My theme is history. It is an
old subject, which has been discoursed about since
Herodotus, and I should be vain indeed if I flattered
myself that I could say aught new concerning the methods
of writing it, when this has for so long a period
engaged the minds of so many gifted men. Yet
to a sympathetic audience, to people who love history,
there is always the chance that a fresh treatment
may present the commonplaces in some different combination,
and augment for the moment an interest which is perennial.
Holding a brief for history as do
I your representative, let me at once concede that
it is not the highest form of intellectual endeavor;
let us at once agree that it were better that all
the histories ever written were burned than for the
world to lose Homer and Shakespeare. Yet as it
is generally true that an advocate rarely admits anything
without qualification, I should not be loyal to my
client did I not urge that Shakespeare was historian
as well as poet. We all prefer his Antony and
Cleopatra and Julius Cæsar to the Lives in North’s
Plutarch which furnished him his materials. The
history is in substance as true as Plutarch, the dramatic
force greater; the language is better than that of
Sir Thomas North, who himself did a remarkable piece
of work when he gave his country a classic by Englishing
a French version of the stories of the Greek.
It is true as Macaulay wrote, the historical plays
of Shakespeare have superseded history. When we
think of Henry V, it is of Prince Hal, the boon companion
of Falstaff, who spent his youth in brawl and riot,
and then became a sober and duty-loving king; and our
idea of Richard III. is a deceitful, dissembling, cruel
wretch who knew no touch of pity, a bloody tyrant
who knew no law of God or man.
The Achilles of Homer was a very living
personage to Alexander. How happy he was, said
the great general, when he visited Troy, “in
having while he lived so faithful a friend, and when
he was dead so famous a poet to proclaim his actions”!
In our century, as more in consonance with society
under the regime of contract, when force has largely
given, pay to craft, we feel in greater sympathy with
Ulysses; “The one person I would like to have
met and talked with,” Froude used to say, “was
Ulysses. How interesting it would be to have his
opinion on universal suffrage, and on a House of Parliament
where Thersites is listened to as patiently as the
king of men!”
We may also concede that, in the realm
of intellectual endeavor, the natural and physical
sciences should have the precedence of history.
The present is more important than the past, and those
sciences which contribute to our comfort, place within
the reach of the laborer and mechanic as common necessaries
what would have been the highest luxury to the Roman
emperor or to the king of the Middle Ages, contribute
to health and the preservation of life, and by the
development of railroads make possible such a gathering
as this, these sciences, we cheerfully
admit, outrank our modest enterprise, which, in the
words of Herodotus, is “to preserve from decay
the remembrance of what men have done.”
It may be true, as a geologist once said, in extolling
his study at the expense of the humanities, “Rocks
do not lie, although men do;” yet, on the other
hand, the historic sense, which during our century
has diffused itself widely, has invaded the domain
of physical science. If you are unfortunate enough
to be ill, and consult a doctor, he expatiates on
the history of your disease. It was once my duty
to attend the Commencement exercises of a technical
school, when one of the graduates had a thesis on
bridges. As he began by telling how they were
built in Julius Caesar’s time, and tracing at
some length the development of the art during the
period of the material prosperity of the Roman Empire,
he had little time and space left to consider their
construction at the present day. One of the most
brilliant surgeons I ever knew, the originator of
a number of important surgical methods, who, being
physician as well, was remarkable in his expedients
for saving life when called to counsel in grave and
apparently hopeless cases, desired to write a book
embodying his discoveries and devices, but said that
the feeling was strong within him that he must begin
his work with an account of medicine in Egypt, and
trace its development down to our own time. As
he was a busy man in his profession, he lacked the
leisure to make the preliminary historical study,
and his book was never written. Men of affairs,
who, taking “the present time by the top,”
are looked upon as devoted to the physical and mechanical
sciences, continually pay tribute to our art.
President Garfield, on his deathbed, asked one of
his most trusted Cabinet advisers, in words that become
pathetic as one thinks of the opportunities destroyed
by the assassin’s bullet, “Shall I live
in history?” A clever politician, who knew more
of ward meetings, caucuses, and the machinery of conventions
than he did of history books, and who was earnest
for the renomination of President Arthur in 1884,
said to me, in the way of clinching his argument, “That
administration will live in history.” So
it was, according to Amyot, in the olden time.
“Whensoever,” he wrote, “the right
sage and virtuous Emperor of Rome, Alexander Severus,
was to consult of any matter of great importance,
whether it concerned war or government, he always
called such to counsel as were reported to be well
seen in histories.” “What,”
demanded Cicero of Atticus, “will history
say of me six hundred years hence?”
Proper concessions being made to poetry
and the physical sciences, our place in the field
remains secure. Moreover, we live in a fortunate
age; for was there ever so propitious a time for writing
history as in the last forty years? There has
been a general acquisition of the historic sense.
