless
popularity. Macaulay, greeting a fine Eng-
its
translation of the Papste in 1840, noted that Ranke's
was "known and esteemed wherever German
original version literature
studied."
is
21
While
in Ranke's greatest
German Reformation,
the histories of the
works
of France
and of
England, which occupied him from the late 1830s to the late 1860s
— the pious
asides are rarer than they are in the Papste,
the emotional religious substratum
the same.
is
the fervor of the preacher, whether
Ranke
lacks
the patriotic exalta-
it is
tion of a Treitschke or the prophetic anxiety of a Burckhardt.
The music and
for
of Ranke's style
is
lyrical;
he
strives for
breadth
smoothness. Even the one-sentence paragraph, one
of his trademarks, with
which he
punctuate his more
likes to
expansive exposition, serves not to interrupt but to speed his narrative. Like
materials,
his
Gibbon, Ranke maintains distance from
but unlike Gibbon, Ranke uses few tense
antitheses, little
if
any biting humor;
his distance
of the ironist but that of the Olympian. action, yet their surfaces are unruffled.
events he
is
sind
on man's calm dwelling
ruhiges Dasein in
—on
the golden
mediocritas massigkeit
—ein
22
writes
not that
dramas of
However baroque the
chronicling, Ranke's impulse
liked to reflect
ments
He
is
is
classicizing.
He
in the higher ele-
dem hohern Elemente,
in
dem
wir
middle way akin to Horace's aurea
idealer
Schwung
der Mehrzahl, der Mittel-
In the same review in which Macaulay remarks
21
Thomas Babington Macaulay, "Ranke's History of the Popes," The Works of Lord Macaulay, 2nd edn., ed. Lady Trevelyan, 8 vols. (1871), 6:45422
Ranke, Tagebiicher,
p. 159;
from the
[78]
late 1830s.
— Ranke: The Respectful Critic upon the prominence he also notes
and
its
letters,
Yet
equally remote from levity
earnest, yet tolerant
word, like his
and impartial/' 23
style, is serene.
He
has
Yet even that exaltation has something rather it.
relevance of Ranke's religion to Ranke's history discovery; his readers have observed
workings deserve
its
giosity
literature,
of exaltation, though he reserves these for his
complacent about
a
spirit,
German
normally to his most intimate confidant, his brother
Heinrich.
The new
and
religiosity, in a
moments
his
"admirable
bigotry; serious
Ranke's
of Ranke's Pdpste in
it
is
for a century.
closer definition. Ranke's
still
not
reli-
was at once cultural and personal. Ranke was, in many
ways, a characteristic product of his time and place. As a good
German religion;
To
Protestant, he if
anything, for
saw no
him
had
science
speak of Ranke as a pious scientist
not metaphorically but
said, a
his
religious grounding.
is,
own.
It
precise quality of
was, as
I
matter of experience, not theological so
the highest sense of the word, vocational.
an eternal poem, and translate
24
insight
25
much
ist
is
as, in
has composed
is
for the "lazy" separation of
a lower
form of knowledge,
to belief; scholarship thus has religious
Ignorance, he noted in the late 1830s,
alone
Unwissenheit
God
have already
the historian's task to read and to
belief; belief
and knowledge leads justification.
it is
Ranke had no use
it.
knowledge and
sin;
therefore, to speak
But the
literally.
was very much
his religion
between science and
conflict
der Fulle der Einsicht. 26 Because
original
Ich denke noch immer:
blessedness
auch Erbsiinde.
is
.
.
God
.
Seligkeit bestiinde in is
in
man, and man
in
23
Macaulay, "Ranke's History of the Popes," Works, 6:454. 24 Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 105; from 1818-1824; for parallel thinking, see Burckhardt, below, p. 181. 25 Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 111; "from 1816-1817. 26 Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 127; from after 1836.
[79]
ways of
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
God, the knowledge that man us of God's
life
within us
Herzen? Es redet von
carries in his heart speaks to
Was
dem Leben
denn das Wissen im
sagt
Gottes in uns. 27
It is
not
Ranke can dispense with traditional Christian doctrines; man's life on this earth is in itself a religious event. He explicitly notes that he would prize the divine Logos even more highly if there were no miracles er ware mix noch lieber ohne die Wunder 28 In these reflections, Ranke commits the blasphemy of seesurprising,
then, that
ing the historian himself as divine.
Gott
regiert; but,
too, as long as the if
Ranke
God
adds, the writer, the teacher, reigns
world accepts his views;
it
—Es
ist
them God, in
will reject
they are not truthful, or arbitrary, not founded in
the divine on earth
nur
alone truly rules
der Schriftsteller, der Lehrer nur
Wahrheit sagt. Er regiert ebenWelt seine Meinungen annimmt. Aber sie
insofern machtig, als er die falls,
insofern die
wird dieselben nicht annehmen, heit enthalten,
dem
wenn
wenn
sie sich erst
sie willkurlich sind,
der
Wahr-
nicht in Gott
Gbttlichen auf Erden gegriindet. 29 This
is
not the
y
d.h. defi-
ance of a young rebel, but the rumination of a mature scholar; the entry
is
dated December 21, 1850,
when Ranke was
fifty-five.
In
fact,
Ranke's sense of his craft bears a striking resem-
blance to the position that literary
critics
from Matthew
Arnold to Oscar Wilde were developing in these if
years, almost,
not quite, seriously: criticism outranks creation. Just
as the
painter paints and the novelist writes so that the critic has
something on which to exercise well or a
CromRanke can
his discrimination, so a
Napoleon changes the world
so that a
discover wie es eigentlich gewesen. It was this self-esteem that 27
28
29
Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 154; from 1817. Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 122; from the 1830s. Ranke, Tagebiicher, pp. 132-133.
[80]
— Ranke: The Respectful Critic enabled the aged Ranke to say, with a perfectly straight face,
had won for himself immortal merit by following Gentz's advice and giving him Ranke access that Prince Metternich
—
—
Furst Metternich hat ein unsterbliches Ver-
to the archives
dienst erworben, dass er mir auf
den Rat des
geistvollen
Gentz
Benutzung des Archives gab. 30 In Ranke, at and believer, humility and pride are happily
die Erlaubnis zur
once historian
combined;
who have thought
like others
themselves the lowly
instrument of a higher being, Ranke did not
some
of the prestige
fail
borrow
to
from the divinity whose servant he
professed himself to be.
At the heart
of Ranke's conception of his work, then,
the idea of service.
hind
its
it,
Whatever the unconscious impulses
be-
consequences are unremitting labor and, at least
in the early stages,
its
dark companion, solitude. Ranke speaks
of his loneliness in touching letters to his brothers, into
he pours
is
his thirst for intimacy. "I live,"
he told
which
his brother
Heinrich in late 1820 from Frankfurt an der Oder, "not especially well,
not especially badly, without happiness or
misery, without love success; like
Stoic soul."
passion
is
assurance: lent or, at
and friendship, without
failure,
without
an intermundane god of Epicurus' and
He
confesses that he
is
like a
one of those whose "whole
moment, doubt clouds his selfis his consuming desire to make something excelthe very least, to aim at excellence, a truly religious
study."
Then,
for a
impulse? "Is that worldly? you ask,
Is
there really anything
worldly in this world, anything Godless?" 31 Later, in Berlin
Autobiographical dictation of November 1885, in Werke (1890), 5354:63; see von Laue, Ranke, p. 35m 31 November 1820, in Das Briefwerk, ed. Walther Peter Fuchs (1949), p. 24. Ranke's diary jottings, especially those of his early years, reveal a persistent, nagging concern with "selfishness" and a prayerful wish to wipe out Selbstsucht through the practice of historical scholarship. See, for one instance, Ranke, Tagebilcher, p. 59; from 1816-1817. 30
[8.]
STYLE and
salons,
HISTORY
IN
whom
in his intimacy with his students in
he
took paternal pride, the loneliness receded. But the labor
went on, and
his
social
connections increasingly reflected
men
the requirements of his craft. His intimates were
high
office,
not
men
men who
of letters;
in
in
some way might
help him. This was not self-seeking on his part; he was, after all,
not serving himself.
"We
must
adjust ourselves/' he wrote
with sublime naivete to his brother Heinrich in 1824, "to conditions prevailing even in the scholarly world/' 32
The
"In-
strument of History" needed instruments of his own. His devotion to service sounds an unvarying refrain in his
March 1820 he
In
letters.
grasp historical events superficially their life fest
in
flat,
all
moment
their thinking rigid:
history.
brother Heinrich that to
tells his
is
to
"God
make men
dwells, lives,
is
mani-
Every act gives witness of him, every
preaches his name, but most of
great connections of history.
hieroglyphic/' 33
miserable,
What
There he
good servant can
all,
I
think, in the
stands, like a holy rest
while the divine
remains undeciphered? Normally, the motto a
man
chooses reflects a genealogist's ingenuity; the motto
that
Ranke adopted, labor
The
script
ipse voluptas,
voluptas that his labor brought
was
literally
him was only
true.
rarely infected
with self-questioning. In 1824, he confessed to Heinrich that
he thought
his first
certain,
was born
is
I
else in the world; I
was born
shakes
it off:
book woefully incomplete: "One thing for study,
and
I
on the other hand,
am
no good
it is
for
anything
not certain whether
But he immediately and live in it, and it makes
for the study of history."
"I
have chosen
it,
32
February 18, 1824, in Briefwerk, p. 54. End of March 1820, in Briefwerk, p. 18. This letter is justly famous; Pieter Geyl quotes, "Ranke in the Light of the Catastrophe," in Geyl, Debates with Historians (1955), p. 7; see also von Laue, Ranke, p. 42. 33
[82]
—
—
—
Ranke: The Respectful Critic
my
soul
doubt
and gay/' 34 For Ranke,
contented,
blissful,
feel
passing and bliss lasting, for the joys of history
is
are endless.
And, presume
Ranke did not
repeat, they are in essence religious:
I
to understand
God and
told Heinrich late in 1820, "not to understand
sensing
him
And
to understand the rest."
in a beautiful
— "No,"
he
God, but
in
history directly
same
in the
letter,
metaphor, he translated Plato's theory of knowl-
edge into Christian vocabulary: man's most persistent complaint, really his sole complaint,
knows nothing
of his former
bering, a legend of
Lehren
all
Gegenwart und der Zeit" S5 had not sought
to
Heinrich in 1832,
was
a
as
live blissfully
Was
will
doing history,
Es
us
he repeated,
ist
told his brother
compelling duty to which he was
—diesem so schweren, aber calling,"
he claimed that he
Ranke
not equal but which he could not shirk Miissen: miissen.
Das
Legende Gottes aus der
Persistently
be that teacher; it
but remem-
is
the present and the past
ein Erinnern, eine
ist
that he forgets, that he
"All teaching
life.
God from
is
"We
man this
Pflicht
ist Pflicht.
could
hard but splendid profession
so grossem Berufe. "It
do not seek
ein hoherer Beruf.
He
da lange machen?
Man
it
out,
is
a higher
comes to
it
sucht es nicht, es
kommt
uns." 36
Worldly success therefore counts only
as
it
promotes the
divine plan for the individual: pinched for money, short of time,
and
far
from influence, the young Ranke
still
himself willing to remain without tenure forever,
if
declared
only he
could serve Clio. But he conceded that one could serve her better occupying a university chair. Writing to his favorite
34 35
36
February 18, 1824, in Briefwerk, p. 53. (December 23, 1820), in Neue Briefe, pp. 17-18. (End of April 1832), in Neue Briefe, pp. 170-171.
[83]
STYLE brother in
December
HISTORY
IN
Ranke announces the govern-
1833,
ment's promise of promotion to a
and
full
professorship in Berlin,
and adds:
a sizable increase in salary,
''I
have
just sent
the same news to our dear old parents and wept out loud as
I
fully visualized the gracious care of
the merciful
ambition
falls
need nothing
now he
is
God
hand he has extended over
us
away, like a discarded coat; else
on
truly the
earth.
," 37 .
.
He
I
all.
.
and
all, .
.
All
declare that
I
needs nothing because
instrument of providence. This, he told
brother Ferdinand from Paris in 1843,
his
for us
is
not hubris:
'What would providence be if it did not care for the individual too! That we are thought by an eternal thought, not transitory like the falling leaf of autumn, that we belong to 38 the essence of things that is the sum of all religion/' sincerely It was, in any event, the sum of Ranke's religion
—
felt,
—
consistently heartening,
In his formal prose, softly, but,
and
Ranke
though subdued,
struck this note a
it
the same. Ranke, the supreme
totally convenient.
was
there,
little
more
and unmistakably
embodiment
of the Protestant
ethic was not an uncomplicated Lutheran, but a philosophical
mind who had been touched by
the mystical hand of Neo-
platonism. His religion was the precipitate of wide reading
and vague thinking. But whatever ology,
it
its
shortcomings
as
the-
impelled him, in his historical work, to relentless
labor.
For Ranke, religion was more than a motive it
was also 37
38
Neue
a
for the historian,
key to history. In large and in small, history
Brief e, p. 184.
July 30 (1843), in
Neue
Brief e, p. 299.
[84]
Ranke: The Respectful Critic exemplifies divine work.
While Ranke saw the overarching
processes of world history as the noblest expression of the
same time, that
divine intent, he thought, at the
this
sym-
phonic whole was composed of an immense number of subsidiary themes.
The
particular
is
a mirror, a
worthy miniature,
of the universal. In the progression of his historical writings,
Ranke exhibited
almost as
his organic vision
if
by design: he
began with a prescient study of the Mediterranean world
and of the Reformation; he continued with massive tories of
major European powers; he concluded his career
with universal history. That
was cut
off in the
last effort,
Middle Ages, by
monument;
are his
in the preface,
said so often before: world history history.
his-
The
divine
scheme
the Weltgeschichte,
his death. Its six
he is
reiterates
volumes
what he had
the capstone of national
realizes itself
by and large through
nations or states, but in that great international conflict call history,
the universal element
is
we
always implicit: "Great
nations and states," he wrote, "have a double vocation, national
and
Because particular,
world-historical/'
God
39
works both through the universal and the
each epoch, each act has
its
own
dignity. This
is
what I have called Ranke's professional 40 This affirmation that "every epoch is immediate to God/' dictum, which is the single most important pronouncement the religious source of
in the historicist school,
consummates the nineteenth-century
rebellion against the historiography of the Enlightenment. It
is
the final repudiation of the antique doctrine that
disciplines, including history,
all
have an explicit ethical end. The
Ranke, Franzosische Geschichte, vol. 1, in Werke, 8:v. See above, p. 69. For a searching, if excessively sympathetic, analysis of this famous remark of 1854, see Friedrich Meinecke, "Deutung eines Rankewortes," in Aphorismen und Skizzen zur Geschichte, 2nd edn. (n.d.), pp. 100-129. 39
40
[85]
STYLE
IN
historian does not praise or
stand
—
to understand
called
this
condemn; he
seeks only to under-
from within, by adopting standards of
the period under study. tion to give each
HISTORY
41
epoch
In religious terms, this
its
historians to cast aside private prejudices
is
called
it
and
past as present, but the past as past that
to rise
it;
is
yet
it
in 1814,
but
his
work was
ist
es
If
above
is
not the
dem Menschen
a lifelong assault
mindedness, in particular on the
and
all
proper concern
his
gemass sich zu richten} 2 Ranke wrote these words
which
upon
auf diese gegenwartige Vergangenheit, sondern auf
die Vergangenheit als die vergangene
man,
far-
and time. History, Ranke once noted,
present to the historian as he studies
— nicht
invita-
injunction had
reaching professional reverberations because
their position in class
an
chance of immortality; Meinecke
Christian demand. This
a
is
liberals
religious
Ranke
Whig
as a
young
on present-
view of history, in
appear as good and conservatives as wicked,
men
as either superstitious, or crafty, or stupid.
for his part did
not quite succeed in overcoming
the Tory interpretation of history, his religious ideal for the
do
historian allowed the profession to
so.
Moreover, Ranke's theology of history demands the most scrupulous pursuit of the truth.
I
have already spoken of
Ranke's obsession with archives. Historians must generalize
without that history
is
generalizations on the detail. 41
I
dry chronicle. But they must base their
most intimate knowledge of
Again and again
in
Ranke's
life
we
all
possible
see the cheerful
have argued elsewhere that despite the charges of
historicists against
philosophes, the philosophic historians of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment recognized the need to see the past through its own eyes, even though the practice of Voltaire and Gibbon and Hume often left something to be desired in this regard. But then so did the practice of the historicists. See Peter Gay, The Enlightenment: An Interpretation, vol. 2, The Science 0/
Freedom (1969), pp. 368-396. 42
Ranke, Tagehiicher,
p. 109.
[86]
Ranke: The Respectful Critic work exposing ignorance and battling prejudice. Ranke in 1827 asking the publisher of his second
revisionist at
There
book
is
to return the final draft of his manuscript because
document
found
a
There
are his reports
him
that requires
from
Italy,
to revise a chapter.
44
There
is,
above
While Ranke saw in
world history
a
hand-
the probity with
all,
the archives, for he knows that diplomats
visits all
for the historian
his
in Florence collecting "excel-
to their masters as well as to their counterparts.
lie
is
1830 he writes
on the Medicis, which might add up to
some half-volume. 45 There which he
right.
his materials; in
months
that he has spent three lent material"
by
43
ravenous with his desire to
master everything and get everything willingness to be guided
he has
religion as being of critical
and is,
for history alike,
worldly power; as he once put
importance
the principal agent
in his view, political power.
Ranke the pious servant was no
46
To
be
sure,
stranger to the advantages of
it,
he found
it
a source of
deep
happiness to be able to work within a state he could respect.
But whatever the place history,
way.
and
he
insisted,
While he
by the
writes,
in
dem
in
Ranke's
own
its
sign, it
ideal of service.
situation, in its
own
was shaped
also,
power did not have things
Only
all
in school or in
can we keep church history separate from
political history; in life
—
power
history stood under
significantly,
literature,
of
they are intertwined at every
lebendigen Dasein sind
sie
moment
jeden Augenblick ver-
bunden und durchdringen einander. 47 The European
43
To
Friedrich
and Heinrich Brockhaus, January
17,
1827,
in
state
Neue
Brief e, p. 94.
Heinrich Ritter (August 1, 1829), in Neue Brieje, pp. 125-126. 45 Friedrich Perthes (August 12, 1830), in Neue Brieje, p. 137. 46 Furst zu Sayn-Wittgenstein and Johann Friedrich Ancillon, October 27, 1836, in Neue Brieje, p. 228. 47 Rejormation, vol. 1, in Werke, 1:3. 44
To To To
[87]
STYLE system has embodied the
turies;
Staat
priestliche
—
interpenetration
this
and
warriors
of
state
HISTORY
IN
arose
first
der
priests
cen-
kriegerisch-
eighth century, 48
the
in
many
for
and
world-shaking events like Martin Luther's rebellion stand as visible
symbols of their intimacy and their tension.
In Ranke's scheme of things, the relation of power to ligion
is
not merely one of coexistence or even of cooperation.
There are times when
to identity. After
it rises
all,
power can
happily claim the same exalted origins as service: God's
The
family demonstrates
how power
the matrix of divine justice.
Ranke with
re-
In
will.
can be exercised within
some
striking
metaphors,
projects his loyalty to the institution of the family,
its
dominant and loving
paterfamilias,
onto
society,
organized into hierarchies of authorities and subjects, and
onto the universe, governed by
and
all-loving
God. The
its
all-powerful, all-creative,
hierarchical family
is
Ranke's master
image, sometimes explicit, often implicit. In the good state,
good family, the two poles of power and
as in the
coincide; service works to advance to
make
power
service effective.
large
and small
historical world.
The
is
Ranke saw
all
exists
manifestations of
creative statesman, the state, all forces,
are so
many
the
and the
sparks from
flint.
In this optimistic vision,
power
power and power
as expressions of divine activity in
world-historical interplay of
the divine
service
all
rarely problematical.
tragedy dissolves; for Ranke, It
is
not simply that Ranke
concentrates on the good that power can do and pushes the evil
as
out of sight; more important, he actually sees the
an instrument of the good. The divinely created
mechanism
is
in
the long run
self-regulating;
historical
crime
cruelty play the role that Goethe's Mephistopheles
48
Reformation,
vol.
1,
in
Werke,
1:5.
[88]
evil
and
found
Ranke: The Respectful Critic himself compelled to play: wishing to do
War, mendacious diplomacy,
he does good.
evil,
ruthless politics
are God's
all
many
experiments for solving the world's riddles; they are so
Not even Ranke's own
divine muscle exercises.
side, Protes-
tantism and conservatism, ought to live exempt from battle; the good comes from the battle
itself,
as well as
from
its
preordained outcome. In 1872, countering the pessimism of
who saw
his conservative friends
to
an end in universal
the world they
conflict,
knew coming
Ranke suggested that each
needs his enemy, and bad intentions will find their correction die falschen Intentionen
within themselves
rektiv in sich selbst finden.
49
Ranke does not
and he expects that wickedness,
Day
demands
Bartholomew's
a
all,
drama, by
he
its
treats
such
very nature,
resolutions.
In his last years,
where.
and
glorify brutality,
like the St.
massacre, will be punished. But above
things as parts of a drama,
werden ein Kor-
He
Ranke saw such
resolutions at
hand
every-
was thoroughly aware that he was living through
an age of revolutions; his persistent, even passionate preoccupation with the politics and diplomacy of his
him with the kind
provided
in his historical work.
and
of insight he found invaluable
But while he thought
in fact indispensable,
own time
he thought
it far
struggle inevitable
from endless. His
very last undertaking, the world history, reflected his confi-
dence in the ultimate triumph of the forces of order; without that,
he
said,
he would not have undertaken so vast
Liberalism, he conceded, has
its
scheme:
it
it
goads statesmen,
needing correction. But
whatever
its
radicalism
49
—
form it
its
place in the general dialectical calls their
attention to wrongs
proper function was opposition;
—popular sovereignty,
was
a project.
liberalism, or socialist
at heart negative, at worst destructive,
Ranke, Tagebiicher,
p.
413; from
December
[89]
31, 1872.
and
STYLE did not deserve to rule.
HISTORY
IN
The two
essential foundations of the
Ranke
best form of government, the monarchical state, flected in 1871, are finances
two
re-
and the army. To subject these
to the caprices of a deliberative
body would be
to sur-
render the sound and tested principles of good government:
"Everything we have achieved in the
last
few years has rested
on these elements/' 50 Power, then, is
the
is
march
of
God
through the world. This
one reason why most of Ranke's writings deal with
critical
moments in political history, and with the centuries when the modern state took its characteristic form. In France, England, Prussia, Ranke could trace the decisive clash between centralizing institutions and feudal privileges. The clash differed from
state to state, a difference for
izing perception
which Ranke's individual-
had prepared him
But the
well.
historical
function of that clash was everywhere the same: to find a
way
of controlling territories large
quate natural and a
human
network of competing
enough
resources,
states.
And
and
to
command
ade-
a proper balance in
this, too, is
why Ranke
concentrated his attention not merely on the state but on the J
was the age of the great powers, and Ranke
large state. It
wrote their history in the confident conviction that he was J concentrating on the main theme.
The important powers
were important quite simply because they were important. Ranke's
God
was bored by
losers.
In recent decades, the baneful consequences of such com-
placency have received intense study and hostile comment. 50
Neue
To Edwin
Freiherr von Manteuffel
Brief e, 561.
[90]
(before September
10,
1871); in
Ranke: The Respectful Critic After the Nazi catastrophe,
Rankean
as Friedrich
vision superior to the
writings
Meinecke
moral
to declare Burckhardt's
sunny acceptance that characterized the This
master.
of his
induced even so devout a
it
much
is
undeniable:
Ranke
blandly affirmed the powers that be; he adroitly fitted treaty breaking,
damaging than
him
to forgive the unforgivable.
51
But more was
his much-criticized refusal to judge
his
widely noticed readiness to judge. Behind the screen of
scientific objectivity,
He
economic warfare into God's
for
of history induced
less
invasions,
man; he threw the mantle of spiritual respectaover terrible men and terrible deeds. Ranke's philosophy
scheme bility
illegal
preferred the
Ranke made
definite political choices.
power of the German monarchy
power of the German
the
movement. Thus he found
his
to treat all historical forces with
an
Socialist
most earnest injunction
to
even hand quite impossible to carry out: in Ranke's scheme,
Bismarck was obviously more immediate to It
would be
him
I
mere
would argue instead that Ranke's
in this direction,
from gaining distance on through cool
than Bebel.
a mistake to treat this set of biases as a
accident or aberration. piety forced
God
both by preventing him
his cherished political convictions
critical inspection,
and by predisposing him
to
prefer the powerful to the powerless. In Ranke's religion, the first
51
shall
be
Foreign
first.