The methods of teaching history have so improved that
they may be called scientific. Even as the chemist
and physicist, we talk of practice in the laboratory.
Most biologists will accept Haeckel’s designation
of “the last forty years as the age of Darwin,”
for the theory of evolution is firmly established.
The publication of the Origin of Species, in 1859,
converted it from a poet’s dream and philosopher’s
speculation to a well-demonstrated scientific theory.
Evolution, heredity, environment, have become household
words, and their application to history has influenced
every one who has had to trace the development of
a people, the growth of an institution, or the establishment
of a cause. Other scientific theories and methods
have affected physical science as potently, but none
has entered so vitally into the study of man.
What hitherto the eye of genius alone could perceive
may become the common property of every one who cares
to read a dozen books. But with all of our advantages,
do we write better history than was written before
the year 1859, which we may call the line of demarcation
between the old and the new? If the English, German,
and American historical scholars should vote as to
who were the two best historians, I have little doubt
that Thucydides and Tacitus would have a pretty large
majority. If they were asked to name a third choice,
it would undoubtedly lie between Herodotus and Gibbon.
At the meeting of this association in Cleveland, when
methods of historical teaching were under discussion,
Herodotus and Thucydides, but no others, were mentioned
as proper object lessons. What are the merits
of Herodotus? Accuracy in details, as we understand
it, was certainly not one of them. Neither does
he sift critically his facts, but intimates that he
will not make a positive decision in the case of conflicting
testimony. “For myself,” he wrote,
“my duty is to report all that is said, but I
am not obliged to believe it all alike, a
remark which may be understood to apply to my whole
history.” He had none of the wholesome skepticism
which we deem necessary in the weighing of historical
evidence; on the contrary, he is frequently accused
of credulity. Nevertheless, Percy Gardner calls
his narrative nobler than that of Thucydides, and Mahaffy
terms it an “incomparable history.”
“The truth is,” wrote Macaulay in his
diary, when he was forty-nine years old, “I admire
no historians much except Herodotus, Thucydides, and
Tacitus.” Sir M. E. Grant Duff devoted
his presidential address of 1895, before the Royal
Historical Society, wholly to Herodotus, ending with
the conclusion, “The fame of Herodotus, which
has a little waned, will surely wax again.”
Whereupon the London Times devoted a leader to the
subject. “We are concerned,” it said,
“to hear, on authority so eminent, that one of
the most delightful writers of antiquity has a little
waned of late in favor with the world. If this
indeed be the case, so much the worse for the world....
When Homer and Dante and Shakespeare are neglected,
then will Herodotus cease to be read.”
There we have the secret of his hold
upon the minds of men. He knows how to tell a
story, said Professor Hart, in the discussion previously
referred to, in Cleveland. He has “an epic
unity of plan,” writes Professor Jebb.
Herodotus has furnished delight to all generations,
while Polybius, more accurate and painstaking, a learned
historian and a practical statesman, gathers dust
on the shelf or is read as a penance. Nevertheless,
it may be demonstrated from the historical literature
of England of our century that literary style and
great power of narration alone will not give a man
a niche in the temple of history. Herodotus showed
diligence and honesty, without which his other qualities
would have failed to secure him the place he holds
in the estimation of historical scholars.
From Herodotus we naturally turn to
Thucydides, who in the beginning charms historical
students by his impression of the seriousness and
dignity of his business. History, he writes, will
be “found profitable by those who desire an
exact knowledge of the past as a key to the future,
which in all human probability will repeat or resemble
the past. My history is an everlasting possession,
not a prize composition which is heard and forgotten.”
Diligence, accuracy, love of truth, and impartiality
are merits commonly ascribed to Thucydides, and the
internal evidence of the history bears out fully the
general opinion. But, in my judgment, there is
a tendency to rate, in the comparative estimates,
the Athenian too high, for the possession of these
qualities; for certainly some modern writers have
possessed all of these merits in an eminent degree.
When Jowett wrote in the preface to his translation,
Thucydides “stands absolutely alone among the
historians, not only of Hellas, but of the world,
in his impartiality and love of truth,” he was
unaware that a son of his own university was writing
the history of a momentous period of his own country,
in a manner to impugn the correctness of that statement.
When the Jowett Thucydides appeared, Samuel R. Gardiner
had published eight volumes of his history, though
he had not reached the great Civil War, and his reputation,
which has since grown with a cumulative force, was
not fully established; but I have now no hesitation
in saying that the internal evidence demonstrates that
in impartiality and love of truth Gardiner is the
peer of Thucydides. From the point of view of
external evidence, the case is even stronger for Gardiner;
he submits to a harder test. That he has been
able to treat so stormy, so controverted, and so well
known a period as the seventeenth century in England,
with hardly a question of his impartiality, is a wonderful
tribute. In fact, in an excellent review of his
work I have seen him criticised for being too impartial.