Thus, ultimately, Ranke's deepest impulse,
critics, especially after
often; Pieter Geyl's essay (Debates
the Nazi tyranny, have
With
made
Historians, pp. 1-18)
is
charge a splendid
this
and fair-minded instance of such criticisms. But even Germans, reevaluating their past, have taken a new and critical look at Ranke. See especially HansHeinz Krill, Die Ranke Renaissance: Max Lenz und Erich Marcks (1962); while Krill concentrates his fire on two of Ranke's best-known disciples, many of his bullets hit the master quite directly. Even Friedrich Me.inecke, Ranke's most enthusiastic supporter in the German historical guild, found the Nazi catastrophe shedding a new and somewhat harsher light on the historian he admired more than anyone else. See "Ranke und Burckhardt," in Aphorismen und Skizzen zur Geschichte, pp. 143-180.
[91]
STYLE which was the source of of his
most crippling
open
his greatest work,
was the source also
defect.
These are deep waters, are
HISTORY
IN
I
know. After
angles of vision
all, all
to bias; precisely as an atheist, an atheist can write
one-sided history just as
much
as a Christian.
The
history assumes the prevalence of perspectives, a
German
history of
whether
it is
historian underestimating the merits of France, a
bourgeois historian the maturity of the proletariat, a male historian the intelligence of
women. But Ranke was
peculiarly
vulnerable. Early in the 1840s, he noted that the historian
needs three cardinal qualities, honesty; the
become
first,
common
to grasp things at
frightened at
what he
sees;
um
moral
Mut und
fall
into
qualities govern
Etwas zu machen, dazu gehort
gesunder Menschenverstand,
and
the second, not to
the third, not to
self-deception; in short, the simplest
science as well
all;
sense, courage,
Redlichkeit.
dreierlei:
Der
erste,
um vor den Reum sich nicht selber
nur die Sache einzusehn, der zweite,
sultaten nicht zu erschrecken, der dritte,
etwas vorzumachen. So dass die einfachsten moralischen Ezgenschaften auch die Wissenschaft beherrschen. 52 But precisely
knew he had
science and tirelessly strove
precisely because
he had strong reasons to
because Ranke
for objectivity,
believe that he was not deceiving himself, he was particularly
susceptible to self-deception. It
is
true that Ranke, publishing
immensely, subjected himself to the public forum in which alone self-deception can be detected and corrected
ment
of his professional peers.
historical
But the shape
— the judg-
of the
German
profession was such that the criticism he got he
could not use, and the criticism he could have used he did
not 52
get.
Ranke, Tagebiicher,
p. 240;
from the
[92]
early 1840s.
Ranke: The Respectful Critic Ranke has sometimes been charged with ignoring the dimension of
history, those realities of technology
social
and eco-
nomics, of mass politics and mass communications, that were transforming the world in Ranke's lifetime and that should, in retrospect,
have deepened
scattered notebook jottings, lizing prospect that
his analysis of the past. In a
Ranke
few
in fact suggests the tanta-
he was playing with
social history.
He
professes himself interested in population, classes,
and games,
and he hints that the task of history might well be
to describe
the
rise
of
all
Das ware nun
elements
Geschichte, das allmahliche schildern.
53
But his
Emporkommen
Elemente zu
England, the sexual mores
Burckhardt thought suitable for
festivals that
tural history,
alter
and popular songs that Macaulay
freely using in his History of
and public
Aufgabe einer
practice was less comprehensive. Certainly,
in view of the broadsides
was
die
Ranke's conception of society was narrow.
cast of his characters
was
like a neoclassical tragedy,
cul-
The
with the
speaking parts almost exclusively reserved to the higher orders.
But Ranke did not it,
by subjecting
the "social
so
much
ignore the social world as distort
conflict to the pathos of reconciliation.
movement/' which he saw
1830s on, negative as
it
seemed
all
Even
about him from the
to him,
was destined in
Ranke's mind to be assimilated into an ever-growing social order.
54
Ranke was nothing
if
not a consensus historian. His
53
Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 323; from 1843. See also the important entry in the same work (pp. 239-40) from the 1830s. Rudolf Vierhaus has explored the question in detail in his Ranke und die soziale Welt (1957), which includes some hitherto unpublished notes from Ranke's Nachlass. Significantly, Burckhardt argued that the totality of perception that Ranke's die Totalitat writings seemed to offer at first glance was in fact an illusion der Anschauung, die seine Schriften bei dem ersten Anblick zu geben scheinen, ist illusorisch. Burckhardt to Heinrich Schreiber, October 2, 1842; 54
Max
Burckhardt, 7 vols: to date (1949-1969), 1:216. Ranke, Tagebiicher, p. 167; from August 11, 1880.
Brief e, ed.
[93]
STYLE him
wish for harmony led
merely the classes.
rise
HISTORY
IN
1843 not
to see in the Paris of
of equality but also the disappearance of
55
Thus Ranke's serene dramatic conception governed torical perceptions
He
from beginning to end.
his his-
recognized that
the mere piling up of documents and eyewitness relations, no
matter
how
reliable,
would only introduce
a
new kind
of dis-
tortion into history, by presenting history as a spectacle of a casual, facts, in
as
but
it
happy ending, was congenial
a
also
conceived dramatically. Ranke's
God who,
the Deists' watchmaker
and
all its
laws, withdraws
closer to Calvin's his decrees.
fully.
That
critic
who, it is
is
a
left
God was
not
man
He
was
much
with intimations of
continuous evidence of himself in history,
men
the historian
is
to testify to
it,
so important: he
truthis
the
devout study, accepts God's work and sees
good. Ranke's
God was
the immortal dramatist
has written the play, designed the tion,
and who continues
lines.
And, since
God
duty not to be
dull,
is
sets,
Ranke, Tagebiicher,
who
supervised the produc-
to observe the actors speaking their
never dull,
either.
it is
Style,
of prayer.
55
temperament,
having created the world
his creation.
few exceptional
why
after
from
God, who has
He gives
and has called
that
to his
impressed him as the appropriate form for a history
God had
that
meaningless accumulation of
desperate need of the ordering hand. Drama, as long
had
it
ultimately
disorderly,
p. 320;
from 1843.
[94]
the historian's highest
for
Ranke, was a form
3
Macaulay Intellectual Voluptuary
The Acrobat The
failings of
explored;
Macaulay's
it is
have been thoroughly
style
unlikely that the
reader will discover any
most unsympathetic
new grounds
In Macaulay's lifetime, wits found
its
for complaint.
extravagances ample
provocation for lampoons; after his death, serious students of literature raised the
of writing.
Thomas
A
it
way
to his
formidable array of essayists and historians
Carlyle and Walter Bagehot,
Lord Morley,
demned
most far-reaching objections
Sir Leslie
verbose,
as
Stephen and artificial,
Matthew Arnold and
Sir Charles Firth
—
con-
overemphatic: a virtuoso's
instrument played not to interpret the music but to glorify the performer. Macaulay's most discriminating readers found his style style of
wearisome and ultimately profoundly an orator
who smuggles onto
suitable to a debate in the
As
House
irritating,
the
the printed page tricks of
Commons,
if
there.
committed public speaker, he exaggerates his points, constructs false antitheses, grows heated beyond measure, expands immense ingenuity underlining the obvious and prova
ing the self-evident.
making His
airs
a case,
and
He
and sounds
argues
all
the time: he
is
always
as sure of it as only a debater can.
graces, his acrobatic pirouettes, far
[97]
from con-
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
cealing, only advertise the essential corruptness of his his-
work: he
torical
make
to
detest
is
an advocate rather than
Whig
things worse, a
—and,
a historian, and,
He
advocate.
worse, he really detests
—what he
professes to
too limited
is
to grasp: the subtler points of philosophy, the mysteries of
poetry, the sheer historical interest of personages or causes
he
does
Macaulay
not
find
Matthew Arnold
sympathetic.
a philistine, in fact the "Prince of Philistines, " a
verdict with
which
Leslie Stephen, with
curred; Gladstone called
him
vulgar
—
conceded Macaulay the quality of
them I
With Macaulay,
all
due caution, con-
in Greek.
clarity,
means and
clear with illegitimate
poses.
called
1
All his critics
but he seemed to
for illegitimate pur-
somehow becomes
clarity
a vice.
do not intend to minimize the gravity of the case against
Macaulay. His rhetorical self-indulgence and his Whiggish bias are too blatant to
be denied. Some of
work
are impossible to defend; his of restraint
and of
taste.
And,
not only the tone that
it is
with the other historians style
is
most,
if
not
all,
He
like
a
failure
of the
man. His way of writing
his
an imperious and
with Macaulay,
way
far
raises
of thinking as a historian.
he judges, dealing out
from impartial teacher. Lord
Morley, reading in Macaulay's History of England, found "full of cleverness, full of detailed
1
Matthew Arnold, "Joubert,"
as
considering in this book, the
rarely seeks simply to understand;
marks
marked by
in question;
am
uncomfortable doubts about
mannerisms
as his detractors rightly observed,
is
I
is
his
it
knowledge, extraordinarily
Works, 15 vols. (1903-1904), 3:333, and Friendship's Garland, letter 8, in Works, 6:307. Yet, when Macaulay died, Arnold wrote to his mother: "It is said he has left no more history ready, which is a national loss." December 31, 1859, in Works, 13:150. Leslie Stephen, "Macaulay," in Hours in a Library, 3 vols, (new edn., 1892), 2:355, 362. For Gladstone, see G. M. Young, "Macaulay," in Young, Victorian in
Essays (1962), p. 38.
[98]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary make my-
graphic and interesting. But/' he added, "I cannot self
That
the style.
like
happen." 2 This
not the way in which things
is
a devastating indictment:
is
the historian's business to record the
way
of course,
it is,
which things
in
happen.
Yet
me
we have done to Macaulay what We have judged him from our perspectives and we have done this because we live in
seems to
it
he did to
others.
rather than his,
that
an age to which the mentality of a Macaulay
Whigs,
stranger.
I
think
I
can safely
temper uncomfortable; Tories,
say,
is
make
unhappily a
modern
the
their sense of tragedy intact,
Macaulay, writes Pieter Geyl, speaking for
far better.
suit
it
this
temper, "rouses distrust and annoyance"; lacking
historical
3
There
is
But Macaulay's style has other, more And, in addition, it has many more personal
truth in this.
attractive aspects.
and
true
empathy, "vituperative" and "cocksure," his "writing
of history strikes us as decidedly old-fashioned."
much
all
cultural resonances than are immediately apparent;
surfaces hide a richly
complex man,
living in a richly
its
complex
age.
We I
must,
want
prose.
to
as
the Scholastics would have said, distinguish.
submit in evidence three samples of Macaulay's
"Such
a scene as the division of last
saw, and never expect to see again."
the stage the
House
of
Commons,
second reading of the Reform
Thomas Flower sisters,
2
Ellis,
Bill,
Tuesday
The time
is
I
March
never 1831,
the occasion the decisive the recipient of this letter
Macaulay's best and, apart from his
only friend.
May
1905, in Lord Morley, Recollections, 2 vols. (1917), 2:133. In the same entry, Morley significantly quotes Lord Acton as being "full of praise for the careful labour and good judgment of the History." 3 Pieter Geyl, "Macaulay in his Essays," in Geyl, Debates with Historians (i955), PP- 20-23.
Entry for
9,
[99]
STYLE If I
should
and sharp seeing
live fifty years the
my mind
in
mace from the
never to be forgotten. part.
When
we had
as
Caesar stabbed in
taking the
IN
if
it
HISTORY
impression of
had
just
it
will
taken place.
be It
as fresh
was
like
the Senate House, or seeing Oliver table, a sight to
The crowd
be seen only once and
overflowed the House in every
the strangers were cleared out and the doors locked
hundred and eight members present, more by fifty-five than ever were at a division before. The Ayes and Noes were like two vollies of cannon from opposite sides of a field of battle. When the opposition went out into the lobby— an operation by the bye which took up twenty minutes or more we spread ourselves over the benches on both sides of the House. For there were many of us who had not been able to find a seat during the evening. When the doors were shut we began to speculate on our numbers. Every body was desponding. "We have lost it. We are only two hundred and eighty at most. I do not think we are two hundred and fifty. They are three hundred. Alderman Thompson has counted them. He says they are two hundred and ninety-nine." This was the talk on our benches. I wonder that men who have been long in parliament do not acquire a better coup d'oeil for numbers. The House when only the Ayes were six
—
in it
looked to
me
a very fair
house— much
fuller
than
it
generally
had no hope however of three hundred. As the tellers passed along our lowest row on the left hand side the interest was insupportable— two hundred and ninety-one— two hundred and ninety-two— we were all standing up and stretching forward, telling with the tellers. At three hundred there was a short cry of joy, at three hundred and two another— suppressed however in a moment. For we did not yet know what the hostile force might be. We knew however that we could not be severely beaten. The doors were thrown open and in they came. Each of them as he entered brought some different report of their numbers. It must have been impossible, as you may conceive, in the lobby, crowded as they must have been, to form any exact estimate. First we heard that they were three hundred and three— then the number rose to three hundred and ten, then went down to three hundred and seven. Alexander is
even on debates of considerable
interest.
[100]
I
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary Baring told
me
hundred and Charles
that he
We
four.
Wood who
had counted and that they were three were
all
breathless with anxiety,
when
stood near the door jumped on a bench and
hundred and one." We set up a shout that you might have heard to Charing Cross— waving our hats— stamping against the floor and clapping our hands. The tellers scarcely got through the crowd: for the house was thronged up to the table, and all the floor was fluctuating with heads like the pit of a theatre. But you might have heard a pin drop as Duncannon read the numbers. Then again the shouts broke out— and many of us shed tears— I could scarcely refrain. And the jaw cried
out— 'They
of Peel
fell;
are only three
and the face of Twiss was
as the face of a
damned
and Herries looked like Judas taking his neck-cloth off for the last operation. We shook hands and clapped each other on the back, and went out laughing, crying, and huzzaing into the lobby. And no sooner were the outer doors opened than another shout answered that within the house. All the passages and the stairs into the waiting rooms were thronged by people who had waited till four in the morning to know the issue. We passed through a narrow lane between two thick masses of them; and all the way down they were shouting and waving their hats; till we got into the open air. I called a cabriolet— and the first thing the driver asked was, "Is the Bill carried? "Yes, by one." 'Thank God for it, Sir." And away I rode to Grey's Inn— and so ended a scene which will probably never be equalled till the reformed soul;
,,
Parliament wants reforming.
This
fine
4 .
victory was, as
.
.
we know, only temporary;
the
more than a year later, in June 1832, after a prolonged and intense political crisis complete with elections, resignations, and
Reform
Bill
did not receive the royal assent until
threats to
swamp
ceedings,
Macaulay took
4
March
a recalcitrant
a
House
prominent
of Lords. In these propart.
He had
1831. Quoted in Sir George Otto Trevelyan, Letters of Lord Macaulay (edn., 1908), pp. 146-147. 30,
[101]
The
entered
Life
and
STYLE the
House
Commons
of
HISTORY
IN
in 1830;
he was
just turning thirty,
already widely appreciated as a lucid and forceful essayist.
On March
1831, just three weeks before the historic vote
2,
he reported to bill
It
Macaulay
Ellis,
that Lord John Russell
was one of
had introduced the preceding
his best performances, like the others
and memorable. The House his rapid delivery, for
writer, a
day.
memorized
sat silent, intently trying to catch
Macaulay was, though
a great speech-
bad speaker. ''Turn where we may, within, around,
the voice of great events
is
you may preserve." This was
Now,
rose to speak in behalf of the
proclaiming to
who
Reform, that
his peroration:
therefore, while every thing at
ruin to those
us,
home and
abroad forebodes
persist in a hopeless struggle against the spirit
of the age, now, while the crash of the proudest throne of the
continent
is still
resounding in our
ears,
now, while the roof of a
an ignominious shelter to the exiled heir
British palace affords
we
on every side ancient institutions subverted, and great societies dissolved, now, while the heart of England is still sound, now, while old feelings and old associations retain a power and a charm which may too soon pass away, now, in this your accepted time, now, in this your day of salvation, of forty kings, now, while
see
not of the
take counsel, not of prejudice, not of Party
spirit,
ignominious pride of a
history, of reason,
fatal consistency,
but of
which are past, of the signs of this most portentous time. Pronounce in a manner worthy of the expectation with which this great debate has been anticipated, and of the long remembrance which it will leave behind. Renew the youth of the of the ages
State. Save property, divided against itself. Save the multitude,
endangered by its own ungovernable passions. Save the aristocracy, endangered by its own unpopular power. Save the greatest, and fairest, and most highly civilised community that ever existed, from calamities which may in a few days sweep away all the rich heritage of so many ages of wisdom and glory. The danger is terrible.
The time
is
short. If this bill should
[102]
be rejected,
I
pray
Thomas Babington Macaulay COURTESY THE
NEW YORK
PUBLIC LIBRARY
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary God
to
that
remember
none of those who concur
in rejecting
their votes with unavailing remorse,
may
it
ever
amidst the wreck
and the
of laws, the confusion of ranks, the spoliation of property, dissolution of social order. 5
Four years
after this speech, in 1835, while
member
as a legal
of the
began to write
years after that, in 1839, he first
peared.
two volumes of
The work
his History of
it.
Late in 1848,
England
finally ap-
has no wholly representative passages; like
Gibbon, Macaulay had occasion vasions, describe
in India
Supreme Council, he began ponderwork that would make him immortal; 6 four
ing the historical
the
he was
ways of
and
to narrate battles
living, depict character,
in-
and moralize
over the course of events. Devoted craftsman that he was, he varied his
manner
to
do
matter
his
sage of sufficient length, he
is
But
justice.
sure to deploy
in
any pas-
most
of his
techniques.
If
we would study with
our ancestors
profit the history of
[this
from the beginning of his famous third chapter on social history] we must be constantly on our guard against that delusion which the well known names of families, places, and offices naturally produce, and must never forget that the country of which we read was a very different country from that in which we is
live.
In every experimental science there
perfection. In every
human
being there
is
tendency towards
a
is
a wish to ameliorate
own condition. These two principles have often sufficed, even when counteracted by great public calamities and by bad instihis
tutions,
fortunes,
to carry civilisation
rapidly forward.
no ordinary misgovernment,
will
do
No
so
ordinary mis-
much
to
make
a
nation wretched, as the constant progress of physical knowledge
and the constant
effort of every
man
to better himself will
do
to
Speech on Parliamentary Reform, in The Works of Lord Macaulay, 2nd edn., ed. Lady Trevelyan, 8 vols. (1871), 8:24-25. 6 See John Clive, Macaulay: The Shaping of the Historian (1973), 47^. 5
[
10 5]
STYLE make
HISTORY
IN
been found that profuse expenditure, heavy taxation, absurd commercial restrictions, cora nation prosperous. It has often
rupt tribunals, disastrous wars, seditions, persecutions, conflagra-
have not been able to destroy capital so fast the exertions of private citizens have been able to create it. It
tions, inundations,
as
can easily be proved that, in our
own
land, the national wealth
been almost uninterruptedly increasing; that it was greater under the Tudors than under the Plantagenets; that it was greater under the Stuarts than under the Tudors; that, in spite of battles, sieges and confiscations, it was greater on the day of the Restoration than on the day when the during at least
has,
centuries,
six
Long Parliament met;
in
that,
spite
of
maladministration,
of
extravagance, of public bankruptcy, of two costly and unsuccessful
and of the fire, it was greater on the day of the death of Charles the Second than on the day of his wars, of the pestilence
Restoration. This progress, having continued during
became
many
ages,
about the middle of the eighteenth century, portentously rapid, and has proceeded, during the nineteenth, with at length,
accelerated velocity. 7
The
three passages
have
I
one mind. Yet they are
The and
letter
notably
is
larger than
its
true to say that is
quoted are
from identical
clearly the
Macaulay's
flexible.
stylistic repertoire
indicate. It
spoken
essays.
He
string to his lyre except perhaps true simplicity,
moments when he
presumably
a
hectoring
is
as un-
is
his writings are disguised orations as
to say that his orations are
are
of
from the History, though consistently
dominant tone would all
work
in their techniques.
intimate and spirited, the speech
biblical, the passage
rhetorical, is
is
far
just
even to
rises
that.
has every
and there
His letter to
spontaneous performance, shows
it
how
Ellis,
rapidly
he could compose a finished piece of reportage. Writing a
7
Thomas Babington Macaulay,
History
Works, 1:219-220.
[106]
of
England
[Chapter
iii],
in
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary week
after the dramatic
moment, Macaulay
—
that haunts every historical storyteller
end
piques
'We
three hundred.
have .
.
lost
First
.
bill.
by dwelling on the uncertainty of that
Ellis' interest
ending ("
knows the But Macaulay
his reader
302 to 301 for the
of the story:
problem
faces the
...
it.'
we heard
had no hope however
I .
.
.
of
then the number rose").
Without evident compunction, Macaulay,
on
pulling
'
his
reader's lapel, emphatically characterizes the event as exciting
("the interest was insupportable ...
more
anxiety"); but also,
He
two").
the
of
stilts
lends his
moment,
all
breathless with
he dramatizes the suspense
subtly,
("two hundred and ninety-one
we were
—two
hundred and ninety-
visible as it
most extraordinary
is
historical
on
own, the
its
parallels
("like
seeing Caesar stabbed ... or seeing Oliver taking the
from the table"). by making
it
benches. ...
He makes
his narrative brilliantly visual
wholly concrete ("we spread ourselves over the
we were
all
standing up. ...
all
the floor was
fluctuating with heads like the pit of a theatre").
not disdain pathos ("many of us shed tears")
he
homely
to a friend, the
is
a pin drop").
mace
And he
or,
He
does
writing as
might have heard
cliche ("y ou
completes his report by constructing a
dialogue suitable for the stage, with laconic question and laconic
Whig ("the 'Yes, this
response,
the popularity of the
neatly illustrating
program and the blessings of thing the driver asked was,
first
by one/ agile
Thank God
narrative,
for
it, Sir.'
Macaulay
also
a
deferential society
'Is
the Bill carried?'
"). Yet,
throughout
all
sounds a deeper, more
natural note, a pure boyish exuberance that will not be denied
("And the jaw
of Peel
fell
taking his neck-cloth off for
.
and Herries looked like Judas the last operation"). Macaulay is .
.
not too starchy to admit that sweeter
still
it
to win.
[107]
had been sweet
to fight,
STYLE When
HISTORY
IN
he ventures onto the public
lutely suppresses all such levity. In the
he
is
stage,
Macaulay
House
reso-
Commons,
of
The emphatic music of his rhythmic beating of a drum in
grave, urgent, humorless.
sentences resounds like the
That
the jungle, designed less to inform than to arouse. the point of
"now/'
is
Macaulay's insistent eightfold reiteration of
a technique
he borrowed from the rhetoric of the
Bible and intensified for his
own
secular assignment.
That
is
the point also of his equally insistent short sentences, either
beginning with the same word multitude. the
fairest,
.
.
.
short/')
"Save property.
Save the aristocracy.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Save the
Save the greatest,
the most highly civilised community") 8 or cast
the same shape
in
(
Here
is
("The danger
is
terrible.
The time
is
the demagogy of a connoisseur steeped in
the oratory of the ages, employed for the delectation of other connoisseurs, Macaulay's fellow
MPs. The Commons
dearly
loved a rousing speech, and hankered after the good old days of parliamentary oratory, the 1790s,
when
giants like Pitt
and
Fox and Burke had harangued and swayed the House. While Macaulay does not scruple on occasion to play on the widespread fear of violent upheaval, his is a demagogy less of message than of tone, a half-instinctive, half-calculated appeal
8
Macaulay's rage for anaphora is really relentless. Here is a sample from his essays, which are not quoted in my text. Speaking of the practices for which Lord Bacon was punished, he writes: "That these practices were common, we admit. But they were common, just as all wickedness to which there is strong temptation always was, and always will be common. They were common just as theft, cheating, perjury, adultery, have always been common. They were common, not because people did not know what was right, but because people liked to do what was wrong. They were common, though piohibited by law. They were common, though condemned by public opinion. They were common, because in that age law and public opinion united had not sufficient force to restrain the greediness of powerful and unprincipled magistrates. They were common, as every crime will be common when the gain to which it leads is great, and the chance of disgrace and punishment small. But though common, they were universally ." "Lord Bacon," in Works, 4:194-195. allowed to be altogether odious. .
.
[108]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary to inarticulate, indeed unconscious, inner periodicities. this
if
demagogy,
is
Macaulay's letter to grandiosity:
it
elevated;
is
Ellis
has given
the
way
Yet
concreteness
of
to circumlocutory
"while the roof of a British palace affords an
ignominious shelter to the exiled heir of forty kings/'
a
is
roundabout and rather precious way of alluding to France's former king, Charles X, dislodged by the Revolution of 1830,
and
living at Castle
Lulworth
in Dorset. Considering the five
hundred bottles of Bordeaux that the
family had
royal
remembered to bring along to sweeten the bread of exile, Macaulay 's choice of adjective "ignominious" seems a little
—
strained.
9
But Macaulay was
decorum and in mundane details that might spoil
the resounding effect, not in
them. His paraphrase of
—
St.
interested in
Paul's familiar Epistle to the
Romans ("Now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed," 10 underscores Macaulay's sense that
most solemn
may
addressing himself to the
is
His sober statesman's warning
of occasions.
("Reform, that you
he
preserve"), which carried reminders
of the conservative authority of
Burke and the populist threat
of Cobbett, redoubles that solemnity.
The
History
like all
is
something rather
its
is
ingratiating,
Macaulay's work, but since with the History he
courting popularity with a to
different. It
tastes
new
public,
he adapts
within the limits of his convictions.
is
his devices
He
is
still
making points ("we must be constantly on our guard and must never forget"), but at a less feverish, less ominous .
temperature than in his speeches. obiter dicta
human
He
is
still
("In every experimental science.
being.
.
.
."),
but he
now
.
.
laying
down
... In
every
takes the time to prove, or
For the bottles of Bordeaux, see David H. Pinlcney, The French Revolution of 1830 (1972), p. 179. 9
10 Epistle to
the Romans, 13:11.
[
1Q 9]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
at least elaborate, his assertions,
more
in
leisurely
employing the
He
fashion.
and
inescapably orotund,
still
is
single phrase, "that
was greater/' four times
it
in a single sentence to link his evidence into
Yet he
is
Whether
an iron chain.
sensitive to the perils of repetitiousness;
power
for
in
speeches
may make
his sentences are
taste of the reader.
11
But
for
monotonous it is
argument
to press his
what makes
boredom
in
or not depends
certain that
he
books.
on the
tried to avoid
monotony. That long sentence beginning, "It has often been found" has the contours of a sleigh ground,
it
picks
of two-
list
up momentum
as
it
ride.
slides
Starting
on
level
downhill with
its
and three-word phrases ("profuse expenditure,
heavy taxation"), further accelerates with a rushing sequence of single words
("seditions, persecutions"),
gently to a stop with a neat antithesis destroy
.
likes his
.
.
and then
coasts
("not been able to
able to create"). In general, though,
Macaulay
sentences to be short and perspicuous: "But at the
court Jeffreys was cordially welcomed." Macaulay
is,
of course,
describing Lord Jeffreys, notorious for the Bloody Assizes.
He
own
James had watched the circuit with interest and delight. In his drawing room and at his table he had frequently talked of the havoc which was making among his disaffected subjects with a glee at which the foreign ministers stood aghast. With his own hand he had penned accounts of what he facetiously called his Lord Chief Justice's campaign in the West. Some hundreds of rebels, His Majesty wrote to The Hague, had been condemned. Some of them had been hanged; more should be hanged; and the rest should be was
a judge after his master's
heart.
sent to the plantations. 12
11
"His sentences are monotonous and mechanical." Stephen, "Macaulay,"
p. 36412
Macaulay, History of England
[v], in
[no]
Works, 1:515.
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary Macaulay's youthful affection for Ciceronian antithesis and
Augustan balance did not diminish: "But the
made
the nation had been
ernment" 13 spirits of
one of
is
men
his
summaries; "To bend and break the
What
The
money
he had not the generosity to do at
own expense he determined one
vices of the gov-
gave him pleasure; and to part with his
gave him pain.
is
by the
fruitless
liberality of
to
do
his
at the expense of others"
one of King James
of his characterizations, this
14
II.
profusion of parallel clauses in Macaulay's writings
suggests that he perceived history as a succession of dilemmas,
debates,
and combats
—between
conscience
and ambition,
bravery and cowardice, Protestants and Catholics, Cavaliers
and Roundheads, Whigs and Tories, passive obedience and
manly esis.
rebelliousness.
For Macaulay, history was a vast antith-
His character sketches, which he scatters
across
History with a liberal hand, simulate the complexity of beings by wallowing in antithetical
13
traits.
15
And
his
human
those paired
Works, 1:234. [viii], in Works, 2:99. 15 In his early essay on history, Macaulay made some observations he did not always remember himself; but even had he remembered them, the pairing of contrary traits would have made his sketches psychologically inadequate: "In every human character and transaction there is a mixture of good and 14
evil:
Macaulay, History of England Macaulay, History of England
[iii],
in
a little exaggeration, a little suppression, a judicious use of epithets, a
watchful and searching scepticism with respect to the evidence of one side, a convenient credulity with respect to every report or tradition on the other, may easily make a saint of Laud, or a tyrant of Henry the Fourth. This species of misrepresentation abounds in the most valuable works of modern historians." "History," quoted in Sir Charles Firth, A Commentary on Macaulay' s History of England (1938), p. 23. Macaulay's critics fastened on his
inability
to
draw character: "There are no half tones, no subtle
blending of different currents of thought," writes
Sir Leslie
inter-
Stephen. "It
is
partly for this reason that his descriptions of character are often so unsatis-
He
man
bundle of contradictions, because it enables him to obtain startling contrasts. To anyone given to analysis, these contrasts are actually painful." Stephen, "Macaulay," p. 365. And Lord Morley noted: "Macaulay, great though he was, did not find his way to the indwelling man of many of his figures." Morley, Recollections, 1:118.
factory.
likes to
represent a
as a
.
[in]
.
.
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
lists
he called the "declamatory disquisition/' 16 with which he
sets
out
first
the claim
of.
one, then those of the other party,
are simply antitheses writ large.
The declamatory
he had learned from ancient
a technique
collective aspirations or grievances not
disquisition,
historians, illustrates
by quoting the words
of historical individuals, but by constructing an embracing
summary. Macaulay begins the great Chapter 9 of his History which he will crowd with such historic action as the English
,
expedition of William and the flight of James, with an extensive examination of the English conscience, divided to
between
depths
those
who
feel
compelled
king no matter what his crimes, and those
under extreme circumstances rebellion
is
to
who
justified.
obey
its
the
argue that
Macaulay
strews this debate with another favorite device, the rhetori-
answer behind:
cal question that drags its
really
turned the
the right?
.
.
.
left
Was
cheek to the ruffian
there any
government
"What Christian who has smitten
in the
world under
which there were not to be found some discontented and factious
men who would
say,
and perhaps think, that
their
grievances constituted an extreme case?" 17
This narrative manner involves the reader, and
is
brilliantly
calculated to keep his interest at a continuously high pitch.
Macaulay's book
seem
is
long, but he vigorously labors to
short. In his essay
on
history,
an early
effort,
make
it
Macaulay
had lamented the decline of the narrative genre and praised "the art of interesting the affections and presenting pictures to the imagination."
He
practiced that art by
moving the
story along with apt quotations, changes of pace,
16
and
finely
Macaulay noted in his diary that his declamatory disquisitions were a modern counterpart to the orations of the ancient historians. See Journal, December 10, 1850, in Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 547. 17 Macaulay, History of England [ix], in Works, 2:185-190, especially 187.
[112]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary contrived opening sentences, which point forward like arrows
"The
acquittal of the Bishops/' thus begins
Chapter
9,
"was
not the only event which makes the thirtieth of June 1688 a great epoch in history/'
18
Much
like
Ranke, he
likes to
hint at
what might have happened: recounting the trial of the seven bishops, which ended with their sensational acquittal, he observes, with disarming ingenuousness, "that they would be convicted it was scarcely possible to doubt." Stirred by the improbability of the actual outcome, the reader reads on.
Performing
all
Macaulay
these acrobatic rhetorical feats,
never forgets to be concrete. Following his
own
advice,
he
presents pictures to the imagination where later historians
might have offered footnotes, was scarcely
charts, or tables. In 1685,
a rural grandee/'
"There
he writes about the Tory op-
position to a standing army,
who
wrongs and insults suffered by himself, or by his father, at the hands of the parliamentary soldiers. One old Cavalier had seen half of his manor house blown up. The hereditary elms of another had been hewn down. A third could never go into his parish church without being reminded by the could not
tell a
story of
defaced scutcheons and headless statues of his ancestry, Oliver's redcoats
had once stabled
that
their horses there. 19
His declamatory disquisitions are models of concreteness,
and when Macaulay has nurses "It
its
details
was ten
a dramatic
with an experienced
o'clock.
The coach
moment
to relate,
storyteller's
he
affection.
of the Lieutenant of the
—
Tower was ready" 20 so begins his celebrated account of the execution of Monmouth. "When William caught sight of the 18 19
20
Macaulay, History of England Macaulay, History of England Macaulay, History of England
Works, 2:185. [iii], in Works, 1:230. [v], in Works, 1:486.
[ix],
in
Italics
mine.
STYLE valley of the
IN
HISTORY
Boyne, he could not suppress an exclamation
and gesture of delight" 21
—
so begins his equally celebrated
account of the battle of the Boyne. In tively
translates
even the
pictures that can be
Of
the old
baronial
fact,
Macaulay imagina-
social history of
comprehended without keeps
many had been
Chapter
3
into
effort:
shattered by the
cannon of Fairfax and Cromwell, and lay in heaps of ruin, overgrown with ivy. Those which remained had lost their martial character, and were now rural palaces of the aristocracy. The moats were turned into preserves of carp and pike. The mounds were planted with fragrant shrubs, through which spiral walks ran up to the summer houses adorned with mirrors and paintings. 22
Macaulay nobility,
is
here really analyzing the decline of the military
but the one long word in the passage
sable "aristocracy." Instead of bearing the
concepts, the reader can, as
it
is
the indispen-
burden of abstract
were, see the decline from the
martial to the pastoral, with the ivy on the ruins, the carp in the moats,
and the pictures on the
shrubs, he can even smell
walls.
With
the fragrant
it.
The Son
To
probe beneath these techniques to the feelings that underlie
them
is
to encounter expansiveness
ety, the first candid,
and
anxi-
even aggressive, the second con-
cealed and sublimated. Macaulay's versatility does not bespeak 21
22
Macaulay, History of England [xvi], in Works, 3:287. Macaulay, History of England [iii], in Works, 1:227.
[•Ml
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary incoherence; his style expresses the unity of his intentions and
though more reluctantly, the strenuousness of
Macaulay fervently wishes to
persuade by pleasing. This
Macaulay wrote
and
to please
a great deal,
his
—he
not
it is
to
make
book," he confided to his private notebook on
a tolerable
1854, "and
6,
the
ordering of
how
know how much
readers
little
the parts has
Whatever contrivance Macaulay chose and polished every phrase; he grants
23 the writer!"
cost
to adopt, his writing
He
emerges from an intense self-consciousness.
has wrought
not a
his reader
of the relief that stretches of plain writing
Thomas
and
just did
'What labour
wrestle with himself in public.
trouble
to persuade,
apparent ease of execu-
tion does not preclude continuing travail
February
his execution.
continuously hard work;
is
but
7
would provide.
Carlyle, himself scarcely a relaxed writer,
strenuousness plain. "Macaulay
is
saw
this
well for a while," he said
"but one wouldn't
in the late 1830s,
moment
live
have suggested, Macaulay
under Niagara." 24
While,
as
readers,
he does not pay them the ultimate compliment of
I
them make
letting
their
own
discoveries.
vincial hotel keeper of the old days,
to ask
Of
if
everything
is
and
—the
anxiety effects
inform first,
than
the
a
single
23
in
like a pro-
satisfactory.
Macaulay's
style
make up Macaulay's
—expansiveness
being more public in second,
Macaulay was expansive repetitiousness
Much
he constantly reappears
the two essential qualities that
temper
his style to his
fits
is
also
easier
its
origins
to
its
comprehend.
in a quite literal sense. If
adjoining sentences or
and
and
he avoided
monotony within
paragraph, he escaped neither vice in the longer
See Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 613.
from Commonplace Book. See Sir T. Wemyss Reid, The Life, Letters, and Friendships of Richard Monckton Milnes, First Lord Houghton, 2 vols. (1890), 2:478. 24 Extracts
[•15]
STYLE he
stretches:
HISTORY
IN
never content to report only once an irony
is
that amuses him, or an interpretation he
That James
owed
II
his
the
is
throne to the Anglican
he mistreated once he became king, that
first
to offer.
clerics
whom
was the seven-
it
teenth-century practice to blame the misconduct of rulers on evil counsellors, are
his readers
with the insistence of a nervous hostess.
aware, regretfully, that the historian
must
made
But when he
side of
he did not
err
on the
He
was
from the
select
profusion of the past, and so he bravely erred,
upon
observations that Macaulay presses
his choices.
economy.
Macaulay, indeed, lengthened his history by shortening time span. In 1838,
he wanted
it
when he began
to reach
from 1688
to think
25
about
it
its
seriously,
to 1832, beginning with the
Crown
''Revolution which brought the
into
harmony with
the Parliament," and ending with the "Revolution which
brought the Parliament into harmony with the nation." 26
When
he published the
later, this
first
volumes of the History ten years
grand harmonious design
"I propose to write the history of
sentence,
down
still
dominated
his
mind:
England," runs the opening
"from the accession of King James the Second
which
to a time
within the
is
memory
of
men
still
These two volumes were already gluttonous in their consumption of space: apart from the two introductory chapters, which provide a glance backward, they covered only three
living."
years, the reign of
James
II.
and most famous chapter
And Chapter
in these
vance chronology in any way; "No
picture
it
3,
the most original
two volumes, did not
ad-
provided an extensive survey
and no
history, can present us with the whole truth: but those are the best pictures and the best histories which exhibit such parts of the truth as most nearly produce the effect of the whole." Macaulay in the Edinburgh Review, May 1828, quoted in Sir Charles Firth, Commentary on Macaulay' s History, p. 19. 26
Macaulay
.
.
.
to Napier, July 20, 1838;
[116]
quoted
in Clive,
Macaulay,
p. 478.
— Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary
—population,
of English society
The
in the year 1685.
popular taste
cities, classes,
chapter was intimately relevant, and
drama that King James stands very much on its own,
in a sense introductory, to the political
was about to launch, 27 but as the partial fulfillment of
as
he said
in
it
Macaulay's commitment to
treat,
an introductory passage, more than "battles and
sieges" or the "rise
and
fall
of administrations."
He
proposed
to "relate the history of the people as well as the history of
the government, to trace the progress of useful and ornamental describe the rise of religious sects
arts, to
literary taste, to portray the
and not
to pass
this
and from the
among
manners of successive generations
dress, furniture, repasts,
ments." 28 In view of
which,
all
it
is
like
He
and public amuse-
commitment he made to perspective of modern social history ambitious
branches of history, has doubtless advanced
the most since Macaulay's day, Chapter
promise.
of
by with neglect even the revolutions which
have taken place in
his reader,
and the changes
returns to
its
3
did not
fulfill
his
chief preoccupations only rarely
an overture whose themes make only sporadic ap-
pearances in the opera for which
it
event, he did not live to balance
was written it
in
any
with a similar chapter
more recent
surveying England's society in
— and
times. It
is
not
complete, and far from adequately analytical, though, looking
backward instead of forward,
it
is
the occasional forays that David tory,
Hume made
and an advance beyond the
Voltaire had offered.
With
all
an immense leap beyond
its
brilliant failings,
into social hisintuitions
Chapter
3
that per-
mitted social history to become a serious discipline, and
27
The
political
forcefully stressed in
Macaulay's social history has been most an interesting pamphlet by Mark A. Thomson, Macaulay
relevance
of
(i959). 28 Macaulay, History of England
[i],
in
[117]
Works, 1:2-3.
STYLE the measure of
its
success
historians to raise— even
But whatever our this
IN is
HISTORY
the question
about the chapter
compelled
it
itself.
judgment, the point here
final
later
that
is
chapter did nothing to speed up the pace of Macaulay's
down. The great
suc-
and the enormous success of the two
vol-
History and served instead to slow
Chapter
cess of
umes with the revise his
3,
it
Macaulay
history-reading public, induced
scheme, and to study, with even greater diligence
than he had planned, the pamphlets and the battle the reign of William
volume
fifth
1861;
it
to
III.
He a
never got beyond his hero.
fragmentary account of the
days and the death in 1702 of as it was, the history retained
'When
to the end.
his
The
was published posthumously
of his History
concluded with
sites of
in
last
Dutch William. Incomplete
Macaulay's celebrated specificity
remains were laid out,
it
was found
that he wore next to his skin a small piece of black silk riband.
The
lords in waiting ordered
a gold ring
and
it
to
be taken
a lock of the hair of
off.
Mary/' 29
A
It
contained
history once
designed to span a century and a half had contracted, by ex-
panding, into a history covering every inch of seventeen years.
This was the reward, and the penalty, of expansiveness. Macaulay's expansiveness also set the tone of his History.
Lord Melbourne
is
reported to have said that he wished he
could be "as cocksure about anything as Macaulay everything,"
Walter
while
complained
Bagehot
is
about
that
in
Macaulay's writings 'You rarely come across anything which is
not decided.
.
.
."
This, he added,
was rapidly becoming familiar, tory."
Macaulay does seem
to
that tempts skeptical readers to
knows. 29 30
He
"is
making
a charge that
hardly the style for his-
know
—
everything
a posture
wonder how much he
describes the thoughts
and
really
feelings of his char-
Macaulay, History of England [xxv], in Works, 4:556. Both quoted in Firth, Commentary on Macaulay's History, pp. 54-55.
[118]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary acters as
1688
is
though he had been inside them: Sunderland
haunted by 'Visions of an innumerable crowd cover-
Tower
ing
in
Hill
and shouting with savage
of the apostate, of a scaffold
hung with
joy at the sight
Burnet
black, of
reading the prayer for the departing"; 31 William of Orange, reflecting
on the foreign policy of Louis XIV, "smiled
in-
wardly at the misdirected energy of his foe/' 32 Macaulay's sweeping, magisterial assertions tolerate no exceptions.
When
Mary of Modena, and Princess of Denmark down
the public learns that James IFs queen, is
pregnant,
"From
the Prince
and laundresses nobody alluded
to porters
birth without a sneer/' 33
to the
promised
Nobody? Macaulay the
historian
seems to be enjoying ubiquity
as well as omniscience.
This manner does Macaulay a as
Sir
was doubtless,
disservice. It
Charles Firth has observed, the secret of his public
success. It permitted
him
to realize,
and
greatly surpass, his
expressed ambition to "produce something which shall for a few days supersede the last fashionable novel
of
young
ladies."
authorities,
but
it
34
which has the same
principally addressing his work.
and of
tables
His cavalier and casual way of citing his origin,
may
did not trouble the reader to
simplicities
on the
his
liberal
novels and diaries and road
irritate
whom
the scholar,
Macaulay was
Yet the accuracy of allusions
to
his lofty
pamphlets and
maps was guaranteed by an im-
mense and voracious study of obscure sources, unpublished documents, and earlier historians. 35 Most writers have read less
than they get credit
for;
Macaulay had read more.
31
Macaulay, History of England [ix], in Works, 2:225. Macaulay, History of England [ix], in Works, 2:232. 33 Macaulay, History of England [viii], in Works, 2:121. 34 Quoted in Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 621. 35 For details, see Firth, Commentary on Macaulay' s History, chaps. 4, 5. Macaulay's critics, including Sir Leslie Stephen, readily acknowledged his diligence and his learning. 32
["9]
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
The confident manner was the way to the public's heart. The first two volumes .sold 13,000 sets in four months; volumes 36 In three and four, twice that number in half the time. about a quarter of a century, Longmans sold more than 140,000 sets of the History in Great Britain alone. This
meant an average twenty million of history,
He
—though
an unprecedented figure for a work
Macaulay reached
a relatively small reading public.
could therefore write for people he, in a sense, knew and
whom
to
of 6,000 sets a year for a population of over
he did not have
to explain everything,
he loved to explain everything. Popular
as
much though
he intended
his
History to be, he could presuppose relatively cultivated and
who caught literary allusions and
well-informed readers
histori-
instances without needing the prompting of a conde-
cal
scending footnote. But, while Macaulay found his general reading public im-
mensely supportive, a
narrow
his expansiveness rested, as it were,
social base.
triumphantly, he
made
Somewhat
uneasily, but, in the end,
himself a part of England's intellectual
aristocracy; his certainty, his sense that
on
on the surface so
he was on the right
unruffled, reflects
track, in the right place,
and
not alone. Macaulay could hear reassuring supportive echoes wherever he turned.
and is
He was
influential army, all of
a meritorious officer in a select
whose generals were
cousins. This
not a farfetched metaphor. In nineteenth-century England,
intellectual leadership families.
A
was the business of a few extended
few ramified clans translated the
classics,
edited
the journals, headed the colleges, reformed the schools, ad-
vanced the sciences, and wrote the laws. There was some circulation within this elite,
and much adroit renewal: the
leading families rarely let a promising recruit get away.
36
See Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 622.
[120]
They
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary co-opted him, or her, by marriage.
The
march
shock troops. 37
in
England, and these were
Thomas Babington Macaulay guard, carrying the
His
flag.
its
intellect
was on the
struggled to be in the van-
life
is
a splendid instance of
the careers open to the talented from the middling classes.
He came from
a respectable family of exemplary piety, with
few connections, and average income
been
less
absorbing,
Macaulay made racy,
his
its
—indeed,
had
its
piety
income would have been more ample.
way
into the favor of the
Whig
aristoc-
though not without qualms and hesitations, and was
created Baron Macaulay in 1857, for his literary attainments.
He remained
a bachelor,
but
beloved
his
ried Charles, later Sir Charles, Trevelyan,
a
distinguished
Charles'
son,
public servant
and
Hannah marwho was to become sister
civil
service
reformer.
Macaulay's nephew, George Otto, later
Sir
George, Trevelyan, became a fine modern historian and his uncle's
first
Macaulay Trevelyan, became right
named George famous historian in his own
biographer; Sir George's son, aptly a
and master of Trinity College, Cambridge, which
his
M. Trevelyan Mrs. Humphry Ward,
even more famous great-uncle had attended. G. married the daughter of the novelist
who was Matthew
Arnold's niece, thus joining the Macaulays
who,
to the Arnolds
in turn,
formed connections with the
Huxleys and the Penroses. It
was a clan but not a
individualists. fields
—
Many
of
sect, a brittle
troop of high-strung
them achieved eminence
in
their
in economics, in literature, in art criticism, in govern-
For the march of intellect, see R. K. Webb, The British Working Class Reader, 1790-1848: Literacy and Social Tension (1955), p. 13. About the intellectual aristocracy, discussed in this paragraph and below, I have learned much from Noel Annan, Leslie Stephen: His Thought and Character in Relation to his Time (1952), especially p. 3; and from Annan's splendid 37
essay,
to
"The
Intellectual Aristocracy," in Studies in Social History:
G. M. Trevelyan,
ed.
J.
H. Plumb (1955), pp. 241-287.
[12,]
A
Tribute
STYLE ment,
less in
HISTORY
IN
—and they
the church, but impressively in history
did not always agree.
Nor were they
and
Whigs
a foretaste of
of Macaulay's
him an immortality. Macaulay
But they
persuasion, or of any persuasion. intelligent audience
all
offered
longed for immediate popularity. But, sounding
he liked to
caress
in
his
mind
like Stendhal,
the applause of the ages:
"Corragio," he wrote in his Journal in 1850, "and think of a.d.
2850." 38 Unlike Stendhal though, Macaulay found his
public in his lifetime.
understanding of the public,
At home
in his
world, sure of the
and the approval of the
elite
Macaulay was naturally confident about
his
larger
work and
hopeful for the future.
That was the public Macaulay. There was also a private Macaulay, and he is far more elusive. 39 To the extent that his formal style was meant to protect, rather than express, his character,
when
it
style
gives his biographer little help
becomes
a
mask
the study of style reaches
limits,
its
his
Macaulay.
instead of being confident,
it is
at this point,
rather than remaining a face, that
becomes indispensable. Yet structive for the private
—
it
and independent evidence
style It
is
not wholly unin-
becomes
indiscreet
proclaims confidence.
when,
It gives
involuntary testimony with such favorite words as "voluptuary": he characterized himself,
if
unwittingly, in character•40
izing the Earl of Dorset as an "intellectual voluptuary."38 Journal, 39 It was
January 12, 1850, in Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 536. only after his nephew G.O. Trevelyan's masterly life and letters appeared in 1876 that the private side of Macaulay's temper first emerged. "No reader of Macaulay's works," notes Sir Leslie Stephen, "will be surprised at the manliness which is stamped no less plainly upon them than upon his whole career. But few who were not in some degree behind the scenes would be prepared for the tenderness of nature which is equally conspicuous." Stephen, "Macaulay," p. 343. "Manliness" is a term others also applied to him, including Trevelyan and Taine. 40 See Macaulay, History of England [viii], in Works, 2:129. For other 7
uses see
two passages
in
Chapter
9, in
Works, 2:193-194.
[122]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary Perhaps the best opening to the inner Macaulay I
is
the point
have already made: Macaulay was a performer anxious to
please.
Now,
addresses,
if
the person he wanted to please most, unconsciously,
all
the time,
is
Clive, in his penetrating biography of the
whom
he
John
his father.
young Macaulay,
both begins and concludes with the historian's father, and justly so.
Zachary Macaulay was prominent in what Sydney
Smith, the wit, called the
Clapham
sect, a
party of earnest
Evangelicals devoted to the religion of the heart and the
improvement of the world. William Wilberforce, the was
slavery agitator,
was small,
its
its
anti-
most famous member. The group
influence enormous.