On the other hand, Grote thinks that he has found
Thucydides in error, in the long dialogue
between the Athenian representatives and the Melians.
“This dialogue,” Grote writes, “can
hardly represent what actually passed, except as to
a few general points which the historian has followed
out into deductions and illustrations, thus dramatizing
the given situation in a powerful and characteristic
manner.” Those very words might characterize
Shakespeare’s account of the assassination of
Julius Cæsar, and his reproduction of the speeches
of Brutus and Mark Antony. Compare the relation
in Plutarch with the third act of the tragedy, and
see how, in his amplification of the story, Shakespeare
has remained true to the essential facts of the time.
Plutarch gives no account of the speeches of Brutus
and Mark Antony, confining himself, to an allusion
to the one, and a reference to the other; but Appian
of Alexandria, in his history, has reported them.
The speeches in Appian lack the force which they have
in Shakespeare, nor do they seemingly fit into the
situation as well. I have adverted to this criticism
of Grote, not that I love Thucydides less, but that
I love Shakespeare more. For my part, the historian’s
candid acknowledgment in the beginning has convinced
me of the essential not the literal truth
of his accounts of speeches and dialogues. “As
to the speeches,” wrote the Athenian, “which
were made either before or during the war, it was
hard for me, and for others who reported them to me,
to recollect the exact words. I have therefore
put into the mouth of each speaker the sentiments
proper to the occasion, expressed as I thought he
would be likely to express them; while at the same
time I endeavored, as nearly as I could, to give the
general purport of what was actually said.”
That is the very essence of candor. But be the
historian as chaste as ice, as pure as snow, he shall
not escape calumny. Mahaffy declares that, “although
all modern historians quote Thucydides with more confidence
than they would quote the Gospels,” the Athenian
has exaggerated; he is one-sided, partial, misleading,
dry, and surly. Other critics agree with Mahaffy
that he has been unjust to Cleon, and has screened
Nicias from blame that was his due for defective generalship.
We approach Tacitus with respect.
We rise from reading his Annals, his History, and
his Germany with reverence. We know that we have
been in the society of a gentleman who had a high
standard of morality and honor. We feel that
our guide was a serious student, a solid thinker,
and a man of the world; that he expressed his opinions
and delivered his judgments with a remarkable freedom
from prejudice. He draws us to him with sympathy.
He sounds the same mournful note which we detect in
Thucydides. Tacitus deplores the folly and dissoluteness
of the rulers of his nation; he bewails the misfortunes
of his country. The merits we ascribe to Thucydides,
diligence, accuracy, love of truth, impartiality,
are his. The desire to quote from Tacitus is irresistible.
“The more I meditate,” he writes, “on
the events of ancient and modern times, the more I
am struck with the capricious uncertainty which mocks
the calculations of men in all their transactions.”
Again: “Possibly there is in all things
a kind of cycle, and there may be moral revolutions
just as there are changes of seasons.” “Commonplaces!”
sneer the scientific historians. True enough,
but they might not have been commonplaces if Tacitus
had not uttered them, and his works had not been read
and re-read until they have become a common possession
of historical students. From a thinker who deemed
the time “out of joint,” as Tacitus obviously
did, and who, had he not possessed great strength
of mind and character, might have lapsed into a gloomy
pessimism, what noble words are these: “This
I regard as history’s highest function:
to let no worthy action be uncommemorated, and to
hold out the reprobation of posterity as a terror
to evil words and deeds.” The modesty of
the Roman is fascinating. “Much of what
I have related,” he says, “and shall have
to relate, may perhaps, I am aware, seem petty trifles
to record.... My labors are circumscribed and
unproductive of renown to the author.”
How agreeable to place in contrast with this the prophecy
of his friend, the younger Pliny, in a letter to the
historian: “I augur nor does
my augury deceive me that your histories
will be immortal: hence all the more do I desire
to find a place in them.”
To my mind, one of the most charming
things in historical literature is the praise which
one great historian bestows upon another. Gibbon
speaks of “the discerning eye” and “masterly
pencil of Tacitus, the first of historians
who applied the science of philosophy to the study
of facts,” “whose writings will instruct
the last generations of mankind.” He has
produced an immortal work, “every sentence of
which is pregnant with the deepest observations and
most lively images.” I mention Gibbon,
for it is more than a strong probability that in diligence,
accuracy, and love of truth he is the equal of Tacitus.
A common edition of the History of the Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire is that with notes by Dean
Milman, Guizot, and Dr. Smith. Niebuhr, Villemain,
and Sir James Mackintosh are each drawn upon for criticism.
Did ever such a fierce light beat upon a history?