The Claphamites
relied
on arguments that plain Christians, weary and suspicious of theological refinements, could understand: the experience of
conversion, the primacy of Scripture, the sincerity of belief,
They occupied strategic posts in English some were Members of Parliament; some were pros-
the need for action. society:
perous merchants; some, like Zachary Macaulay, were respected public servants.
Tom
sect, early familiar
and
early
in the
with the good, sober talk of
imbued wtih the heavy
was a precocious his
Macaulay grew up
midst of
men
this
of affairs
obligations of sainthood.
child, a notable prodigy, anxiously loved
mother, adored by his
sisters,
acquaintances. His father loved
and spoiled by
him
in his
He by
his astonished
own Claphamite
way; not without affection, he undertook to keep his son's
ego within bounds
—
it
would not do
for sinful Christians to
be proud.
The Claphamites' devout, unwearied quest for self-improvement entailed close and candid attention to the imperfections of others. This
was not cant or self-indulgence:
criticisms
were
unsparing but mutual, and to proffer them responsibly was
among
the Evangelicals' highest duties.
[123]
Young Macaulay
felt
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
the lash of paternal admonition
he did not dare
—and
to retaliate. In 1824, already a
Tom
too often. As an apprentice
might have smitten the
Evangelical, he a dutiful son,
all
Macaulay delivered
a
other's
in fact did not wish
young man
of great promise,
powerful oration against the
slave trade before the Society for the Mitigation
which
of Slavery, It
was
father
a great occasion; the
and Abolition
had founded the year
before.
Claphamites were there in
force,
member of the royal family consented to grace platform. The speech was a triumph, a foretaste of the
and even the
his
cheek; as
a
parliamentary speeches Macaulay would deliver only a few years later.
father
had
Applause was prolonged and enthusiastic, and the tears of pride in his eyes.
But
as
the two walked
home together, Zachary Macaulay told his son, "By the way, Tom, you should be aware that when you speak in the presence of royalty, you should not fold your arms." 41
That
this sort
of severity was hard for the father to sustain seems likely;
that a rebuff at such a
the son
is
as parental It
is
the
moment was
a devastating affront to
This was sadistic propriety masquerading
certain.
wisdom.
way
of the world that
those significant figures
whom
men
try hardest to please
they please the
victories bring little satisfaction; repeated failures
reiterated effort, to the
moment
least.
encourage
of ultimate gratification or
ultimate resignation. As Macaulay grew up, went to bridge,
and entered the world, he continued
father, to seek his elusive applause. After faith,
his
Macaulay moderated
father's sake,
his
Easy
he
Cam-
to pacify his
lost his religious
language in controversy for
stopped for a time sending contributions
to a high-spirited quarterly because 41
its
tone offended his father,
See Clive, Macaulay, p. 72. For a slightly different account of the dent, see the appendix in Trevelyan, Macaulay, pp. 721-722.
[124]
inci-
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary was desolated when he
failed in
mathematics
because he feared his father's reproaches
husband
event, begged her
Even
while.
he was
after
Cambridge
—
his mother, in
any
to spare the son at least for a
he had been
in his thirties,
at
in politics for
some
when
years,
Macaulay would take positions
in
which
he did not quite believe because he hoped they would make
He
Zachary Macaulay happy.
Hannah
his sister
felt
in 1831, that
himself fortunate, he told
he had managed to soften
ambition "into a kind of domestic feeling/' This, he wrote,
owe
"I
to
my
always took in
dear mother, and to the interest which she
my
childish successes.
the gratification of those
with the gratification of
From my
whom I love my own thirst
two have become inseparably joined letter tile
It
has been associated for fame, until the
my
in
demonstrates that with Macaulay,
earliest years,
as
mind." 42 This
with others, infan-
patterns survived, suitably transmogrified, in the man.
makes plain that among
was easy to
please.
What
his intimate audience, his it
leaves unsaid
is
mother most
that the
important target of his desperate anxiety was his father.
One was
powerful ingredient in Macaulay's inner
his yearning for his father's approval.
life,
then,
Another ingredient,
quite as powerful, was his passionate love for two of his
younger
Hannah and Margaret. Even remembering effusiveness of much nineteenth-century cor-
sisters,
the unbridled
respondence, the profuse employment of extravagant epithets,
and the easy equating of
affection
with love,
we cannot
escape the conclusion that Macaulay's feelings for his
were extraordinary in essence.
and
his
48
He
their
called his love for
intensity
them
and
erotic
his "greatest
"strongest feeling"; he addressed
their
enjoyment"
Hannah
42
July 6, 1831, quoted in Trevelyan, Macaulay, pp. 165-166.
43
See Clive, Macaulay, p. 267.
[125]
in
sisters
as
"my
STYLE dear
my
girl,
told her
my
sister,
how he
HISTORY
IN
darling
—my own sweet
and
friend/'
pined "for your society, for your voice, for
your caress." While he bravely steeled himself for the inevitable
day that
his sisters
would marry, when they did, he
suffered
bouts of depression resembling breakdowns; in the midst of his gratifying political activities
and arduous
legal labor,
he
wept, professed that his heart was broken, and declared that,
when Hannah married
Trevelyan, "the work of
twenty years" had "vanished in This
is
not the voice of a
but of one bor.
To
aim
its
who
if
man
—
has steered his sexuality into a sheltered har-
—
it
was a love inhibited in
one was Byron. But why should
unless, of course,
gratifying
month." 44
deficient in sexual passion,
love one's sister was safe;
Macaulay pour
—
a single
more than
kind of ungratified
his passion into this
all
incest?
At
this point, conjecture
must supply
the want of adequate evidence. Macaulay' s love for his father
was a prolonged of an
impregnable
fortress
his
punctuated by desertions from
by "idle reading," and by sloppy
so impossible a task, Significantly,
but protracted siege
strain, the intermittent
sister
Hannah
recalled later
Macaulay's faults "were peculiarly those that
no patience with." 45 for
mother included
his
gression;
lavish
On
large
portions
intimate care during illnesses he
father that
it
father
that
had
his share,
but
emerged most
44
of
voluptuous
re-
the motherly touch, her
recall
sake of her closeness. 46 Ambivalence
his
my
life
the other hand, Macaulay's love
he would fondly
and Macaulay had
in
attire.
it
is
welcomed
for
the
the lot of humanity,
was
visibly,
in his relation to
though
rarely into
For these passages, see Clive, Macaulay, pp. 266-272, 281, 284-285. See Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 48; William A. Madden, "Macaulay's Style," in The Art of Victorian Prose, ed. George Levine and William Madden (1968), p. 15m. 46 On this point see Clive, Macaulay, p. 34. 45
[126]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary open consciousness. Behind the screen of the was rage and,
affection there
Another
son's poignant
think, rivalry.
I
bit of evidence adds
mosaic of Macaulay's character:
the
a significant piece to
his volubility.
a great talker, and, like other great talkers, a
was given to one-sided conversations and
Macaulay was
bad
listener.
He
rapid-fire delivery.
Sydney Smith was once asked how he had spent the night.
"Oh, I
my
horrid, horrid,
was chained to
a rock
dear fellow!" he replied. "I dreamt
and being talked
to death
Martineau and Macaulay/' 47 Others had
When
waking hours.
their
on Macaulay
in the History,
in his journal that
Quakers waited
48
of easy jokes,
Macaulay complacently noted
he had completely routed them: "They
had absolutely nothing literally.
a delegation of
nightmare in
to protest against his malicious caricature of
William Penn
take
this
to say," a
remark we are entitled to
But the compulsive is
a
wounded
talker,
though the target
being, driven by his neurosis
either to blurt out dreadful secrets, or to get in a
wise before he
is
interrupted.
I
to him. His offerings in despair,
word edge-
would suggest that the
orator was unconsciously terrified that
and half
by Harriet
no one was
had been spurned and
great
listening
so, half in
hope
he made them over and over again. The
only arena in which Macaulay could permit himself to be a voluptuary
47
p.
was
See R. K.
in the
Webb,
realm of the
Harriet
intellect.
Martineau:
A
Victorian Radical
(i960),
11. 48 Firth,
owe
Commentary on Macaulay' s
this malicious
History, 272-273, to which
reading of Macaulay's words.
[127]
I
also
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
The Liberal Macaulay, psychological needs and
Forhappily coincided. No one wholly escapes least of all
Macaulay.
What loomed
social
realities
his early past,
large for
Macaulay
the young boy, and what was symbolized by the heroic stature of his pious and exigent father, was the Evangelicalism of the
Clapham
As
sect.
he extricated
his religious beliefs faded, as
himself from the mire of biblicism, he retained the energy of the Claphamites, their detestation of evil desire to aid
good
history as a
combat between two
and
their
solemn
causes. In fact, his dramatic perception of clearly delineated
forces
translated the Evangelicals' view of things into secular terms. Similarly, to celebrate progress in history,
and
to insure
49
its
future advance, was to translate early injunctions into mature
conduct.
Such
translations are
commonly
called a secular religion,
most
in-
congruous phenomena, merits the historian's suspicion.
A
but
which has been used
this term,
to explain the
fervent conviction that emerges after a religious belief has
gone may be
its
functional replacement;
it
may
give the sense
of exaltation, the certainty of salvation, or the pleasure of ritual that the
now
discarded faith once gave. But the two
may be independent
of one another; and, even
psychological equivalents,
which half of the term phasis. Normally,
secular has
49
Amid
its
it is
own
it
remains a
secular or religion
religion that has
claims.
What may
they are
question just
—deserves
em-
borne the weight. But
matter
is
not that a set
G. M. Young, Victorian England: Portrait of 1953), retains its vitality on this and many other matters.
a large literature,
an Age (2nd edn.,
difficult
if
[128]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary of convictions resembles, or even replaces, a religion with irrational tenacity
and
its
its
resistance to empirical evidence, but
that
it
permits a scientific appraisal of the world. Seculariza-
tion
is
never a small step. 50
With Macaulay, certainly, the emphasis must be on the adjective. The precise contours of his religious views have not been
fully
but he obviously detested
traced,
enthusiasm, rejected miracles and the
literal
religious
inspiration or
even the symbolic supremacy of the Bible, and softened the stern doctrine of original sin into the anthropological
monplace of human his beliefs
fallibility.
—understandably
so.
Macaulay was
The
com-
reticent about
coarse candor and wide-
spread freethinking of the eighteenth century had been placed, decades before the accession of Victoria, by a
emphasis on respectability and
among
a
re-
new
measure of public piety
the ruling orders. It was not until 1858, the year before
Macaulay's death, that the House of
member
Commons
—Lionel de Rothschild—unable
admitted a
to take the oath, pre-
viously required, that he was a Christian.
And
it
was only
in
the following year that Darwin's shattering Origin of Species
Before
appeared.
common
then
it
had been neither prudent nor
to profess oneself an agnostic, let alone an atheist,
and even
later
it
remained
rare.
Lacking public professions,
must depend on the tenor of his philosophical remark and that one
the student of Macaulay
work, and on a rare
marginal
—that
—
has been drafted to do heavy duty for the
understanding of Macaulay: "But," the eighteenth-century skeptic Conyers
Middleton had written,
think freely; to practise what 50
my
is
"if to live strictly
and
moral and to believe what
is
"Rhetorics and Politics in the French Revolution," in Peter Gay, The Party of Humanity: Essays in the French Enlightenment (1964), pp. 162-187, especially pp. 165-170. As my late friend Henry L. Roberts once wrote: "It must be admitted that a 'secular religion' is not an altogether obvious entity." Russia and America (1956), p. 19.
See
essay
[129]
STYLE
be consistent with the sincere profession of Christi-
rational, anity,
then
sors."
Underlining the
I
"Haec
note,
HISTORY
IN
myself like one of
shall acquit
critical
passage,
pher amounted to
was
and
truest profes-
Macaulay added
est absoluta et perfecta philosophi vita."
Macaulay, then, the absolute and perfect
practice
its
strict
living
and
rational belief. If that
a Christian.
But
not, and,
it is
life
free
For
of the philoso-
thinking,
moral
Macaulay
Christianity,
is
a
reasonable to conclude,
it is
neither was Macaulay. 51
While Macaulay did not make a god of God, he did not make a god of progress either. His confidence in progress was grounded
optimism.
in realities that offered daily tributes to
Whether one accepted Macaulay's definition of what constitutes progress or not, few even among devout and sophisticated Christians desirable.
—had
—
any question that progress
And once one
is
accepted his definition, there could
be no doubt that the evidence Macaulay's
itself
for progress
style fits into this progress
was overwhelming.
The
with ease.
ampli-
tude of his periods, his accumulative prose, aptly mirrors the
improvements
all
time for reading. gests
around him.
It
Its
very leisureliness
breathes and presupposes opulence. It sug-
comfortable chairs, warming
China
tea, efficient servants,
dends.
In
this
demands
expansive
Macaulay's History a
expensive slippers,
long weekends, and high
divi-
money was
and
culture,
fitting
fires,
companion
time,
to the long novel,
52 For Macaulay, the the long poem, and the long dinner.
r>1
The
passage from Middleton has been
much
quoted;
I
am
citing
it
from
add that Macaulay when challenged at a public meeting at Leeds, angrily told his questioners, "Gentlemen, I am a Christian." Trevelyan, Macaulay, p. 204. My interpretation stands. 52 Taine was moved to similar metaphors. "Seated in an arm chair, with our feet on the fender, we see little by little as we turn over the leaves of ." History of the book, an animated and thoughtful face arise before us. English Literature, trans. H. van Laun (1873), p. 627.
Clive, Macaulay, p. 489.
It
is
fair
to
.
h3°]
.
— Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary message of progress was more than a psychological weapon, it
was also a report on contemporary
history.
Macaulay was not wholly naive about the
signs of the times.
G. M. Young has called him an Augustan, 53 and the implicahe was,
tion that
much
as in his
speaking and writing, a son of the eighteenth century,
style of is
in his style of thinking as
highly suggestive. In decisive ways, Macaulay was not a
beginning but an end. But he was heir to more than the
He was
English Augustans.
Western En-
heir also to the
lightenment, both in his belief in progress and in his reserve.
The
philosophes, as
I
my
noted in
essay
on Gibbon,
sur-
with caution, and believed that
rounded
their confidence
progress
must somehow be paid
for.
Macaulay
his speeches, his essays, his History, that it
is
all
reiterated, in
better to be
cultivated than barbaric, better to live in cities than in hovels,
better to religion.
have the truths of science than the fancies of
But "rude"
ages,
candor and spontaneity sipate.
he acknowledged, had advantages
— that advanced cultures
Gains to reason meant
forward march of civilization forever.
traveler
54
A new
may
visit
is
losses
not
tend to
dis-
And
the
poetry.
for
likely to
go on unchecked
may come, and some future now the monuments of Western
barbarism
what
are
greatness to see only their ruins.
But these were shadows bright. life,
As Macaulay
in a
insists in his
despite grievous setbacks,
ing. In the
Macaulay
panoramic picture
famous peroration
essentially
History and often elsewhere,
had improved and to
Chapter
proffers this conviction in the
53
3
is
improv-
of his History,
most concentrated
Young, Victorian England, p. 8n. John Clive rejects this designation, as I do, though for other reasons; he sees Macaulay as being far more sympathetic to the Romantics than has generally been acknowledged. Clive, Macaulay, p. 79. 54 See above, p. 50; and Clive, Macaulay, pp. 77-78, 107.
[131]
STYLE He
form.
HISTORY
IN
deplores the inclination to imagine "the England of
the Stuarts as a
which we
live."
more pleasant country than the England in Nostalgia is human; it springs from mankind's
we
"natural impatience of the state in which
which disposes us times.
to
we were
because, "if
source
a
is
of bygone
the happiness
exaggerate
This very discontent
actually are,"
improvement,
of
perfectly satisfied with the present,
we
should cease to contrive, to labour, and to save with a view to the future." Yet, natural as
mirage.
nostalgia
it is,
Minds have softened and matured; and
extirpated teachers,
and
life
jailers
is
an
illusion, a
diseases have
has been lengthened; fathers, husbands,
have grown
far
more humane; games and
politics alike are infinitely less coarse
under Victoria than they
had been under William. Most impressive, the poor in
number and
been
are fewer
better off than ever before. "Every class doubt-
has gained largely by this great moral change: but the
less
class
which has gained most
is
the poorest, the most de-
pendent, and the most defenceless." 55
Much
as
Macaulay loved the
knew them, he found himself
classics,
in the
and intimately
camp
of the
whatever battles the ancients and moderns were
He
derided
the
fashion
of
praising
as
he
moderns
in
still
ancient poets
fighting.
simply
because they were ancient, and he invidiously compared the poetry of Plato with the philosophy of Bacon. Indeed, Bacon was, in Macaulay's eyes, a decisive turning point in history.
He had
mankind
to
human
created a system of thought that permitted
glimpse the power of practical thought
unlimited potential of reason, reasonably employed, to
not just a
life
5
">
little prettier
Macaulay, History of England
Works, 6:135-245,
make
but a great deal better. In a vast
views, see "Southey's Colloquies," in in
—the
Works,
332-333. For similar Works, 5:330-368; and "Lord Bacon,"
[iii],
in
1:
especially the second, analytical half of the essay.
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary essay
on Bacon
—almost
a
book
—that added up
to over 50,000
more the benefits of health, faster communica-
words, Macaulay in 1837 rehearsed once true philosophy: longer tions, in short, greater
life,
better
power over nature.
Macaulay cheerfully acknowledged the
materialistic edge
to this kind of appraisal. Bacon's philosophy principally benefited
what
side
of
cultivated
life.
promising
It
men
were pleased to disdain
—or
improved existence without producing
—Utopia.
It
sustained the body, even
if it
perfect the spirit. Yet, as the essay itself testifies,
by no means underestimated the force of the it
industrial revolutions. But, fond as
engine.
But there
the Stoics
is
and
Macaulay was of the
father,
man
of the
than a steam-
a grander object
are steam-engines.
yet to be born."
Macaulay
scientific
he was even fonder of the offspring. "The wise
no doubt, be
did not
spirit: after all,
was Bacon's philosophy that had fathered the
Stoics would,
low
as the
And
the wise
man
His choice of metaphor
anything but accidental; Macaulay,
far
the machine, unhesitatingly celebrates
of is
from being afraid of
it.
He
recognized and
welcomed the transforming power of the railway; its fatal impact on the stagecoach and its invasion of the English landscape did not give him pause. If it had harmful effects, they were consequent not upon the invention of the machine but
upon the unregulated activities of the financiers; Macaulay spoke in behalf of governmental regulation of the rather
railways in order to protect a national asset.
56
Surveying the
Macaulay compared it unfavorsystem a system more modern, more
archaic English legal system,
ably with the industrial
—
aesthetically satisfying than the antique
which Englishmen were 56
Speech on the Ten Hour
especially
tried Bill,
in
May
362.
[133]
jumble of
court. 22,
"Can
rules
under
there be
a
1846, in Works, 8:360-376,
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
stronger contrast/' he asked rhetorically, "than that which
between the beauty, the completeness, the speed, the precision with which every process is performed in our facexists
and the awkwardness, the rudeness, the slowness, the
tories,
uncertainty of the apparatus by which offenses are punished
and right vindicated?" 57
No wonder
Macaulay should
find
the Great Exhibition of 1851 dazzling and exceedingly roman-
no wonder that Ruskin should
tic;
But glorious and palpable not find
it
be automatic.
to
Evangelical that liberal that
be
men
was
He
joined the
is
the
name
demand
this principled posture, rather
Whig:
to remain."
Macaulay did
made Macaulay proudly
con-
Whig;" he
told
"I entered public life a
Whig
am
I
deter-
But he immediately added that he used
"in no narrow sense." It defined, not loyalty to a
or a favorite statesman, not even to a party for
sake,
but to a set of values that
rule,
corrupt politics, religious intolerance,
were
all
unmitigated
some
ture of the
evils,
this party
and
it
regrettable lapses,
characteristic vein,
Whigs
for the past
was the Whigs who had, opposed them
Whig
In his
And now,
Stuarts,
and the Hanoverians, the Whigs remain the
Whigs
as
is
pos-
the knot
policy together
humane
"To
all.
two centuries and more; the
string of
endeavor.
own
inhumane laws
Macaulay enumerates the progressive
that securely holds the pearls of
their purpose:
its
embodied. Arbitrary
phrase "It was that party/' uttered seven times,
57
can
it
than social
book
despite
of the
necessary but
the electors at Edinburgh in 1839, "and a
mined
naive.
should do good to the confidence of the
origins or social ambition, that
himself a
Macaulav
as progress was,
they can do good: effort
effective. It
fess
find
on
under Elizabeth, the faithful to
of the nineteenth century
Speech on Parliamentary Reform, June
[*34]
5,
a
1831, in Works, 8:32.
we
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary owe
that the
it
House
Commons
of
The
has been purified.
abolition of the slave trade, the abolition of colonial slavery,
the extension of popular education, the mitigation of the rigour of the penal code,
and of that
party,
I
all, all
repeat,
I
were effected by that party;
am
member." 58
a
It
was
elec-
tioneering talk of this sort, which he blithly imported into his essays
Stephen
and into passages of
to observe that
Whig, but fools/'
pretty
his History, that
moved
Macaulay "was not only
much convinced
that
all
Leslie
a thorough
but Whigs were
59
For the debater and reformer,
for the historian it presented pitfalls
pelled Macaulay,
mitigate as only
had
this stance
advantages;
its
hard to avoid.
com-
It
much against his conscious intention, to human the failings of those he admired
while he pilloried as detestable the failings of those he detested.
60
His historical sympathy was by no means always
dormant; on
many
occasions
susceptibility to paradox,
made him
notice
liberal
his
sense
of
justice,
and sheer immensity of information
what he might have
liked to overlook. His
long essay on Bacon, for one, dwells with almost painful relish
on Bacon's cruelty and corruption, and excuses them
not one
bit.
device from
Yet often enough
(to
Mommsen) Macaulay
perception that the
New
borrow an anachronistic falls
into the error
York Times detected
in
its
of cor-
respondents covering the Republican Convention of 1952, 58 59
Speech at Edinburgh, May 29, 1839, in Works, 8:158-159. "Macaulay, Thomas Babington," in Dictionary of National Biography
(edn., 1949), 12:411. 60
At the same time, Macaulay found
historians
—other
historians
—who
were "advocates" thoroughly unsatisfactory on that ground. He criticized Hume as an "accomplished advocate," and he used this term of opprobrium for a practice he himself was guilty of: extenuating the failings of his own -
side
and
exercising great severity against the other.
on Macaulay' s History,
p. 23.
I>35]
See Firth,
Commentary
STYLE when
HISTORY
IN
they regularly called the managers of Eisenhower's
campaign the "Eisenhower organization/' and the managers of Taft's
campaign the "Taft machine/' The Whigs were
Macaulay's Eisenhower, the Tories his Taft.
Whiggism
the entire range of Macau-
left its tracks across
At the very time that Ranke was proclaiming the historicist principle that would oblige historians to see every epoch as equally close to God, Macaulay saw the past partly as a prologue to the present, a time to lay's historical exploration.
away from and improve upon. What imperiled his historical work was not so much that he made partisan moral
get
judgments, but that he
once again, for distance
it is
and
and, as a drama,
made moral judgments
at
Yet,
all.
important to recognize Macaulay's capacity
The
objectivity. it
was interesting
past was a moral drama, for
its
own
sake.
No
reader
of his history can miss his noble, and often strikingly success-
himself to the seventeenth century,
ful,
efforts to transport
and
to take his readers with
again,
and
Macaulay
assesses
served,
visualizes events
them with
torian reader,"
him on
its
his voyage.
through the eyes of the past
standards. "Like Macaulay's Vic-
one recent student of Macaulay's
"what we remember when we
memorable
style has ob-
finish the
'going back,' the displacement in time,
events the most
Again and
aspects of
and the
book
is
re-living of
which have
This
testimonial
to
Macaulay's
valuable precisely because
from 61
a critic
intel-
61
history-mindedness
displacement in time and reliving of events is
to
little
do with the history of England's material, moral, and lectual progress."
the
it
is
—
for
precisely that
forms part of an indictment,
convinced that Macaulay's way of "losing himself
Madden, "Macaulay's
Style," p.
150.
[136]
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary in the past"
is
the product of a psychological malaise, the
studied avoidance of troubling emotional problems which
Macaulay "chose not driven by
demons
confront." 62
to
That Macaulay was
of denial, that his style functioned
other things as a suit of armor against intolerable a proposition to which
But we cannot have
it
much
have devoted
I
both ways:
realities, is
of this essay.
used to take what
critics
they considered Macaulay's present-mindedness as a
now
of his political passions; critics are
Whether Whig
or neurotic, Macaulay,
This has been so for a long time;
it
of his fear of
life.
seems, cannot win.
back
as far
symptom
taking what they
symptom
consider his past-mindedness as a
among
as
Gladstone,
readers have taken Macaulay's style as a mirror of his defects
rather than of his virtues.
63
submit that a more generous estimate
I
would be more
just.
Macaulay,
I
is
possible
was right to think
think,
of himself as something better than a professional
He
was, in the largest sense of that difficult
liberal.
Whig.
modern word,
with
to his decency. all his
pation,
The
considerable dialectical
removal of Jewish
—Catholic
emanci-
educational
reform,
skills
disabilities,
time of hesitation and
instruction, state intervention in setting limits to the
—were
testa-
causes he stood for and supported
intellectual liberty, and, after a
day
a
His parliamentary speeches, his essays, insofar as they
touch on such matters, and his History, are a voluble
ment
and
causes characteristic for a
humane and
self-
working
generous-
149, 151. George Levine agrees: "He violating any of the canons of truthfulness, and he dwelled in the unreal world all the time he argued the superiority of the real world from which he was retreating." Levine, The 62
Madden, "Macaulay's Style," pp. converted history into romance without
Boundaries of Fiction: Carlyle, Macaulay, Newman (1968), p. 158. 63 Gladstone thought that Macaulay's style was a "mirror which reflects the image of himself," lacking perspective, balance, and breadth. See Madden, "Macaulay's Style," p. 127.
[137]
STYLE
IN
minded man. Like many
HISTORY Macaulay was
liberals in his time,
prone to bouts of hysteria over the threat of red socialism, but his fears did
not compel him to repudiate the causes in which
he believed; they simply confirmed pulse, to
work
for the timely
his earliest political im-
and far-reaching reforms that
would make revolution unnecessary. Macaulay's proverbial
the
clarity deserves
same complex
response. It was in part a sign of superficiality, in part evi-
dence
for his inability to grasp the tragic
in part the didactic streak that urged
him
least as a historian, his principal task
understand. But
and obfuscation,
it
was
dimension to teach
in things,
when,
at
should have been to
a sign also of his impatience with cant
his desire to get to the
bottom
at least of
those things that he recognized to be deep. It expressed the
expansive energy that characterized the age in which he lived. I
am
style
not arguing, with so many, that the vices of Macaulay's
were
his
own,
its
virtues the virtues of his age. In
both
the historian and the age, virtues and vices were thoroughly intermingled. energetic,
But that he should have been
and opulent
is
venial rather than mortal,
scarcely vicious.
clear,
hopeful,
His gravest
sin,
complacency, and he had some
is
reason even for that.
We see more deeply now than Macaulay,
but then our world
is
style
is
a far sadder place
than
a style as inappropriate to our time as
priate to his
is
a reflection far less
[138]
on
his
his. it
That
his
was appro-
time than on ours.
4
Burckhardt The Poet
of Truth
The Condottiere An
/A JL
old anecdote (one of those that
everywhere true) describes
jL narrator
in the strategic
is
nowhere and yet
roughly as follows. "
The
Jacob Burckhardt; the old anecdote appears
opening section of
in Italien; the situation
dence of Italian
it
is
rulers
it
on
his
describes
is
Kultur der Renaissance the anomalous depen-
their hired soldiers of fortune, the
condottieri.
Once
the burghers of a city— apparently Siena
who had freed them from foreign how to reward him, and concluded
is
meant— had
a
They consulted
general
pressure.
daily
that no reward they
had
power was great enough, not even if they made him lord of the city. At last one of them rose and suggested, "Let us kill him and then worship him as the patron saint of the city." And in their
that,
we
are told,
senate did with
nirgends so:
how they dealt with him, much as the Roman Romulus— Eine alte Anekdote, von jenen, die
is
und dock
uberall
wahr
sind, schildert dasselbe ungefahr
Einst hatten die Burger einer Stadt—es
soil
Siena gemeint
sein—einen Feldherrn, der sie von feindlichem Druck befreit hatte; taglich berieten sie, wie er zu belohnen sei und urteilten, keine Belohnung, die in ihren Kraften stande, ware gross genug, selbst nicht, wenn sie ihn zum Herrn der Stadt machten. Endlich erhob y
sich einer
und meinte, "Lasst uns ihn umbringen und dann [141]
als
STYLE anbeten."
Stadtheiligen
HISTORY
IN
Und
so
man
sei
mit ihm verfahren,
ungefahr wie der rbmische Senat mit Romulus. 1
This chilling story
which ingenuity alone
a mental world in city fathers are
sudden horrifying glimpse into
offers a
not just cruel or cynical
moral constraints. But the story also
— they
These are
Italian
beyond
offers a glimpse,
who
relates
sixteenth-century
it.
Burckhardt's source
"Roman
diary/' a
is
all
puzzling
than horrifying, into the mental world of the
rather torian
rules.
his-
Stefano Infessura's
compendium
of rumors,
historical dates, eyewitness reports, written partly in Latin,
partly
in
Italian,
litany
a
of
treaty
breaking,
treacherous
promises of safe-conduct, poisoned dinners, of unrelieved,
At the time Burckhardt chose to quote curious document, he was a mature and responsible
lighthearted slaughter. this
scholar, occupying a respected chair of history at the Univer-
And
sity of Basel.
a
it
was
a
work of history he was
writing, not
romance; he was reporting on a voyage of exploration un-
precedented for cultural history, and, precisely because of his
he needed to be cautious. The
daring,
hardt practically copied,
down
which Burck-
to the formula indicating
sunt qui dicunt—is, in
be hearsay
story,
all'
it
to
likelihood, a traditional
topos illustrating the lengths to which man's ingratitude can go.
2
Burckhardt was ready to admit that
strictly true,
but rather,
an archetypal anecdote.
as his reference to
Why
undependable, an informant as
That blinking
is
the
—
I
first
employ
might not be
Romulus
indicates,
so tainted, or at least,
this?
question this story
am tempted
it
raises.
Burckhardt's un-
to say, affectionate
—report
on
its
Jacob Burckhardt, Die Kultur der Renaissance in Italien: Ein Versuch, ed. Walter Goetz (1925), pp. 21-22; [The Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy: An Essay, trans. S. G. C. Middlemore, 1878 (ed. L. Goldscheider, 1
1945), pp. 13-M]. 2 See Stefano Infessura, Diario della Citta di
(1890),
p.
105.
[142]
Roma,
ed. Oreste
Tommasini
The Poet
Burckhardt:
of Truth
A
imaginative sadism raises a second question.
historian's
choice of subject, and even more, his handling of
deeply emotional ally
affair.
be in eliminating
initia l selection
and
However
successfu l he
may
a
eventu-
person from his conclusions, his
his
strategic
approaches are part of his
p rivate biography There are times, to be .
principally responses
is
it,
m ost
when they
sure,
are
the wishes of a professor or the
to
blandishments of a publisher. But in general, the character of the historian and the character of his history stand in an intimate,
reason
if
why
subterranean, relationship. There
is,
of course,
no
they need to be identical twins; the historian's
identification with his material
may be
the candid salute of
recognizing his like or the involuntary expression of an un-
conscious
affinity. It
a sinner dwelling
on
may
also
be a compensation or a wish:
purity, a servant
on masters.
Certainlv with Burckhardt, the contrast between the extravagant violence on which he concentrates and the sober
moderation of
his
life
Outwardly, at
striking.
is
least,
his
existence was tranquil, securely circumscribed. Jacob Burck-
hardt was, except for his genius, a typical Swiss patrician.
was born in Basel in 1818, he died in Basel
in 1897, an94]
On of these
is
Style in History
known than
better
the second, but
ting out. It holds that the study of style
is
world
And
as their historical world.
style that supplies the
set-
a study in limitations.
Clearly, like other historians, these four masters torical
worth
still
saw the
clearly, it
most incriminating evidence
his-
their
is
for their
ineradicable, unconscious parochialism.
Gibbon the
Ranke the
Burckhardt the poet
—each
believer,
Macaulay the
of these looked
liberal,
on the past from
which only partly intersected that of the
ironist,
his angle of vision
others.
This sweeping skepticism, which questions the very possibility of objective history, finds
theory of perception that
sustenance in a well-known
the psychological counterpart of
is
the sociological theory of false consciousness. It lar
with historians
—
largely,
I
suspect, because
from the imputation of naivete. perception
is
largely projective,
Its
it
is
very popu-
rescues
them
proponents argue that
and motivation determinative
of results. Notions like the ''innocent eye," they insist, or
mind
of the
as a passive
and accurate camera, are nothing
better than misconceived metaphors, the delusions of simple-
minded
positivists or equally
perception
Goethe
is
a
construction;
said long ago)
is
simpleminded
Realists.
the simplest observation
(as
already a theory. Facts are never
they are impregnated with value judgments.
neutral;
Every
The
child hears not just a sound, but a loving or a scolding voice;
the adult looking at a painting translates lines
and
reality.
its
two-dimensional
colors into a representation of three-dimensional
Reinforcing the pressures of social location or cultural
presuppositions, the accidents of time
and place and
create mental sets that act like so
many
What
affiliation
distorting lenses.
same time to act; the historian studies the past that he may influence, no matter how modestly, the world around and the world within is
more, to observe and to
l>95]
reflect are at the
STYLE him.
The
HISTORY
IN
control he seeks
may be no more than
a reassuring sense of familiarity or
hope
self-control,
in a bewildering or
threatening environment. But his historical inquiries, like inquiries, are always the response to
all
some need, and always built into his most prim-
some purpose; interest is itive acts of perception and appears in suitably disguised form in his most urbane presentations. And the evidence for this position is ample and seems irrefutable: different reports on the same realities, different interpretations of the same events, directed to
and, as always, different styles.
In sharp contrast, the natural sciences, this line of argu-
ment
goes on, have discarded their biases in the course of their
triumphant
career; rising
above
class or
nation or anthropo-
morphism, they have gained distance with
their repeatable
experiments, falsifiable theories, and dispassionate vocabulary.
Whatever the metaphysical
status of the realities the scien-
— and philosophers the question — natural tist
studies
of science continue to debate
scientists
their counter readings,
and
have their chemical analyses,
their
mathematical formulas. In
the midst of such wealth (to recall Ranke's saying from a
He may have information no reasonable critic will dispute: he may know the precise date of a battle or the correct wording of a charter. He has different context) the historian
is
poor.
him
techniques, often quite sophisticated, enabling forgeries
and make jumbled numbers
intelligible.
to expose
The
prestige
of natural science continues to haunt his waking dreams.
Like the natural
main
scientist, the historian also
of certainty.
But
it is
pitifully small.
true stories, but there are so story that the very historian's
meaning
strategies
of
many ways of "the
exposition
He
aspires to tell
of telling the
same" are
governs his do-
is
all,
imperiled.
same
The
consciously
or
unconsciously, strategies of persuasion. Style, therefore, just
[196]
On because
it
the
is
distinction,
is
Style in History
mark
and
of the historian's distinctiveness
also the proof of his
unconquerable subjectivity.
This pessimistic assessment of the historian's claim to
been the stock-in-trade of historiography,
objectivity has long
which,
as
I
have suggested,
argument that historians it
is
are
justifies
existence with the
its
doomed
to limited perspectives;
the wrestling with these limits, the offering of new,
be
larger interpretations that prove to
give the writing of history
history.
There
is
nothing very
In perceiving their task to be the
bold about this view. analysis
its
limits in turn, that
of perspectives, historiographers have drifted with
prevailing currents in the theory of knowledge. For over centuries,
epistemologists
two
have been propelled by an un-
masking animus; they have been intent on exposing the unchallenged prejudices, the unrecognized preconceptions, the
comfortable ignorance built into the pursuit, and concealed in the very possibility, of knowledge. This critical current was usually
on
one-sided,
classical
combative,
sources,
it
rose
polemical.
with
Though
it
the antitheological
drew
and
antimetaphysical crusade of the Enlightenment, and crested in the sociology of
Marx, the epistemology of Nietzsche, and
the ontology of the historicists. Since the mid-nineteenth century,
have reiterated that progressive historians
historians
write progressive history history,
and
and bourgeois
that, like their controlling assumptions, the style
of these historians
is
the expected, indeed the inescapable,
style of their party or their class.
their
historians bourgeois
skeptical
And
epistemology with a
they have reinforced
relativist
metaphysics,
questioning the* objective existence of facts as distinct from the historian
who
interprets them. Historical facts, Carl Becker
wrote, are not out there, in the world of the past, but in here, in the
mind
of the historian.
And
[197]
the popular conclusion has
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
been summarily put by E. H. Carr: "The
belief in a
hard
core of facts existing objectively and independently of the interpretation of the historian
one which
The
it is
tenor of Carr's conclusion suggests
beyond
My
more hopeful
far
deny
among
Yet
discussion.
wish to defend.
and
a preposterous fallacy, but
very hard to eradicate." 10
this position carries
I
is
how much
historians today.
Most
authority
consider
precisely this preposterous fallacy
it is
essays permit a drastically different
set of conclusions.
—how could —that the I?
I
historian's
am
not disposed to
mental
set or secret
emotions often cause partial blindness or involuntary but
tortions,
would argue that they can
I
it
dis-
also provide a
historian with a clear view of past actions that other historians
have been too ill-prepared to understand, too indifferent even to see.
dom:
As Burckhardt put if
transmitting a bit of ancient wis-
our eye were not in some way sunlike,
Unser huge
see the sun
Sonne
it,
nicht.
11
may become
is
could not
sonnenhaft, sonst sake es die
Passion, notorious as the historian's
pling liability,
consciousness
ist
it
his
most valuable
most
asset.
crip-
Not
all
false consciousness.
This position, too, finds impressive support in modern psychology, both in psychoanalysis and in the psychology of perception, and to little
impact on the
ception
is
10 x
its
findings,
which have had
historical profession, are conclusive. Per-
and the dominant direction not toward myth or self-protection, but
part of the total person,
of the person
1
my mind
may
be,
E. H. Carr, What Is History? (1962), p. 6. Jacob Burckhardt, Weltgeschichtliche Betrachtungen, ed. Albert Oeri, in
Jacob Burckhardt-Oesamtausgabe (1929), 7:6, 6n.
[198]
On toward mastery and
Style in History
reality.
or even with limitation, are motives
cient
and
To
equate motive with distortion,
demonstrably illegitimate; there
is
toward the
ideals driving the inquirer
comprehension of the outside world. The need that
generates inquiry
may be sublimated
into disinterestedness.
Even empathy, the very emotion that the modern is
ceaselessly enjoined
to
has
cultivate,
cannot exaggerate the significance of
historian
com-
objective
its
ponent. Qualities are as inherent in the object as I
effi-
size.
12
this psychological
point of view for the historian. As he trains his senses and
become more
his conceptual apparatus to
sensitive
and
ac-
curate instruments, as he ascends from the self-indulgent and self-centered realm of the pleasure principle to the austere
atmosphere of the there
is
reality principle,
match more and more
wish to relate the past
as
it
what he
closely.
actually
And
historians' distortions are richly
rate
and
I
and what
Ranke's celebrated
happened
fatuous fantasy nor a concealed ideology. It perfectly realistic expectation.
sees
is
is
neither a
a difficult
but
might add that while
documented,
effective perceptions are richly
historians' accu-
documented
as well:
convergent reports on the past, reduction in the range of acceptable interpretations, and precise expressiveness in
While normally,
style.
then, the historian of history proceeds
from apparent objectivity to concealed
subjectivity,
that he can profitably reverse this procedure and subjectivity to understanding.
Read
I
propose
move from
in this fashion, these four
more than reports on the limitations that bias imposes and style reveals; they are reports as well on the
essays
12
are
There are "aspects of objects perceived
as emotionally significant with-
out being subjective in character. That is, they are not delusive projections but features of things, and an aspect of knowledge of physical events." George S. Klein, Perception, Motives, and Personality (1970), p. 65.
[*99]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
special capacity of each of these historians to see historical
inaccessible
realities
feline malice
to
others.
have suggested that the
I
animating Gibbon's parallel clauses exhibits
his
mixed motives. But
his
insensitivity to the oceanic feeling for
ironic vision
equipped him to penetrate the fraudulent ma-
chinations of
Roman
ness of the
Church
and the all-too-human
politicians,
Fathers.
petti-
have argued that the dramatic
I
devices shaping Ranke's prose reveal his implicit conformity
and conservatism. But
dramatic vision gave Ranke an
his
unprecedented appreciation of the complex confrontations
among
the great powers.
have treated the bourgeois ampli-
I
tude of Macaulay's rhetoric
and expansive English
as a
symptom
social system.
But
of a prosperous
his optimistic vision
allowed Macaulay to discard the nostalgia that obstructed the perception of others and to value, without embarrassment, the
improvements I
in England's social, cultural,
and economic
life.
have traced Burckhardt's informal and emphatic way of writ-
ing to his unconscious identifications with the magnificent
But it was this empathetic vision that for the first time encompassed the enormous vitality of the Renaissance and its historic uniqueness. The most rigorous test of this analytical strategy would personalities of the Renaissance.
be
a look at the cognitive style
a scholar, a
want
man
of letters,
13
and
to write yet a fifth essay,
combines these historical
work
a
known
but there
who
partisan.
is
prove
a
Theodor Mommsen, the only
is
I
at
once
do not
one historian who
in heroic proportions,
qualities will
of a historian
and whose
bulwark against skepticism.
historian
(if
we
except Winston
Churchill) ever to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, was
an unsurpassed scholar,
13
For
a
distinguished stylist and, by his
this term, see Klein, Perception,
Motives, and Personality, pp. 8-10.
[200]
—
— On
Style in History
testimony, a lifelong animal politicum. 1 *
own
Mommsen
public knows
But the as a
entrepreneur,
who
and
tion,
filled
For
though
men
relentless in his pursuit of dehistorical imagina-
brilliant conjectures as for
and inspired emenda-
Burckhardt, the imagination was
the mother of history as well as of poetry aller
tainly
is
born not made. 16
worked on
his prose;
Mommsen insisted that But Mommsen himself
ist.
15
the cer-
his style, taking pleasure in the felicity of
he cultivated
by reading
his taste
French novels and English poetry of Burckhardt,
die Phantasie,
Poesie so auch aller Historie Mutter
In a much-quoted address, historian
Mommsen
grievous lacunae in abundant yet fragmentary
Mommsen,
welche wie
nar-
with his enthusiasm
was richly endowed with
documents with tions.
knows
historical profession
inspired younger
for the sources. Yet,
Mommsen
and
analytical lucidity
its
meticulous inquirer and inventive academic
preeminently
tail,
general
the author of the Romische
as
Geschichte, a work notable for rative vigor.
The
Mommsen
—
was a
belles lettres
all his life.
gifted,
if
In the
—
manner
occasional, poet
and, in Burckhardt's manner, he responded sensitively to the
emotional and aesthetic side of his experience.
Romische Geschichte is
displays his literary culture,
of central interest here are his 14
Mommsen's but what
notorious anachronisms.
The
phrase comes from a passage in his will, written in 1899, but not printed until 1948: "I have never had, and never aspired to political position and political influence; but in my innermost being, and I think with the best that is within me, I have always been an animal politicum and wished to be a good citizen bin ich stets ein animal politicum gewesen und wiinschte ein Burger zu sein. That is not possible in our nation, in which the individual, even the best, never gets beyond serving in the ranks, and beyond political fetishism." Quoted in Alfred Heuss, Theodor Mommsen und das 19. ]ahrhundert 15
und 16
(1956), p. 282. Quoted in Albert Wucher, Theodor
Politik (1956), p. 2in. "Rede bei Antritt des Rektorates,"
Aufsatze (3rd printing, 1912), pp. 3-16.
[20l]
Mommsen:
October
15,
Geschichtsschreibung 1874, in
Reden und
STYLE Mommsen's
first
IN
HISTORY
made much
readers
of his "subjective
way
of
Even more than his clarity and vigor, it was his putting ancients into modern dress, those "Liberals" and 'Junkers" who march through his pages, that was the most writing history."
distinctive aspect of his style
Mommsen sciousness.
"There
he wrote to that the
He
first
his
justified is
a lot to
from the beginning. 17 practice with
a
certain self-con-
be said about that modern tone,"
Wilhelm Henzen in 1854, the year volume of his Romische Geschichte appeared.
his
insisted that
friend
he had no intention of cajoling the public.
True, direct allusions had offered themselves by the hundreds,
but he had scorned them
make
the ancients clirnb
all.
Yet he had found
down from
it
essential to
their imaginary pedestals
them once again into the real world, where men love and hate, work and play, invent fantasies and tell lies. That is why the consul had to become the mayor und darum musste der Konsul ein Burgermeister werden" and
to
place
He might
have overdone
it,
but he was confident that his
in-
und richtig" 18 We have no cause to question the purity of Mommsen's intentions, though we may doubt that his desire to endow faded historical figures with new life exhausts his reasons
tentions, at least,
were "pure and right
for introducing Junkers
When stirring
rein
and Agrarians onto the
Roman
stage.
he undertook to write the Romische Geschichte, the
and dismaying events
of the revolutions of 1848 lay
Mommsen
those revolutions as
had been engaged in partisan and publicist, and had been
briefly deprived of his
academic post during the
in his
immediate memory.
first
period of
For their reception, see the citations in Wucher, Mommsen, chap. 3. Mommsen to Henzen, November 26, 1854. Quoted in Ludo Moritz Hartmann, Theodor Mommsen. Eine Biographische Skizze (1908), pp. 62-63. 17
1S
[202]
On reaction.
He
was
—
Style in History
in the
German
fashion
—
a liberal;
he hated
the rural oligarchy and distrusted military and clerical power
In the years that followed the
alike.
Romische Geschichte, despite
his
three volumes of
first
immense and wide-
his
ranging activity as professor of ancient history and superin-
tendent of numerous scholarly enterprises, he found time to serve
first
in the Prussian,
Nor was he
a latter-day
then in the
Gibbon, a
German
legislature.
silent senator.
He
was
contentious, outspoken, and fearless. Politics was in his bones,
on
his It
mind
—and under
his pen.
would seem only natural
for such a political being to
see the past principally in political terms political struggles in that past
Mommsen's
critics leveled
his
own
Rome
And
against
time and have leveled ever since: Caesar of ancient
to invest the
not merely with the urgency,
but with the very shape, of the present. that
and this
him during
Mommsen
his life-
worshipped the
modern demagogy, he smuggled
his offended feelings into his assessment of the
Mommsen
was
Republican
sensitive to such criti-
cisms. In the second edition of his third volume, lineates
the charge
because he longed for a Caesar in
time; disgusted with
opposition to Caesar. 19
is
the ascent of his hero,
Mommsen
which
added
a
de-
long
passage firmly denying that his admiration for Julius Caesar
meant admiration
for
Caesarism, and turned the criticism
against his critics: his glorification of Caesar, precisely be-
cause he was so great a statesman with so noble an aim,
should actually be read
as a devastating critique of his
modern
authoritarian disciples.
19
on Mommsen, the English historian Francis Haverfield noted: "Probably he had met his Cicero: there were many in 1848 who talked admirably and acted feebly." English Historical Review, Writing
an
19 (1904), 84. In
obituary
Wucher, Mommsen,
p.
[203]
92m
STYLE Mommsen
protested in vain; his disclaimer, though as ex-
and eloquent
plicit
viction.
20
It
HISTORY
IN
he could make
as
it,
has not carried con-
was indeed eminently plausible to argue that
Mommsen's anachronisms are symptomatic of partisanship. Yet this verdict on Mommsen's historical perception trivialaccomplishment. Near the end of
izes his
said once again
what he had often
said
Unser Lebensnerv
presuppositions
Mommsen
and always acted on:
the vital nerve of the scholarly enterprise all
his life
ist
is
inquiry free from
die voraussetzungs-
Forschung. 21 This was anything but rhetorical
lose
Mommsen's view
fication:
self-justi-
of antiquity was something
more
than a mere outlet for the frustrated passions of a defeated liberal.
Mommsen's Roman
other northerners
experience was shared by
—Englishmen,
Netherlanders,
many
Germans
facing, for the first time, the sources of their classical culture. Italy
was the sunny playground of their schoolboy imagination,
and the
though overlaid by medieval and modern
reality,
accretions,
was more intense than their most lavish
To be overwhelmed by Goethe, duly recorded
had been the experience
much
felt
as
poets.
good company. history!
step
The
went
on your holy
trip
as well, historians as
he was, had
Ranke and Burckhardt.
to Italy in 1844, his emotions were in
"Italy!"
first
it
Gibbon, unsentimental
the Italian magic, and so had
When Mommsen
of
— and dutifully reexperienced by count-
Germans. But others had experienced
less
as
Italy: that
fantasies.
he wrote, "holy
soil of nature,
art,
own sea, the first he reached Rome, he wept.
through your very
soil!"
And when he came back
After
to Italy thirty years later,
20
he traveled
But note the more favorable appraisals in the more recent literature by Heuss and Wucher (see notes 14 and 15 above.) 21 "Universitatsunterricht und Konfession" (1901), in Reden und Aufsatze, p.
4^2.
[204]
— On through the country a
metaphor,
sen's
for the
layers only the
of
an old lover recalling
like
must add, that
I
emotion
composed
Style in History
most
Roman
is
his first love
Mommsen's own. 22 Mommwhose
past was a palimpsest,
delicate reading can discriminate. It
memories reinforced by
action; this thirst, in turn,
was
his thirst for political
was fed by memories; and both
stood under the severe discipline of his scholarly probity.
—
sum and this, of course, is the point of this exploration Mommsen's passions gave him insights denied to earlier historians of the Roman Republic. Modern research has pulIn
—
verized the
Roman
party contest, and has
shown the
parties
have been interest groups clustering around family
to
ances.
23
Mommsen
doubtless oversimplified the struggle, giv-
ing Cicero's sweeping terms optimates and populates credit than they deserved. in the politics of his
open eyes
Yet
it
more
was because he participated
—with partisan convictions but with
day
—that Mommsen saw the
with a vividness unavailable to
much
alli-
politics of ancient
earlier historians,
Rome
and with
as
objectivity as the historians' techniques then in exis-
tence would permit.
Gibbon had thought
his captaincy in
the Hampshire militia not useless to the historian of the
Roman
Empire, and in the same way, Mommsen's
activities
proved not useless to the historian of the
Republic.
And his chosen style was map of his discoveries.
pendable
political
Roman
the perspicuous and de-
Lothar Wickert, Theodor Mommsen: Eine Biographie, vol. 2, Wanderjahre: Frankreich und Italien (1964), pp. 43, 55f. A fascinating book could be written on the impact of Italy on great historians. 23 See especially Lily Ross Taylor, Party Politics in the Age of Caesar (1949). Another historian whom it would be very interesting to examine from this perspective would be Jules Michelet, whose gift for empathy was enormous. "I am accomplishing a hard task," he wrote in 1849, "that of reliving, remaking, and suffering the Revolution. I have just passed through September and all the horrors of death: massacred at the Abbey, I am going 22
See
[205]
STYLE
The
HISTORY
IN
dramatically divergent potentialities inherent in the his-
mental set
torian's
raise the interesting prospect of similar
polarities in the other dimensions,
which the historian his style.
Most
culture
and
from
craft,
also draws his motives, his materials,
cultures, at
most
times, with their rewards for
compliance and their horror of subversion, confine the torian's choice of subject
and
matter and
mode
of
his-
judgment within
defined boundaries of social decorum and political accept-
No braver
ability.
than most men, few historians have courted
We
the martyrdom of the heretic.
told,
and
most historians preside over the construction the collective memory. And they are not architects whose
rightly,
of
have often been
that
them
patrons have given
a free hand.
They
are
under pressure
to design an impressive, even a glorious facade that
may
bear
only a tangential resemblance to the structure of events concealed behind
it.
Memory, we know,
is
the supple minister
memory
is
in this respect, as in
of self-interest,
and
others, like the
memory
ory
is
nesia;
collective
of individuals.
a convenient distortion or it
has
all
collective
mem-
an equally convenient am-
too often been the historian's assignment to
assist his culture in
remembering events that did not happen,
and
in forgetting events that did.
can
use.
24
Most
This cosmetic
The
activity, I
culture wants a past
need hardly add,
is
it
rarely
before the Revolutionary Tribunal, that is, to the guillotine." Quoted in Emery Neff, The Poetry of History (1947), p. 149. 24 When I was giving this conclusion its final revision, I recalled an essay by my late friend, Richard Hofstadter, which anticipates this argument in substance, and even in phrasing. I reprint the passage here: "Society and special interests in society call upon him [the historian] to provide them with
memory. The kind
of
memory
that
is
too often desired
[206]
is
not very different
On
Style in History
venal or even conscious; to paraphrase George Bernard Shaw, historians
do
do not need
The
for nothing.
to
parochial or nationalist productions by
respectable practitioners torian
is
most
be paid to do what they are eager to
show only too
plainly that the his-
when them and
insidious as a purveyor of cultural biases
he does not recognize them
be
to
biases,
but shares
them to be established conclusions rather than unexamined prejudices. But this is only the depressing, if admittedly the more prominent, side of a two-sided story. There have been times when societies have called, not for reassuring tales, but for takes
Then
harsh truths about their past.
the historian exchanges
the embroidered robe of the appointed panegyrist for the
— profession — the
white coat of the independent anatomist. Paradoxically is,
as
we
shall see,
historian can be
not the only paradox of his
most useful when he
is
most
free.
it
Yet what-
ever beneficial consequences flow from the historian's pursuit of truth, they are available only to a relatively
which permits professional ards
and
open
own
fraternities to set their
tolerates intelligent
society,
stand-
and organized discontent. Cos-
mopolitans in a parochial culture, skeptics in a religious culture, socialists in a capitalist culture
can
feel free to
under-
take historical investigations that aim at veracity rather than beautification;
outsiders often
command
prospect, above the assumptions
a
high and wide
and values generally taken
for granted. Critical history, of course, carries
its
own
risks;
—
that is, memory that knows how to provide for ourselves forget, memory that will rearrange, distort, and omit so much as is needed to make our historical self-images agreeable. In a liberal society the his-
from what we
torian
is
all
free to try to dissociate
but that same impulse also at work in him." Hofstadter,
myth from
reality,
myth-making that moves his fellow men is "History and the Social Sciences," in Varieties of History,
to
359-360.
[207]
ed.
Stern,
pp.
STYLE it
new myths
often substitutes
for truth
HISTORY
IN
and indignation
for old, or mistakes
unmasking
But the point
for demonstration.
remains that culture
disinterested
historical inquiry.
may at times actually foster And history records enough
instances of
hope that these
are perhaps
such
moments
to permit the
no means abnormal, interludes
exceptional, but by
age-old effort to deceive himself
and oppress
from
free
umphs.
presuppositions celebrated
all
was notoriously sour, judging
well placed for the study of history.
and
all literatures
all
the
and
most notable
tri-
Burckhardt, whose assessment of
It is striking to see
his century
when
researches
its
its
man's
others.
Nineteenth-century liberal culture was the time ideal of a historical science uninhibited in
in
modes
it
The
to
be exceptionally
easy accessibility of
of thought, the relative indiffer-
ence of states to the results of historical research, the impotence of established religions to interfere with the free airing of their past,
seemed
him
to
the most prominent reasons
why
time was propitious for historians. 25 Liberalism, to be
his
sure,
suffered
from complacency,
were among the
first
to point out. It
as
Macaulay's detractors
smuggled
self-satisfaction
into historical interpretation through the theory of progress,
and cheerfully counted
earlier cultural
all
imperfect prefigurations of
its
achievements
own. But liberalism
ated a refreshing atmosphere of self-criticism. It possible,
though,
I
liberal historians at
should add,
it
as
also gener-
made Marx
held Marx's critique of
bay until well into the twentieth century.
Yet, however self-serving the liberal ideal, and however flawed its
application,
it
had
its
share in producing an intellectual
climate congenial to the pursuit of objectivity. It
is
—and
not an accident
this brings
25
me
to the dimension
See Burckhardt, Weltgeschichtliche Betrachtungen, 7:9-19.
[so8]
in
Gesamtausgabe,
On of craft
—that
Style in History
the nineteenth century should also have wit-
nessed the transformation of history into a profession. then, as
have
I
house, the university. Practically the age
—Ranke
into his
own
the leading historians of
all
and Burckhardt, Michelet and Fustel de
Mommsen
Coulanges,
moved
said, that the historian
was
It
and Maitland
—were
and
professors;
another, Macaulay, could have been a professor had he not preferred to write history instead.
move
that this
exacted
its
before or since, imposed
own
exercise of the inquisitive spirit:
sometimes doxies
servile
Craft in that century, as
price. its
have already suggested
I
on the
free
generally cautious
and
constraints
its
relation to power,
often
its
and respectable points of view, and
tance to radical
new
vistas.
But
it
also
smug
ortho-
stubborn
its
developed
resis-
internal
its
impulse toward autonomy, a capacity for detachment from the society that in general
it
served.
Professionalism at
its
best braced the historian to resist the egregious, and to recognize the subtlest, pressures for conformity that culture could
bring to bear on the individual historian. Professionalism can do, and has done, as
it
more than
intervenes to regulate the historian's
culture,
it
intervenes to regulate his
establishing standards of proof
traffic
traffic
this. Just
with his
with himself. In
and presentation
—the
footnote, the honest bibliography, the accurate citation
full
—
it
compels the historian's sources, reasoning, and conclusions into the glaring light of public scrutiny
and
serves to dis-
criminate what he owes to others from what he has contributed is
on
his
own. The judgment of the professional forum
always candid and often cruel, and
more
inclusive
Like so
much
objectivity
is
and more accurate
it
prepares the
way
for
historical interpretations.
else in the discipline of history, the struggle for
a collective affair.
[209]
STYLE The is
share of professionalism in epistemological clarification
more
far
HISTORY
IN
extensive than has usually been recognized. In
serving as the systematic critic of personal perceptions,
acts
it
kind of public superego, strengthening and extending
as a
the self-criticism that any responsible practitioner builds into
and
his practice.
realistic
because the
his proceedings in the course of his training
And
this pressure
toward objectivity
is
objects of the historian's inquiry are precisely that, objects,
out there in a real and a single past
^ ^
a)i
in i|0t in
rial
tofla*^
Historical controversy
no way compromises
their ontological integrity ./The tree
the woods of the past
fell
in only
one way, no matter
fragmentary or contradictory the reports of
whether there are no tentious historians in
soun ds
If this
mean
it
re ason
like
historians,
no matter
one historian, or several con-
future to record and debate itl
its
n aive Realism,
I
can only plead that
though not of the naive
to be feealisml
why
its fall,
how
variety.
I
One
interpretation has been generally treated as an that historians have illegitimately
e xercise in subjecti vity
is
imp osed one meani ng
of inte rpretation, smuggled in from
the
arts,
arts,
me aning,
on anothe r
interpretation
is
appropriate to history
among
the interpreter's choice
set of alternatives, as in
an
the word in this permissive sense
Economic
An Economic
Interpretation;
indefinite article to
show
In the a valid
actor's interpretation of a role or
a conductor's interpretation of a score. Charles
his precise title,
.
he
when he
Beard used
called attention to
Interpretation, rather than insisted that
he had used the
his awareness that his
being the only possible interpretation.
The
With
was
far
from
the same
ill-
placed modesty, Burckhardt offered his interpretation of the
Renaissance this
begs
as
only one of several,
usage (of which, the
very
I
must
question
an
equally legitimate. But
all
confess,
I
too have been guilty)
interpretation
[210]
is
designed
to
On
Style in History
answer. 26 For the historian, an interpretation
a general
is
explanation of events, nearly always pr oviding a hierarchy of
To
causes.
pretation It
is,
the extent that
any conflicting
common knowledge
of course, a matter of
interpretation.
are
usually
inter-
But
I
want
that his-
burdened with more than one to offer
niable fact of the historian's
ment maps
correct,
is false.
events
torical
it is
two
glosses
on
Interpretations
life.
this
may
unde-
supple-
rather than contradict one another, just as different
same
of the
being in conflict at tions, in short,
is
may be equally correct without any point. The coexistence of interpreta-
territory
possible
and even
likely
if
these interpre-
tations are, in the benign sense of that word, partial.
But when
interpretations contradict each other, the his-
torian cannot resign himself to these conflicts
on the ground
that they are inherent in his material, or in the nature of historical research. It
is
precisely the conflicts of interpretation
that are the measure of
the historical discipline
how
unsatisfactory the knowledge of
on
this point. Physicists, seeking to
is
reconcile incompatible theories of the origin of the universe, or the nature of particles, take such conflicts as a spur to
further
work rather than
spectivism of
human
a reflection
knowledge.
It
is
on the inescapable in
per-
any event reassuring
pendulum of historical interpretations does not always swing with the same vehemence. New facts, better
to note that the
readings of old facts, the elimination of discredited views all
bring about a reduction in
to be sure, 26
its
oscillations. Interpretations,
do not always tend toward the
inertia of total
An Economic
Interpretation of the Constitution of the United States, 2nd edn. (1935), "Introduction to the 1935 Edition"; Burckhardt, Kultur der Renaissance in Italien, p. 3 [p. 1]; Peter Gay, The Enlightenment: An Interpretation. I suppose "the Interpretation" would
See Charles Beard,
have sounded immodest; but
it
would have been what
[211]
I
meant.
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
agreement; the impress of great events in the present encourages historians to take a
new
look at the past and discover
the importance of what had been thought insignificant before, or the insignificance of
what had been thought important. Or
the impulse from neighboring disciplines
push to the pendulum by throwing old or by I
am
not suggesting that
history, too
is
certainties into
—the
doubt
histories of
is
its
process will ever end; the
for that. In fact,
map
that will
not for the reason usually offered in
end of t une^or,
The meaning
never need revision
must
The commonplace
predecessors.
modern
such a conclusive
to say that every generation
rather, because events
or, in
One commonplace way
unrealizable in principle. that principle
this
too remote, too obscure,
overcrowded
interpretation
its
give a fresh
making unsuspected connections.
landscape of the past
th e
may
its
rewrite the true,
is
but
behalf. It holds true,
may
have posterities that
continue to
at least, the__£nd_oLalLhist orical
wr itir^
its
posterities, as distinct
contemporary meaning or
its
causes,
from
perpetually open
is
As new generations reappraise the French Terror
new meanings,
or the Great Depression, these events acquire
and these
is
of stating
of an event for
to revision.
—
in turn
tion. History, in a
fut ure always uses
become word, its
subject to inquiry
and
interpreta-
unfinished in the sense
is
past in
new way^ But
this
thaMjie
argument
in
no way damages the point that an interpretation is an attempt and it is, to offer an objective account of an objective past
—
in
any
case, the task of the profession to
like the
a
make
it so.
In sum,
realms of culture and of private character, craft has
Janus face, looking not merely toward subjectivity but
toward science. This has important bearing on is
the man,
much
style. Style, as
of the time, and, as
[212]
I
I
have argued,
have also argued,
On man
compounded
is
Style in History
of several dimensions. Style
is
the vector
of their complex, sometimes conflicting, pressures. Culture
and
between them supply the
craft
possibilities
the range of expression; character makes choices
then,
is
tivity,
restrict
among
the
and lends the touch of individuality that
available options
becomes the
and
historian's stylistic signature.
27
Whether
style,
a clue to incurable subjectivity or to scientific objec-
or to a mixture of the two,
is
a question that
we can
never answer in advance.
There
still
history.
I
remains one more obstruction to the definition of
have noted what kind of art history can claim to
want now to specify what kind of science it is. Since Wilhelm Windelband's celebrated address of 1894, historians
be;
I
have sharply separated Geschichte from Naturwissenschaft. In Windelband's
unique events;
vocabulary,
it is
history
seeks
to
understand
idiographic. Natural science, in contrast,
aims at general laws;
it is
nomothetic. 28 Historians of a wide
range of persuasions have accepted this distinction; they have
argued that historians seeking general laws have ceased to be historians
and have turned into retrospective
sociologists,
nostalgic demographers, or pretentious metaphysicians.
the argument
hard sciences
is
false, or at least
like
incomplete.
The
But
so-called
astronomy or molecular biology are often
concerned to explain singular events that are in nature
like
27 "It
seems useful to visualize the motivational field as having a center and a periphery determined by the adaptive relevance of component motives, the peripheral ones including not only those irrelevant to the specific adaptive purpose but also repressed motives." Klein, Perception, Motives, and Personality,
p.
61.
28
See Wilhelm Windelband, "Geschichte und Naturwissenschaft" (1894), in Praludien, 2 vols, in 1 (7th and 8th edn., 1921), 2:136-160.
[213]
STYLE the events the historian
HISTORY
IN
himself to understand.
fits
And
natural sciences, like geology, generally concentrate vidual events,
on
indi-
and thus resemble history more often and more
closely than, say, physics. if
other
29
On
the other side, historians, even
they do not seek to establish general laws, freely use
them
in their interpretations, especially their causal interpretations,
and
The
in their logic of proof.
historians' great debate over
the place that history should occupy in the spectrum of the sciences has
been bedeviled by
their identification of science
with the most abstract, most severe, has induced
sciences,
even in
not its
style
manic
—with
and
its
effort at
is
its
explanations, laws that
other disciplines chology. 30 In
—
almost
all
—
aping the natural
may
What
incessant pressure for
verifiable propositions;
capacity to generate laws but
its
branches. This
disheartening results.
a science into a science
objectivity
its
to beat a despairing retreat into belles
or to undertake a
lettres,
makes
them
among
its
what
reliance
actually be
as they are, in history,
defines
on laws
is
(to
is
in
borrowed from
mainly from
of these defining characteristics, history
a science. It
it
psyis
borrow Levi-Strauss' phrase) the
science of the concrete.
We and
are
now
say: history
in position to is
amend
Bury's famous dictum
almost a science and more than a science.
29
See for these issues, above all, Ernest Nagel, The Structure of Science: Problems in the Logic of Scientific Explanation (1961); and Carl G. Hempel, Aspects of Scientific Explanation and Other Essays in the Philosophy of Science (1965). 30 They are I should perhaps say: they should be. I am in any case convinced that the principal auxiliary science for history is psychology, in particular the branch known as ego psychology, developed by Heinz Hartmann, Anna Freud, and Erik Erikson from the work of Freud, a distinct move toward realizing Freud's greatest ambition: to construct a general psychology, applicable to "normal" persons as much as to neurotics. Once again, I want to refer to my forthcoming book, Art and Act: On Causes in History Manet, Gropius, Mondrian.
—
—
[214]
— On This definition all
more
the
Style in History
admittedly paradoxical. But that makes
is
precise, for the historian's craft, especially in
modern, professional incarnation,
There
it
is, first
of
all,
pervaded by paradox.
is
the pair of incompatible injunctions that
are required baggage for every apprentice historian
same time,
to empathize with the past, but, at the
distance from
If
it.
its
he neglects the
he
first,
he
:
is
told
to preserve
never leave
will
the present but parade in his writings contemporary actors dressed up in period costumes.
he
will never leave the past,
And
if
he neglects the second,
becoming not
its
student but
its
accomplice. This paradox denotes the tense yet productive coexistence of engagement and detachment that differentiates
him from
the other. This
not the only way in
is
who must
historian resembles the psychoanalyst, ically
on which the modern
the novelist on one side and the physicist
sympathet-
penetrate the most secret recesses of his patient's
yet remain, as Freud poignantly put
it,
life,
stranger to his
a
patient forever.
This paradox
arises because, unlike the scientist of nature,
the scientist of the materials.
That
is
human
past
what makes
of the sciences, susceptible to
of the
is
same
history into the all
stuff as his
most
fragile
the germs carried by the
winds of doctrine, and vulnerable to the charges of prejudice or ideology that are so familiar.
other
modern
scientists take for
a laborious victory over
The
critical
granted
sympathy and
is,
distance that
for the historian,
anxiety.
The emotional
empathy that is irrelevant to other scientists is a quality he must patiently cultivate. Though one among the sciences, history faces problems no other science shares to the same degree.
The
dual nature of history
—
at
once science and
art
emerges even more strikingly in the related paradox that [215]
STYLE history
at the
is
HISTORY
IN
same time
a progressive discipline
and a
Nowadays the historian will not begin his studies of ancient Rome with Gibbon or Mommsen; they are no longer the last word. Yet The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Romische Geschichte are imperishable masterpieces which no amount of fresh facts timeless treasure house of classics.
or revisionist interpretations will eject from the pantheon.
What makes them
immortal
merit, great though that truths that have
become
a
is.
more than
is
Their view of the past embodies
been confirmed by other historians and have
permanent
cultural possession.
fashioned maps: delightful to consult, a
It
is
still
useful for
art of that style
flourishes apart,
it
map
its
must not
interfere with
but the precise means of conveying
function of Gibbon's irony, whatever to
appropriate
give
A
few
the historian's
not separate from historical it.
that principally dictates his stylistic choices.
is
distinct form.
of a very special kind.
is
science. His literary devices are truth,
somewhat oldmodel to later mapif
showing others the way.
the historian's style that gives his
But the
These books, and
drawn
others like them, are like exquisitely
makers, and
their sheer literary
expression
its
to
It is this
The
aim
objective
psychological origins,
the
irony
pervading
Roman history. The
objective function of Burckhardt's energy,
whatever
is
its
origins,
of the Renaissance.
to express the energy informing the age
The
historian's use of elevated diction,
compression or elongation of time spans, synecdoche, anaphora, indirect free use,
style, or
whatever other devices he
perform reportorial functions.
sake, to tation,
make to
To
use words for their
may own
jokes that are not instrumental to the presen-
employ emphasis
in
the interest of drama not
inherent in the material, are sheer self-indulgence, mere fine writing.
[216]
On The
Style in History
relation of style to truth has
been obscured by the
too patent fact that a work of history
all
real world.
present in sequential
But that
is
to
that exist concur-
an inconvenience the historian shares with
While the
stylist's
shaping
be imposing order on disparate, often seem-
ingly disconnected past realities, his act of ordering
exacted by the requirements of presentation.
The
is
formal,
order
something the historian does not make; he finds
is
The
compels the historian to
fashion structures
the astronomer and the sociologist.
hand appears
not a copy of the
a report, often with aesthetic merit.
It is
linear nature of written literature
rently.
is
itself it.
So
controversial an activity as the carving out of a historical
period
is
not a construction but a discovery.
The
order, the
period, are there.
Historians are always rhetoric differs
But
gist.
this
making the happy discovery that
their
from the rhetoric of the chemist or the biolodoes not entail the expulsion of history from
the family of the sciences. It simply makes the historian's science special, withjits
own way
of telling the
truthJWhat
should prevent the historian from offering his findings in the dry, deliberately graceless
psychology,
such a ful
mode
is
not
manner
literary aversion
of presentation
is
but
his recognition that
would be not merely
than a disciplined narrative
(Style
of a paper, say, in clinical
—
it
would
also
less delight-
be
less
true.
the art of the historian's science!
/dfy
[217]
ft
faK
0f/f
BIBLIOGRAPHY I
have compiled
this bibliography
prehensive, let alone complete;
on the writings difference in
my
have
I
cite in the text,
I
with no intention of being comlisted
and
commented have made a
briefly
and on others that
thinking.
Introduction: Style-From Stylistics
Erich Auerbach, Mimesis:
Manner
to
Matter
and Linguistics
The Representation
Western
of Reality in
A
Literature (1946; trans. Williard R. Trask, 1953). classic bridge from philology to sociology spanning Western literature from Homer to Virginia
Woolf; enormously perceptive and
Charles Bally, he langage et
modern stylistics, Wayne C. Booth, The Rhetoric literary
(1925; 3rd edn., 1951). A pioneerconcentrating on ordinary speech.
la vie
ing study in
amination of
of Fiction (1961). Clearheaded ex-
strategies
modes of writing. E. H. Gombrich, Art and
justly influential.
of
novelists;
applicable
to
other
A
Study in the Psychology of Pictorial Perception (2nd edn., 1961). A brilliant attack on the notion of the "innocent eye," and a documented account of the various ways in which the seer contributes to what he sees. (But see
Gibson and Klein
Charles F. Hockett,
Illusion:
titles in
A
Conclusion, pp. 237, 238.)
Course in Modern Linguistics
(1970).
recommended general introduction to the field. Graham Hough, Style and Stylistics (1969). Short but
A
highly
lucid
in-
troductory essay with useful summaries of the classic works; a short bibliography. J.
Middleton Murry, The Problem of Style (1922; edn. i960) Though .
hardly profound,
it
has some interesting observations.
A. Richards, The Meaning of Meaning (1923; 10th edn., 1949). A well-known early statement in modern seman-
C. K. Ogden and
I.
tics.
Ferdinand de Saussure, Course in General Linguistics (1915;
Wade
Baskin,
1959).
The
wellspring of
[219]
modern
trans.
linguistics;
its
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
between langue and parole was important
basic distinction
to this
essay.
Meyer Schapiro, "Style" (1953), most ed. Morris Philipson
hensive survey of
Leo
all
accessible in Aesthetics Today,
(1961), pp. 81-113. Brilliant and compre-
the meanings of style. Indispensable.
and Literary History: Essays in Stylistics (1948). Important collection of exemplary and civilized studies with a suggestive introduction on "Linguistics and Literary History/' Stephen Ullmann, Style in the French Novel (1957; 2nd edn., 1964). The Image in the Modern French Novel i960) Language and Style: Collected Papers (1964). All highly informative and highly suggestive studies; Ullmann's reading of literary Linguistics
Spitzer,
(
,
,
texts
exemplary for the historian.
is
Style in History; History of Style
H. Hale Bellot, American History and American Historians: A Review of Recent Contributions to the Interpretation of the History of the United States (1952)
.
An
intelligent survey. (See also
Higham
title,
p. 221.)
Herbert Butterfield,
Man
Historical Scholarship especially
Ranke
good on the
section, pp.
E. H. Carr,
What
Is
The Study of the History of (1955). Contains some illuminating essays, emergence of the German school. (See also on His
Past:
224-227.) History? (1962).
lectures, essentially preaching
An enormously
an untenable relativism
popular
set of
—though with
some self-protective reservations. R. G. Collingwood, The Idea of History (1946). The classic statement of the modern Idealist position; in this context, Collingwood's excessively neat but immensely revealing Autobiography (1939) debe read. F. M. Cornford, Thucydides Mythistoricus ( 1907) An important early statement of the proposition that Thucydides' history followed the conventions of Greek drama. (But see Finley and Ullman titles serves to
.
in this section.)
John H. Finley, Thucydides (1942). An important modification of Cornford's thesis; the book embodies the findings of Finley's articles, including especially "The Origins of Thucydides' Style," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, 50 (1939), 35-84. Peter Gay, A Loss of Mastery: Puritan Historians in Colonial America (
1966)
.
A
set of lectures
on one type of seventeenth-century
writing.
[220]
history-
.
Bibliography The Enlightenment: An Interpretation, vol. 2, The Science of Freedom (1969), pp. 368-396. A brief interpretation of history•,
writing in the eighteenth century. Clifford Geertz,
"Ideology as a Cultural System," in Ideology and
Discontent, ed. David E. Apter (1964), pp. 47-76.
Much
the most
and most comprehensive interpretation of a heatedly debated notion. (See also Lichtheim title in this section.) G. P. Gooch, History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century (1913; 1959). Though thoroughly old-fashioned, a comprehensive rational
survey of the classic century of history-writing.
John Higham, with Leonard Krieger and Felix Gilbert, History ( 1965) A searching essay on the development of history-writing in the United States; aided by supplementary, equally searching, essays on European history in America and on some major European historians.
Richard Hofstadter, The Progressive Historians: Turner, Beard, Partington (1968). A civilized trio of essays; doing justice both to the sociology and the psychology of history.
John Holloway, The Victorian Sage: Studies in Argument (1953). An interesting study of the relation of rhetoric to philosophy in writings of Carlyle, Disraeli, and other great Victorians.
M.
L.
W.
Laistner,
The Greater Roman
sizable literature, stands out as a
Historians
(1947). In a
good survey.
George Lichtheim, "The Concept of Ideology" (1965), reprinted in Lichtheim, The Concept of Ideology and Other Essays (1967). A well-informed historical survey. Karl
Mannheim, Ideology and
Utopia:
An
Introduction
Sociology of Knowledge 1929-1931, trans. Louis Wirth and A. Shils (1936). The classic statement. ,
to
the
Edward
Essays on the Sociology of Knowledge, ed. Paul Kecskemeti
(1952).
An
important posthumous collection on special aspects of
the sociology of knowledge. Friedrich Meinecke, Historism, 2 vols. (1936; trans. J. E. Anderson, 1972). A subtle and elegant tracing of the historicist strand as it
Enlightenment in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century Germany, culminating in Ranke. Important and, to my mind, totally misleading. Robert K. Merton, "The Sociology of Knowledge," "Karl Mannheim and the Sociology of Knowledge," in Merton, Social Theory and Social Structure, (rev. edn., 1957), pp. 456-488, 489-508. Two
emerged
in reaction to the
lucid appraisals. J.
G. A. Pocock, The Ancient Constitution and the Feudal Law; A
[22i]
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
Study of English Historical Thought in the Seventeenth Century (1957). A model of how t^e social roots of historical style should be exposed and appraised. Sir Ronald Syme, Tacitus, 2 vols. (1958). A powerful and exhaustive account of Tacitus, deliberately written in a Tacitean style. James W. Thompson, A History of Historical Writing, 2 vols. (1942). There are other general histories, but this is probably the best, though none too good; a full history of history remains to be written. B. C. Ullman, "History and Tragedy/' Transactions of the American
^
Philological Association, 73 (1942), 25-53. sensible modification of Cornford's extreme position, it argues that while ancient history
borrowed from the drama, it had scientific elements. Rene Wellek, A History of Modern Criticism, 1750— 10,50, 4 vols, to date (1955-1965). In the absence of a complete history of styles this magisterial history of literary criticism can serve as an immensely informative substitute.
1
:
Gibbon
:
A Modern Cynic among Ancient Politicians Bv Gibbon
The Autobiography of Edward Gibbon, ed. Dero A. Saunders 1961 The most accessible version of Gibbon's memoirs, which present (
)
something of a bibliographical nightmare. A careful critical edition is that by Georges A. Bonnard (1966). The English Essays of Edward Gibbon, ed. Patricia B. Craddock (1972)
.
A
carefully edited collection.
Essai sur V etude de la litterature, in Miscellaneous
Gibbon, Esq.
2nd edn.,
ed.
John Lord
Works
of
Edward
Sheffield, 5 vols.
(1814), 4:1-93. This five-volume collection also contains most of Gibbon's minor writings; its correspondence is now superseded (See below, .
.
.
,
under Norton ) Gibbon's Journal to January 28, 1763. My Journal, I, II, III, and Ephemerides, ed. D. M. Low (1929). Definitive. Gibbons Journey from Geneva to Rome: His Journal from 20 April to 2 October 1764, ed. Georges A. Bonnard (1961). Definitive as well.
The History
and Fall of the Roman Empire, ed. J. B. (1896-1902). The best critical edition, though some
of the Decline
Bury, 7 vols. of its notes are
The
Letters of
Another
now
out of date.
Edward Gibbon,
ed.,
definitive edition.
[222]
J.
E. Norton,
3
vols.
(1956).
,
Bibliography Library of Edward Gibbon, Introduction by Geoffrey Keynes (1950). Fascinating information about a great collector and reader
The
of books.
On Gibbon J.
B. Black,
The Art
of History (1926). Civilized essays
eighteenth-century
great
Hume,
Voltaire,
historians,
including
and Robertson are the other
one
on the four on Gibbon;
three.
Harold L. Bond, The Literaiy Art of Edward Gibbon (i960). Very helpful stylistic analysis.
Leo Braudy, Narrative Form in History and Fiction: Hume, Fielding and Gibbon ( 1970) Interestingly places Gibbon into company with a philosopher and a novelist. C. N. Cochrane, 'The Mind of Edward Gibbon," University of Toronto Quarterly, 12, no. 1 (October 1942), 1-17; 12, no. 2 .
(January 1943), 146-166.
A
careful survey of Gibbon's philosophi-
cal position.
Lewis P. Curtis, "Gibbon's Paradise Lost," in The Age of Johnson: Essays Presented to Chauncey Brewster Tinker, ed. Frederick W. Hilles (1949), pp. 73-90. An elegant essay ing Gibbon as the aristocratic educator.
Giuseppe Giarrizzo, Edward Gibbon e
la
on Gibbon's
style, see-
cultura europea del settecento
(1954). A wide-ranging study, living up to its title. James William Johnson, The Formation of English
Neo-Classical
Thought (1967). Culminates in a long chapter on Gibbon. Michael Joyce, Edward Gibbon (1953). Short and clear. D. M. Low, Edward Gibbon, 1737-1794 (1937). Remains the
best
biography.
Antagonism to Christianity and the Has Provoked (1933). Detailed and special-
Shelby T. McClov, Gibbon Discussions That It
s
ized.
D.
Momigliano, "Gibbon's Contribution to Historical Method" ( 1954), in Momigliano, Studies in Historiography ( 1966) pp. 40-55. A very important essay.
Arnaldo
Thomas
P. Peardon,
The
1760—1830 (1933).
A
Transition in English Historical Writing, judicious
monograph, which places Gibbon
into his time.
Ward
Swain, Edward Gibbon the Historian (1966). Inferior to earlier studies, especially Low's.
Joseph
H. R. Trevor-Roper, "Edward Gibbon after 200 Years," The Listener, 72, no. 1856 (October 22, 1964), 617-619; 72, no. 1857 (October
[223]
STYLE 29, 1964),
657-659.
IN
Warmly
HISTORY
and, more surprisingly but persuasively, of
On
Gibbon the historian Gibbon the man.
appreciative of
Gibbon's World
B. Brumfitt, Voltaire, Historian (1958). A reliable monograph. M. L. Clarke, Greek Studies in England, 1700-1830 (1945). Survey of classical learning in Gibbon's day. J.
edn. (1951). An neglected generations of
David C. Douglas, English Scholars, 1660-1730, important, illuminating study of the
much
rev.
who preceded Gibbon. Peter Gay, The Enlightenment: An Interpretation, 2 vols. The Rise of Modern Paganism (1966); The Science of Freedom (1969). An scholars
attempt to offer a comprehensive interpretation of Gibbon's century; both volumes have full bibliographies. Arnaldo D. Momigliano, "Ancient History and the Antiquarian," in
Momigliano, Studies in Historiography, pp. 1-39. Another of Momigliano's penetrating essays. Jean Seznec, Essais sur Diderot et Vantiquite (1957). Moves far beyond its announced subject to provide understanding of links between the eighteenth century and classical antiquity. Jiirgen von Stackelberg, "Rousseau, d'Alembert et Diderot traducteurs de Tacite," Studi Francesi, no. 6 (September-December 1958), 395-4°7,
Tacitus in der Romania: Studien zur literarischen Rezeption
des Tacitus in Italien
und Frankreich (i960). Together
the heritage of Tacitus in France.
England remains
to
A
full
establish
study for his influence on
be written, though Auerbach and Bond are most
useful.
2
:
Ranke The Respectful :
Critic
By Ranke Sammtliche Werke,
Leopold von Ranke, Alfred Dove, and others, 54 vols. (1867-1890). The most comprehensive, though not wholly complete edition; the masterpieces have been published ed.
separately or in collections of selected works.
Deutsche Geschichte im Zeitalter der Reformation, ed. Paul Joachimsen, 6 vols. (1926). Notable for including some posthumous fragments, like the "Luther-Fragment" of 1817 (6:313-399), and the so-called "Frankfurt Manuscript" of 1837 (6:403-469). Other
[224]
.
Bibliography posthumous publications are conveniently
listed in
Rudolf Vierhaus,
Ranke und die soziale Welt (1957), pp. 251-252. Das Briefwerk, ed. Walther Peter Fuchs (1949). A good collection of Ranke letters. Neue Brief e, ed. Bernhard Hoeft and Hans Herzfeld (1949). A valuable companion volume. Aus Werk und Nachlass, vol. 1, Tagebucher, ed. Walther Peter Fuchs (1964) Immensely revealing. .
On Ranke Ludwig Dehio, "Ranke and German Imperialism" (1950), in Germany and World Politics in the Twentieth Century, trans. Dieter
A
Pevsner (1959).
brave attempt, from within the
torical establishment, to reevaluate
Pieter Geyl,
"Ranke but
in the Light of the Catastrophe," in Geyl,
much
his-
Ranke's historical work.
bates with Historians (1955), pp. 1-18. satisfactory,
German
A
severe
De-
and not wholly
needed, critique.
G. P. Gooch, "Ranke's Interpretation of German History," in Gooch, Studies in German History (1948), pp. 210-266. A second visit to territory Gooch had explored much earlier, in History and Historians in the Nineteenth Century. (See above, p. 221.) Eugen Guglia, Rankes Leben und Werke (1893). ^ biography that has been superseded by numerous publications of documents. Hanno Helbling, Leopold von Ranke und der historische Stil (1953). Studies on Ranke's stylistic procedures. H. F. Helmolt, Leopold von Rankes Leben und Wirkung (1921). The most recent biography; too uncritical. Carl Hinrichs,
(1954).
Georg G. torical
A
Ranke und
die
Geschichtstheologie
der Goethezeit
suggestive work on Ranke's world of ideas.
Ranke in American and German HisThought," History and Theory, 2 (1962), 17-40. A most Iggers,
"The Image
of
useful article. (See also Iggers
title, p.
227.)
Theodore von Laue, Leopold Ranke: The Formative Years (1950). Compact essay on the development of his historical ideas. Makes accessible, in good translations, two important Ranke essays, "A Dialogue on Politics," and "The Great Powers." Gerhard Masur, Rankes Begriff der Weltgeschichte (1926). Very useful on Ranke's ideas on universal history. Friedrich Meinecke, Cosmopolitanism and the National State (1963 Robert B. Kimber, 1970) Machiavellianism (1924; trans. Douglas Scott, 1957).
ed.; trans. ,
[225]
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
Historism, 2 vols. (1936; trans. J. E. Anderson, 1972.) In these three major works, and in many minor ones, Meinecke -,
studied
Ranke with
affectionate
admiration; both
affection
and
admiration seem, at least to me, excessive, though we can learn much about the subtlety of Ranke's mind and (indirectly) the
power
of Ranke's
way
of thinking over
German
historiography. (See
Krill title, p. 227.)
"Deutung eines Rankewortes," in Aphorismen und Skizzen zur Geschichte, 2nd edn. (n.d.), pp. 100-129. Variations on Ranke's saying that all epochs are equally near to God. 'Ranke und Burckhardt," in Aphorismen und Skizzen, pp. 143-180. An old man's reappraisal; with new reservations and new -,
insights.
Wilhelm Mommsen, Stein, Ranke, Bismarck: Ein Beitrag zur schen und sozialen Bewegung des 19. Jahrhunderts (1954).
politi-
Inter-
on Ranke's politics. Moriz Ritter, Die Entwicklung der Geschichtswissenschaft, an den juhrenden Werken betrachtet (1919), pp. 362-421. A long chapesting essay
ter in a general history of history.
Ernst Simon, Ranke und Hegel (1928). An examination of the claim that Ranke was indebted to Hegel's philosophy.
Rudolf Vierhaus, Ranke und die soziale Welt (1957). Already referred to (p. 225) for its valuable bibliography, this thoughtful essay seeks to establish Ranke's concern with society and social history; it contains some hitherto unpublished excerpts from Ranke's Nachlass.
Ranke's World and Impact l
Maarten Cornelis Brands, Historisme als Ideologie. Het Onpolitieke en 'Anti-Normatieve' Element in de duitse Geschiedwetenschap (1965). An inquiry into the profession and the practices of the
German
historicists.
Walter Bussmann, Treitschke: Sein Welt- und Geschichtsbild (1962). A good biography of Ranke's great rival. Ludwig Dehio, 'Thoughts on Germany's Mission, 1900-1918" (1952), in Dehio, Germany and World Politics in the Twentieth Century, trans. Dieter Pevsner (1959), pp. 72-108. Courageous thoughts on the imperialist world Ranke helped to build. (See also Dehio's essay on Ranke, cited above, p. 225.) Andreas Dorpalen, Heinrich von Treitschke (1957). A critical and fair-minded biography. Felix Gilbert,
Johann Gustav Droysen und
[226]
die
preussisch-deutsche
.
Bibliography An
Frage, Beiheft 20, Historische Zeitschrift (1931).
illuminating
esasy.
Walter
Goetz,
Historiker
in
Meiner
Zeit:
Gesammelte
Aufsdtze
(1957). Autobiographical, biographical, and historiographical essays by a liberal German historian; Ranke and his influence mark almost every page.
Too
respectful but informative.
Wolfgang Hock, Liberates Denken im Zeitalter der Paulskirche: Droysen und die Frankfurter Mitte (1957). National liberal historians at a critical time
— 1848—
in
the
life
German
of
history,
and German historians. Walther Hofer, Geschichtsschreibung und Weltanschauung (1950). A searching inquiry into Meinecke's historical work and thought. Highly recommended. Georg G. Iggers, The German Conception of History: The National Tradition of Historical Thought from Herder to the Present ( 1968) A comprehensive survey, with a chapter on Ranke, but surrounding it with his precursors, his few critics, and many followers. Useful. Hans-Heinz Krill, Die Ranke Renaissance: Max Lenz und Erich Marcks (1962). A scholarly examination of two highly regarded German followers of Ranke. Devastating and important. Friedrich Meinecke, Erlebtes, 1862-1 gig (1964). A volume of autobiography that chronicles the growth of a Rankean in a highly favorable atmosphere.
W. M. Simon, "Power and
Otto Hintze's Place in German Historiography," in The Responsibility of Power: Historical Essays in Honor of Hajo Holborn ed. Leonard Xrieger and Fritz Stern (1967), pp. 199-219. Fine essay on a historian marked by Ranke's view of history. Richard W. Sterling, Ethics in a World of Power: The Political Ideas of Friedrich Meinecke (1958). Can be read in conjunction with Responsibility:
f
Hofer, above.
Ernst
Weymar, Das
Selbstverstandnis der Deutschen
on history teaching
in
for its concentration
3:
German
on
(
1961
)
.
A
report
schools in the age of Ranke; valuable
relatively little
known
writers of textbooks.
Macaulay: Intellectual Voluptuary.
By Macaulay The Works
of
Lord Macaulay, 2nd
edn., ed.
Lady Trevelyan,
(1871). A very full but not wholly complete or Usable for almost all purposes.
[227]
critical
8 vols. edition.
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
and Thomas
Pinney (1972). Judicious selections, with excellent bibliography and introduction.
Selected
Writings,
ed.
John
Clive
On
Macaulay
Walter Bagehot, "Thomas Babington Macaulay/' Literary Studies, 2 (1879), 221-260. Witty and critical. Richmond C. Beatty, Lord Macaulay, Victorian Liberal (1938). Unimpressive; for the early years wholly superseded by Clive, below. John Clive, Macaulay: The Shaping of the Historian (1973). An impressive study of the growth of the historian's mind, down to his return from India; an important book. 'Macaulay 's Historical Imagination," Review of English '
,
(October i960), 20-28. A fine essay. Sir Charles Firth, A Commentary on Macaulay's History of England (1938). Posthumous lectures; an immensely valuable survey of style, scholarship, achievements, and prejudices. Literature,
G.
S.
1
"Macaulay's
Fraser,
Literature,
Pieter Geyl,
1
Style
Essayist,"
as
(October i960), 9-19.
"Macaulay
in his
A
Review of English
brief helpful survey.
Essays," in Geyl, Debates with His-
torians (1955), pp. 19-34. Excessively hostile but deserves attention.
W.
E. Gladstone, "Macaulay," in Gleanings of Past Years, vol. 2 (1879). An important contemporary assessment.
George Levine, "Macaulay: Progress and Retreat," in Levine, The Boundaries of Fiction: Carlyle, Macaulay, Newman (1968). Sensitive analysis; perhaps too emphatic on Macaulay's retreat from reality.
William A. Madden, "Macaulay's Style," in George Levine and William Madden, eds., The Art of Victorian Prose (1968), pp. 127-153. Helpful. John Morley, "Macaulay," Critical Miscellanies, vol. 1 (1888). By a late Victorian. J.
H. Plumb, "Thomas Babington Macaulay," University of Toronto Quarterly, 26 (1956-1957), 17-31. Traces Macaulay's style (mistakenly,
I
think) to lack of sexual passion.
Leslie Stephen,
"Macaulay,"
in
Hours
in a Library, 3 vols. (1892), 2:
343-376. Like Morley's appraisal, vigorous and valuable. "Macaulay, Thomas Babington," Dictionary of National Biography (1949), 12:410-418. Judicious and summary. Mark A. Thomson, Macaulay (1959). A lucid pamphlet, stressing ,
Macaulay's commitment to
politics.
[
22 8]
Bibliography M.
G.
Trevelyan, "Macaulay and the Sense of Optimism," in Ideas
and
Beliefs
of the Victorians,
foreword by
Harman Grisewood
(1949; 1966), pp. 46-52. A brief appreciative appraisal. G. O. Trevelyan, The Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay, 2 vols. (1876; enlarged one-volume edn., 1908). A splendid Victorian machine, filled with judicious views and complete letters; until
Thomas
Pinney's edition of the Macaulay's letters appears, this
(and Clive's) work remains an indispensable source.
Ronald Weber, "Singer and Seer: Macaulay on the Historian as Poet/' Papers on Language and Literature, 3 (Summer 1967), 210-219.
G.
Good
study of the part that literary art played in Macaulay's his-
torical
work.
M. Young, "Macaulay" (1937), in Victorian Essays, selected by W. D. Handcock (1962), pp. 35-45. Elegant and discriminating. Macaulay's
World
Noel Annan, Leslie Stephen: His Thought and Character in Relation to His Time (1952). A brilliant study of Evangelicalism and its aftermath in Victorian England.
"The
,
A
Intellectual Aristocracy," in Studies in Social History:
Tribute to G.
M.
Trevelyan, ed.
}.
H. Plumb (1955), pp. 241-
287. Important. Sir
A J.
The Whig Interpretation of History (1932). the modern critique of liberal historiography.
Herbert Butterfield,
minor
classic in
W.
Burrow, Evolution and Society: A Study in Victorian Social Theory (1970). Foundations of evolutionary views in Spencer,
Tylor,
and
others;
highly relevant
to
Macaulay's
perception
of
the past.
E.
M.
Forster,
Marianne Thornton:
1887 (1956).
A
A
Domestic Biography, 1797loving account of Clapham, by a famous des-
cendant.
William Minto, A Manual of English Prose Literature (edn. 1891). A general, thoroughgoing survey that pays close attention to Macaulay. John Morley, Recollections, 2 vols. (1917). Reminiscences and scattered diary entries by a cultivated late Victorian. Mario Praz, The Hero in Eclipse in Victorian Fiction, trans. Angus Davidson (1956). Places Macaulay into a general bourgeois, antiheroic framework (see especially pages 102-117, which are specifically devoted to Macaulay); too mechanical in pursuit of a thesis, but worth reading.
[229]
STYLE The English
Eric Stokes,
HISTORY
IN
Utilitarians
and India (1959). Excellent;
should be read in conjunction with Clive.
Hippolyte Taine, History of English Literature, trans. H. van Laun (1873). Contains a long and remarkable chapter on Macaulay
(Book V, chap. R. K.
Webb,
3).
Harriet Martineau:
A
Radical Victorian (i960).
A
fine
biography of one of Macaulay's most significant contemporaries.
G. M. Young, Victorian England: Portrait of an Age, 2nd edn. ( 1953) Amidst a large literature, still an outstanding general essay.
4:
Burckhardt:
The Poet
of
Truth
By Burckhardt Jacob Burckhardt-Gesamtausgabe, ed. Albert Oeri, Heinrich Wolfflin, and others, 14 vols. (1929-1933). The standard edition.
Max
Burckhardt, 7 vols, to date (1949-1969) This will be definitive, when complete. Meanwhile the following selections, all
Briefe, ed.
.
rather different, are
most helpful:
by Max Burckhardt ( 1965) Briefe, ed. Walther Rehm ( 1946) Briefe zur Erkenntnis seiner geistigen Gestalt, ed. Briefe, selected
(1935). Letters, ed.
A
Fritz
Kaphan
pioneering selection.
and
trans.
Alexander Dru (1955).
The
first
English col-
lection.
The Age of Constantine the Great, trans. Moses Hadas (1949). Good English version of Burckhardt's Zeit Constantins des Grossen (1853; 2nc edn., 1880) The Cicerone: An Art Guide to Painting in Italy for the Use of Travelers and Students (1908). Partial translation of Der Cicerone *
(1855).
The
Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy:
Middlemore (1878). There
is
a
An
Essay, trans. S. G. C.
good and accessible
illustrated
by L. Goldscheider (2nd. edn., 1945). Among German editions of Die Kultur der Renaissance in Italien: Ein Versuch (i860), the Kroner Verlag edition is handy and kept in edition, introduction
print.
and Freedom: Reflections on History (trans. Anonymous, 1943). The important posthumous Weltgeschichtliche Betrach-
Force
tungen (1905)
in English.
Recollections of Rubens, trans. late
essay,
Mary Hottinger (1950).
published posthumously in
[230]
1898.
A
revealing
.
Bibliography
On
Burckhardt
Wallace K. Ferguson, The Renaissance in Historical Thought: Five Centuries of Interpretation (1948). Though much more inclusive than Burckhardt, gives him pride of place and puts him into the historiographical context.
im Leben und V/erk Jacob Burckpoetry and literature in Burckhardt;
Alfred Lukas Gass, Die Dichtung hardts
(
1967)
On
.
the place of
very suggestive and informative.
Peter Gay, "Burckhardt's Renaissance:
Power,"
in
The
Between Responsibility and
Responsibility of Power: Historical Essays in
Honor
Hajo Holborn, ed. Leonard Krieger and Fritz Stern (1967), pp. 183-198. An essay on which I have drawn. Hajo Holborn, "Introduction" to Burckhardt, Civilization of the of
Renaissance in Italy (Modern Library edition, 1954). Short but excellent.
Karl Joel, Jacob Burckhardt als Geschichtsphilosoph
(1918). Useful
essay.
Werner
Kaegi, Jacob Burckhardt: Eine Biographie, 4 vols, to date
Most
book were vol. 2, Das Erlebnis der geschichtlichen Welt (1950), and vol. 3, Die Zeit (1947-
Definitive.
).
der klassischen
Werke
useful for this
1956) Karl Lowith, Jacob Burckhardt: Der Mensch inmitten der Geschichte (1936). Essays, including one on Burckhardt's "relation to language." (
Burckhardt's Renaissance
Hans Baron, The Crisis of the Early manism and Republican Liberty Ernst
in an
Age
of
edn. (1966). The classic account of Cassirer, The Individual and the Cosmos
Tyranny,
HuClassicism and civic humanism.
Italian Renaissance: Civic
rev.
in
Renaissance
Philosophy trans. Mario Domandi (1963). A profound study. Federico Chabod, "The Concept of the Renaissance," in Chabod, Machiavelli and the Renaissance trans. David Moore (1958), pp. ,
,
149-200. ,
A
lucid orienting essay.
"Cultural History and
Problems," Rapports, Eleventh
its
International Congress of Historical Sciences (i960), 1:40-58.
A
valuable report.
Eugenio
Garin,
Italian
Humanism,
trans.
P.
(1966).
A
and History
in
Munz
splendidly balanced survey. Felix Gilbert, Machiavelli
and Guicciardini: [23
1
]
Politics
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
Sixteenth-Century Florence (1965).
An
excellent double essay in
intellectual-cultural-political history.
E. H. Gombrich, In Search of Cultural History (1969) An expanded lecture; a vigorous attack, from a position close to Sir Karl Popper's, .
on Hegelian holism, including Burckhardt's.
If
too severe, worth
pondering. ,
Norm and Form
(1966). Interesting essays on Renaissance
art.
Denys Hay, The (1961). indebted
A to,
Renaissance in
Italian
Its
Burckhardt.
and Humanist
Strains
1961
(
Renaissance Thought
(1965).
Background
very good short account, independent of, but openly
Paul Oskar Kristeller, Renaissance Thought:
,
Historical
Two
The
Classic, Scholastic,
)
II:
Papers on
Humanism and
the Arts
learned and lucid collections of Renaissance thought
and culture. Very valuable. Erwin Panofsky, Renaissance and Renascences in Western Art ( i960) A modern vindication of Burckhardt's view that there was a distinct Renaissance, by one of the great art historians of our century.
On
Intuition
and Knowledge
Claude Bernard, Introduction a Vetude de la medecine experimental (1865). A great work by a distinguished biologist on how scientists actuallv proceed.
P. B.
Medawar, The Art
of the Soluble: Creativity
and
Originality in
Science (edn. 1969). A series of essays and reviews in scientific philosophy and procedures; lucid expositions of the anti-inductivist position.
Induction and Intuition in Scientific Thought (1969). Lectures on scientific method; carries forward the nineteenth-century ,
arguments of Bernard and Whewell. Karl R. Popper, Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth of Scientific Knowledge, 2nd edn. (1965). A series of related essays setting forth Popper's anti-inductivist theorv of knowledge. The Logic of Scientific Discovery (trans. 1959). The English version of an important treatise in epistemology first published in ,
!934-
William Whewell, The Philosophy of Discovery (i860). The Philosophy of the Inductive Sciences, 2nd edn., 2 vols. (1847). Highly significant challenges to the empiricist epistemology ,
of
John Stuart Mill.
[232]
.
Bibliography
Conclusion
(Many
:
On
Style in History
of the titles listed in the Introduction are applicable here.)
History: Art or Science?
Charles Beard, "Written History as an Act of Faith," American His-
Review, 39, no. 2 (January 1934), 219-229; conveniently reprinted in Hans Meyerhoff, ed., The Philosophy of History in torical
An
Anthology (1959), pp. 140-151. The famous presidential address bringing Idealism to the American historical proour Time: fession.
Carl Becker, Quarterly,
"What
are Historical Facts?"
no.
The Western
Political
(September
1955), 327-340; available in Meyerhoff, Philosophy of History, pp. 120-137. A characteristically witty relativist statement, first written in 1926. Marc Bloch, The Historians Craft, trans. Peter Putnam (1953). 8,
3
Fragmentary but immensely illuminating thoughts by a great and heroic historian. L. P. Curtis, ing,
Jr.,
ed.,
A
pioneer-
not always successful, set of sixteen essays by contemporary
historians linking
A
The Historians Workshop (1971). their
backgrounds and motives to their work.
genre that deserves further exploration. (See Namier
title
below.)
Arthur C. Danto, Analytical Philosophy of History (1965). An influential view, from the standpoint of analytical philosophy, holding that history had
own, storytelling logic. John Dewey, Logic: The Theory of Inquiry (1938), especially chap. 12. The locus classicus of the pragmatist argument that history is essentially responsive to the historian's need. (See Lovejoy title its
below.)
William H. Dray, Philosophy of History (1964).
A
clear
and
fair-
minded introduction. G. R. Elton, The Practice of History ,
(
1967)
and Practices (1970). Vigorous, the craft by a practicing craftsman.
Political History: Principles
in fact combative, assessments of
Good common
sense mixed in generous proportions with elemen-
tary philosophical confusions.
torical
Thought
historians;
Toward
a Logic of His(1970). Pert, often impertinent attack on other
David Hackett Fischer, Historians'
Fallacies:
sometimes amusing, but
[233]
filled
with
its
own
fallacies.
STYLE V. H. Galbraith,
HISTORY
IN
An
Introduction to the Study of History (1964). Clearheaded defense of history as truth-seeking.
W.
and the
B. Gallie, Philosophy
Defense of the view of history
Historical Understanding (1964). as storytelling. Impressive
but (to
my
mind) unconvincing. Patrick Gardiner, The Nature of
Historical Explanation (1955). Part of philosophers' debate over the place of causal analysis in history.
Felix Gilbert, Machiavelli
and Guicciardini:
Sixteenth-Century Florence
Politics
(1965). Again:
Hanna H. Gray, "Renaissance Humanism: The
H. Hexter, "The Historian and His Day," in History (1961). pp. 1-13.
A
way
work.
in ,
which historians
"The Rhetoric
really
study.
(October-December
in Hexter, Reappraisals
typically energetic
account of the
of History," in International Encyclopedia of
the Social Sciences, ed. David L.
A
splendid
in
Pursuit of Eloquence,"
Journal of the History of Ideas, 24, no. 4 1963), 497-514. A pioneering essay. J.
a
and History
Sills,
17 vols. (1968) 6:368-394.
deservedly familiar essay, seeking to establish an independent
place for history through
its
rhetoric.
Amusing, vigorous but,
I
think, unpersuasive.
The History Primer 1971 "The Rhetoric of History." -,
in
(
)
.
Expansion of the view expressed
Richard Hofstadter, "History and the Social Sciences," in The Varieties of History, ed. Fritz Stern
(1956), pp. 359-370. Short, informal,
humane. H. Stuart Hughes, History as Art and as Science (1964). Subtitled "Twin Vistas on the Past," this interesting collection of essays examines
the
of
relation
history
to
literature,
psychoanalysis,
anthropology, and other neighbors.
Foundations of Modern Historical Scholarship: Language, Law, and History in the French Renaissance (1970).
Donald R.
An David
Kelley,
excellent analysis.
Landes and Charles Tillv, eds., History as Social Science (1971). Brief report on interdisciplinary work being done or needing doing; sketchy but rather helpful. Gordon Leff, History and Social Theory (1969). A strong critique of the Marxist view of history and an examination of the place of S.
history
among
the sciences of man.
Arthur O. Lovejoy, "Present Standpoints and Past History" (1939), conveniently reprinted in slightly abridged form in Hans Meyerhoff, ed., The Philosophy of History in Our Time: An Anthology (1959), pp. 173-187.
A
powerful refutation of Dewey's attack on
[234]
.
Bibliography objectivity;
develops the idea of "interestingness" as a cause for
inquiry.
Maurice Mandelbaum, The Problem of Historical Knowledge:
Answer
to Relativism (1967).
to Dilthey,
Mannheim, and
A
An
philosophically sophisticated reply
others; a valuable analysis.
Marrou, De la connaissance historique, 4th edn. (1959). Reflectons by a distinguished ancient historian. Hans Meyerhoff, The Philosophy of History in Our Time: An Anthology (1959). Well-chosen series of excerpts from a variety of H.-I.
philosophical positions.
Namier, Lewis Namier: A Biography (1971). A rare thing: a candid biography of a controversial historian; while it does not assess Namier's histories, it clarifies his psychological makeup. Lewis Namier, "History," in Namier, Avenues of History (1952), pp. 1-10. Witty, brief observations. Emery Neff, The Poetry of History: The Contribution of Literature and Literary Scholarship to the Writing of History Since Voltaire Julia
(1947). A" e ^ e g anr rather neglected essay on the subject of Conclusion: the definition of history. >
J.
my
H. Plumb, The Death of the Past (1970). A wide-ranging survey of the way cultures have used their past; stimulating and informative.
David M. Potter, History and American Society ed. Don E. Fehrenbacher (1973). A beautiful collection of essays that illuminate the debts the historian owes to culture, and culture to the historian. Social Science Research Council, Bulletin 54, Theory and Practice in Historical Study ( 1946) Bulletin 64, The Social Sciences in Historical Study (1954). Instructive; should be read together as illustrations of development of thought in the American profession. Chronicles a certain decline ,
,
in relativism.
Fritz
Stern,
ed.,
The
Varieties of History
,
From
Voltaire
the
to
Present (1956). A useful, varied anthology. G. M. Trevelyan, "Clio: A Muse" (1903). Conveniently reprinted in
somewhat abridged form
in Stern, Varieties of History, pp.
245. Important defense of history as literature. H. R. Trevor-Roper, History: Professional and Lay (1957). plea for history as a literary pursuit.
Stephen Usher, The Historians of Greece and
Rome
A
227-
spirited
(1969).
An
intelligent survey.
W.
H. Walsh, Philosophy of History: An Introduction, (1958). Introductory, but clear and intelligent.
[235]
rev.
edn.
STYLE
IN
HISTORY A New
George Watson, The Study of Literature:
Rationale of Literary
1969) A clear-headed essay. Morton White, Foundations of Historical Knowledge History
.
(
(1965).
A
philosopher's technical analysis.
Peter
Winch, The Idea
Philosophy (1958). Among the best "philosophical psychology" identified
ment
that
and
of a Social Science
the science of
man and
whollv distinct. Other well-known
known with
Relation to
Its
of the writings
Wittgenstein's
on
argu-
the sciences of nature are
titles
in this school include A.
Melden, Free Action (1961), and R. S. Peters, The Concept of Motivation (i960). But see, for a defense of determinism as being quite compatible with free action, Alasdair Maclntyre, "The Antecedents of Action" and "The Idea of a Social Science," in Maclntyre, Against the Self-images of the Age: Essays on Ideology and Philosophy (1971), pp. 191-210, 211-229. C. Vann Woodward, The Age of Reinterpretation, Publication No. 35, Service Center For Teachers of History (1961). A persuasive I.
essay.
On
the Definition of Science
R. B. Braithwaite, Scientific Explanation: A Study of the Function of Theory, Probability and Law in Science (1953). Technical but lucid.
Arthur Danto and Sidney Morgenbesser, (i960).
One
of the
most useful of
eds.,
Philosophy of Science
several anthologies.
George Devereux, From Anxiety to Method in the Behavioral Sciences (1967). A very important essay by an imaginative scholar, both psychoanalyst and anthropologist, on the psychological charges the researcher puts into his research, and how to neutralize them. (See also
Myrdal, below.)
Herbert Feigl and Wilfrid
Readings in Philosophical Analysis (1949). Though no longer new, this anthology contains
a
number
of
now
Sellars,
eds.,
classic articles illuminating the
nature of
modern
scientific thinking.
Charles Coulston Gillispie,
The Edge
of Objectivity:
the History of Scientific Ideas (i960). the definition of science.
A
An
Essay in
valuable contribution to
Carl G. Hempel, Aspects of Scientific Explanation and Other Essays in the Philosophy of Science (1965). A collection of seminal essays, including the classic
"The Function
of General
Laws
in
History," by a philosopher persuasively arguing that the logic of
[236]
,
.
Bibliography history
and that of the natural sciences are the same. Indispensable.
(See also Nagel, below.)
Philosophy of Natural Science (1966). Beautifully clear and remarkably brief. -,
Gunnar Myrdal,
plea that social scientists
science
(1969). A vigorous recognize the peculiar nature of their
Objectivity in Social Research
and acknowledge
(in
order
overcome)
to
their
biases.
Fits equally well into the next category.
The
Structure of Science: Problems in the Logic of Scientific Explanation (1961). A splendidly clear exposition of the
Ernest Nagel,
positivist position, assimilating history to science
and incidentally
refuting, with great dash, opposing points of view.
An
important
book.
On J.
L.
Austin,
Perception
Philosophical Papers,
ed.
J.
Warnock (1961) How To Do Things With Words,
O. Urmson and G.
J.
.
O. Urmson (1962) Sense and Sensibilia, reconstructed from notes by G. J. Warnock (1962). Witty lectures and articles constituting a brilliant assault on the sense-data theory and an amusing and profound ,
ed.
}.
,
restatement of Realism.
Egon Brunswik, "The Conceptual Framework national Encyclopedia of Unified Science, short essay on
what kind
1,
of Psychology," Inter-
No. 10 (1952).
of science psychology in fact
Sigmund Freud, "Formulations on the Two
A
fine
is.
Mental Functioning" (1911), in The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud, ed. James Strachey et al., 23 vols, to date (1953)> 12:213-226. The first compressed statement on the pleasure and the reality principles. In an important sense, of course, all of Freud's work is relevant to the study of the way in which the perceiver grasps, masters, and disPrinciples
of
torts reality.
Gibson, The Perception of the Visual World (1950). The Senses Considered as Perceptual Systems (1966). Two masterly statements of the view that perception is in general strikingly adequate, and can be improved. Highly pertinent to my
James
J. ,
Conclusion.
Nelson
Goodman, 'The
Way The
World
Is,"
The Review
of
(September i960), pp. 48-56. Heinz Hartmann, Ego Psychology and the Problem of Adaptation Metaphysics, 14, no.
1
[237]
STYLE
HISTORY
IN
(1939; trans. David Rapaport, 1958). A classic essay on the "conflict-free sphere of the ego" by Freud's distinguished disciple. Essays on
-,
analytic directly
Ego Psychology:
Selected Problems in
Theory (1964). Several essays contained in this volume relate to man's perception of his world; an authoritative
statement of ego psychology, further advancing Freud's
make George
Psycho-
to
effort
psychoanalysis into a general psychology. S.
Klein,
brilliant series
home
(1970). A of studies by a psychologist of perception wholly at Perception,
Motives, and Personality
an impressive attempt to mediate between the objectivism of Gibson and the subjectivism of other psychologists. Its formulations were important to my Conclusion. Ivo Kohler, The Formation and Transformation of the Perceptual World (1951; trans. H. Fiss, 1964). A seminal essay, from which American psychologists of perception have learned much. Robert J. Swartz, ed., Perceiving, Sensing, and Knowing (1965). A sound selection of articles on the philosophy of perception. in psychoanalytic theory;
On Mommsen Ludo Moritz Hartmann, Theodor Mommsen, Eine Biographische Skizze (1908). A very useful first sketch; with much unpublished correspondence. Alfred Heuss, Theodor
Mommsen und
das 19. Jahrhundert
(1956).
Excellent appraisal.
David Knowles, "The Monumenta Germaniae Historica," in Great Historical Enterprises; Problems in Monastic History (1963), pp. 63-97. Includes a discussion of
Mommsen's
scholarly activities.
Theodor Mommsen, Reden und Aufsatze, 3rd printing (1912). A spirited collection of essays and addresses. Rbmische Geschichte, 3rd edn., 3 vols. (1861). The Republic down to or up to Julius Caesar. Lily Ross Taylor, Party Politics in the Age of Caesar (1949). A ,
—
—
scholarly examination of the age to torical
passion; a
fine
summary
which
Mommsen
gave his
of the historiographical
his-
work of
Gelzer and Premerstein.
Lothar Wickert, Theodor
Mommsen: Eine
Biographie,
3 vols, to
date
Stodgy but authoritative. Albert Wucher, Theodor Mommsen: Geschichtsschreibung und Politik (1956). A fine, thorough essay; very favorable to Mommsen, but
(1959-
justifies its
).
point of view.
[238]
INDEX and
Adams, Herbert Baxter, 61 Analysis, in Tacitus and Gibbon,
scientific history,
173-175, 176-180; skepticism of, 163164; stylistic development of,
26 Ancient History (Rollin), 32-33 Annals (Tacitus), 23
of,
Arnold, Matthew, on Macaulay,
tion,"
98 Auerbach, Erich, on social perceptions in style, 15-16
tense,
*73 Byron, on Gibbon, 47
Balzac, 190-191
Capote, Truman, 194
Becker, Carl, 197 Bernard, Claude, 178 Bossuet, 32
Carlyle,
Brenner, Albert, 170 Buffon, on style, 3, 5, 6-7
Christian history, 32-34
165-167; sublimation
145; appraisal of, 182;
Cicerone,
166;
coherence
and of,
171-173; compared to Ranke, 181-182; devotion to readable style of, 146;
emotional
style of,
and Gewaltmenschen, 167169, 170, 182; on individualism, 158-163; and Kultur der Renaissance in Italien, 141142; on Leon Battista Alberti, 143-145;
literary
style of, 7; personality of,
146,
164-165; personal style of, 150156; on poetry and history, 175-176, 180-181; professional style of, 9; and psychology of research, 178-180; on Ranke, 146, 149; on Renaissance, 156163;
scholarship
169-170; and use of "intui-
and use of present 155; and Zeitgeist, 171179;
Thomas, on Macaulay,
Cicerone (Burckhardt), 166 Culture: impact on historian 206-208; and stvle, 14-15
of,
149-150;
of,
Curchot, Suzanne, 23, 39, 51 Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, The (Gibbon), 8, 41,
42-43
8;
157; life of,
works
Carr, E. H., 198
Burckhardt, Jacob: anti-Semitism of,
in
De
Mabillon ) 73 Deutsche Geschichte im Zeitalter re
diplomatica
(
,
der Reformation (Ranke), 63 Dickens, 191-192
Discours de Vhistoire universelle (Bossuet), 32 Doyle, Conan, 192 Fiction, relation to history,
190-
194 First Circle,
Forster, E.
[239]
The
(Solzhenitzyn),
M., 191
STYLE
IN
HISTORY
Franzosische Geschichte (Ranke),
194-197; relation of art and science in, 185-190; as science, 213-215; See also objectivity,
59-61 Freud, Sigmund, 190
Historian (s) Galbraith, V. H., 188
Romanischen und Germanischen Vblker von
Geschichten
der
1514 (Ranke), 68 Edward: appraisal
bis
1494 Gibbon,
of,
53-56; antithetical rhetoric
of,
45-47; discovery of Rome, 3639; emotional style of, 8; and History of the Decline and Fall of the
Roman
Empire, 21-22,
History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, The (Gib-
bon), 21-22, 41, 42-43 Hochhuth, Rolf, 192 Hume, David, 25, 33, 39, 43 Humor, Gibbon's use of, 51—53 Imitation: style,
24;
on,
influences
ironic
style
of,
34-36, 48; 41-50, 54-56;
literary style of, 7;
and natural
history of Christianity,
jection of Christian world view,
style,
23;
style
12;
stylistic
40-41;
development of
on
Oliver,
of,
41-50,
(Burckhardt), 10, 141-142, 171
Mabillon, Jean, 73 Macaulay, Thomas
of,
religion,
44-46 Goldsmith,
use
Kafka, Franz, 192 Kultur der Renaissance in Italien
22-
analvsed,
treatment
11-12
Werner, 177
Kaegi,
34-36; on
of,
and
48-
50; professional style of, 9; re-
scholarship
24;
54-56
38-40;
as philosophical historian,
32;
classics,
Gibbon's
Irony,
41, 42-43; humor of, 51-53; imitation of Tacitus' style, 21-
of
use
of
audience
of,
120-121; on Ba-
132-133; belief in progof, ress 130-134; impact of Claphamites on, 123-124; crit-
con,
icism of, 97-99; and ''declamatory disquisition," 112-113; ex ~
pansiveness
speech, 26
Babington:
in
stvle
of,
115,
118-119; and History of England, 116-118; intellectual circle of, 121-122; life of, 121116,
Historian (s )
:
and
culture,
208; perspectives of,
206-
197-200; 209-210;
and professionalism, and style, 4; and subjectivity,
ernism
199-200; See also History
of,
Historisch-Politische
Zeitschrift,
terpretation
in,
132-134; personality 114-115; political causes of, style of,
215-
190-194; in210-212; and
79; relationship with father of, 123-125, 126-127; relationship
nature
216; and fiction,
mod-
of,
137-138; professional 9;
dual
7;
99-101, 102, 105-106; on Ranke, 78-
71 History:
127; literary style of,
of,
[240]
prose
passages
of,
1
Index with
sisters
scholarship
125-126;
of, of,
secular
119;
128-129; and social history, 116-118; speech style of, 108-109; stylistic techniques religion of,
of,
Ranke, Leopold von: aphorisms of, 68-69; app^isal of, 60-62, 72-73; compared to Gibbon, 75-76; and Deutsche Geschichte im Zeit78;
106-114; and use of histor-
ical
parallels,
parallel
107;
clauses,
use
of
rhythmic reiteration, 108, 110; volubility of,
gism,
127;
of,
Reformation, 63; votion to service of, 81-83; Die Romischen Papste in letzten vier Jahrhunderten,
and den 76-
documentary research
of,
alter der
and use of
111;
criticism
and Whig-
77;
134-136
Macaulay, Zachary, 123, 124
70-71,
86-87; dramatic tech-
niques
of,
62-64, 67; Franzbsische Geschichte,
Norman, 194 Mann, Thomas, 191 Mailer,
de-
and
Melville, 191
5961; and Geschichten der Romanischen und Germanischen Volker von 1494 bis 1514, 68;
Michelet, 149
life of,
Mimesis (Auerbach), 16 Mommsen, Theodor: criticism
7; political biases of,
Meinecke, Friedrich, 91
literary style of,
91-92; on
power, 87-90; professional style
of,
203; impact of political activ-
on work of, 205; politics of, 202-203; Roman experience of, 204-205; scholarship of, 200-201; style of, 201-202 Montesquieu, 43 Murry, Middleton, 5
69-72;
of, 9;
ities
religiositv of,
and
scientific
68;
and
78, 79-86;
method, 61, 67history,
social
93-94; style characterized, 62, 76-79; and theology of history, 84-86; and use of primary sources, 7475; and use of words, 67 Religion, Gibbon's treatment of,
44-46
Natural History of Religion
Rollin, Charles, 32-33
(Hume), 39
Roman History
(Rollin), 32-33 Romantics, view of stvle, 1
Nevins, Allan, 61 Niebuhr, Barthold Georg, 74 Nietzsche, 162
Romische
Geschichte
(Momm-
sen), 201, 202, 203 Penetration, in Tacitus and Gib-
Die Romischen
of
historians,
Sartre, Jean-Paul, 191
Porson, Richard, 52 Professionalism, impact torian of,
(Ranke), 76-77
197-
200
in
letzten vier Jahrhunderten
bon, 25-26 Perspectives,
Papste
209-210
and imitation, 24 Scholarship, of Gibbon, 34-36 Satire,
on
his-
Scientific history, 61
[241]
den
STYLE Skepticism
in
IN
Tacitus and
Gib-
Macaulay's
con-
bon, 29 Social
history,
tribution to,
Society
116-118
the
for
1
and
of,
abuse
development 11-12; dimensions of, 212of, 5-6;
213; elements of, 8-9; function of, of,
13-14;
objectivity, roles of, in,
3;
7-8;
12; social information
study
of,
6;
of
McGraw-Hill Paperbacks
New York,
of
Americas
N.Y. 10020
Gib-
21-24;
30—31
University of Leipzig, 69 Voltaire, 29
West, Rebecca, 194 Whewell, William, 178 Windelband, Wilhelm, 213
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University of Basel, 142 University of Berlin, 70, 72 University of Gottingen, 73
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1221
imitation
and
17; professional, 9;
14-16;
bon's
23;
emotional,
216; history
literary,
and Annals,
world view
24
Solzhenitzyn, 192-193 Sources, Ranke's use of, 74-75 Strauss, Leo, 1 Style:
thought, 9-10; and truth, 217; uses of, 3-4; value of, 7 Tacitus:
Mitigation
Abolition of Slavery,
HISTORY
HISTORY
Style 111
History What does an
Peter
Gay
and lucid guide to the proper reading of Gibbon, Ranke, Macaulay, and Burckhardt— great historians who were also great stylists— Peter Gay demonstrates that, as much as it is a symptom of his bias and belief, style is an invaluable clue to the historian's insight. historian's style reveal? In this original
By showing how the habits
research and presentation— "professional" style— relate to "literary" and "personal" style, Professor Gay suggests that a knowledge of the historian's working methods is an interpretative factor in itself: Ranke assiduously visited all accessible archives; Macaulay pored over broadsides and collections of verses; Gibbon mastered the history of ancient Rome from modern compilations; and Burckhardt searched for Renaissance biographies which he transformed into chilling stories. of
Thus, for Peter Gay, style is the key to culture, and the "truth" of history— as it helps to define that culture— can only be fully understood through an objective and thorough analysis of all its elements. "Style
in
History takes up that marvellous perennial— What
is
History?— from a new perspective with enormous success It is like going through a portrait gallery from a Rembrandt to a Vermeer to a Manet to a Cezanne. It is a real tour de force. 1 '
—Robert
L.
Heilbroner
Peter Gay, one of America's leading cultural historians, is Durfee Professor of History at Yale. Among his many books are The En-
Modern Paganism, for which he received the National Book Award in 1967, Weimar Culture: The Outsider as Insider, and Art and Act— On Causes in History: Manet, Gropius, lightenment: The Rise of
Mondrian.
m
McGraw-Hill Paperbacks
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