With what keen relish do the annotators pounce upon
mistakes or inaccuracies, and in that portion of the
work which ends with the fall of the Western Empire
how few do they find! Would Tacitus stand the
supreme test better? There is, so far as I know,
only one case in which we may compare his Annals with
an original record. On bronze tablets found at
Lyons in the sixteenth century is engraved the same
speech made by the Emperor Claudius to the Senate
that Tacitus reports. “Tacitus and the
tablets,” writes Professor Jebb, “disagree
hopelessly in language and in nearly all the detail,
but agree in the general line of argument.”
Gibbon’s work has richly deserved its life of
more than one hundred years, a period which I believe
no other modern history has endured. Niebuhr,
in a course of lectures at Bonn, in 1829, said that
Gibbon’s “work will never be excelled.”
At the Gibbon Centenary Commemoration in London, in
1894, many distinguished men, among whom the Church
had a distinct representation, gathered together to
pay honor to him who, in the words of Frederic Harrison,
had written “the most perfect book that English
prose (outside its fiction) possesses.”
Mommsen, prevented by age and work from being present,
sent his tribute. No one, he said, would in the
future be able to read the history of the Roman Empire
unless he read Edward Gibbon. The Times, in a
leader devoted to the subject, apparently expressed
the general voice: “‘Back to Gibbon’
is already, both here and among the scholars of Germany
and France, the watchword of the younger historians.”
I have now set forth certain general
propositions which, with time for adducing the evidence
in detail, might, I think, be established: that,
in the consensus of learned people, Thucydides and
Tacitus stand at the head of historians; and that
it is not alone their accuracy, love of truth, and
impartiality which entitle them to this preeminence
since Gibbon and Gardiner among the moderns possess
equally the same qualities. What is it, then,
that makes these men supreme? In venturing a
solution of this question, I confine myself necessarily
to the English translations of the Greek and Latin
authors. We have thus a common denominator of
language, and need not take into account the unrivaled
precision and terseness of the Greek and the force
and clearness of the Latin. It seems to me that
one special merit of Thucydides and Tacitus is their
compressed narrative, that they have related
so many events and put so much meaning in so few words.
Our manner of writing history is really curious.
The histories which cover long periods of time are
brief; those which have to do with but a few years
are long. The works of Thucydides and Tacitus
are not like our compendiums of history, which
merely touch on great affairs, since want of space
precludes any elaboration. Tacitus treats of
a comparatively short epoch, Thucydides of a much
shorter one: both histories are brief. Thucydides
and Macaulay are examples of extremes. The Athenian
tells the story of twenty-four years in one volume;
the Englishman takes nearly five volumes of equal
size for his account of seventeen years. But it
is safe to say that Thucydides tells us as much that
is worth knowing as Macaulay. One is concise,
the other is not. It is impossible to paraphrase
the fine parts of Thucydides, but Macaulay lends himself
readily to such an exercise. The thought of the
Athenian is so close that he has got rid of all redundancies
of expression: hence the effort to reproduce his
ideas in other words fails. The account of the
plague in Athens has been studied and imitated, and
every imitation falls short of the original not only
in vividness but in brevity. It is the triumph
of art that in this and in other splendid portions
we wish more had been told. As the French say,
“the secret of wearying is to say all,”
and this the Athenian thoroughly understood.
Between our compendiums, which tell too little,
and our long general histories, which tell too much,
are Thucydides and Tacitus.
Again, it is a common opinion that
our condensed histories lack life and movement.
This is due in part to their being written generally
from a study of second-hand not original materials.
Those of the Athenian and the Roman are mainly the
original.
I do not think, however, that we may
infer that we have a much greater mass of materials,
and thereby excuse our modern prolixity. In written
documents, of course, we exceed the ancients, for we
have been flooded with these by the art of printing.
Yet any one who has investigated any period knows
how the same facts are told over and over again, in
different ways, by various writers; and if one can
get beyond the mass of verbiage and down to the really
significant original material, what a simplification
of ideas there is, what a lightening of the load!
I own that this process of reduction is painful, and
thereby our work is made more difficult than that
of the ancients. A historian will adapt himself
naturally to the age in which he lives, and Thucydides
made use of the matter that was at his hand.
“Of the events of the war,” he wrote, “I
have not ventured to speak from any chance information,
nor according to any notion of my own; I have described
nothing but what I either saw myself, or learned from
others of whom I made the most careful and particular
inquiry. The task was a laborious one, because
eye-witnesses of the same occurrences gave different
accounts of them, as they remembered or were interested
in the actions of one side or the other.”
His materials, then, were what he saw and heard.
His books and his manuscripts were living men.
Our distinguished military historian, John C. Ropes,
whose untimely death we deplore, might have written
his history from the same sort of materials; for he
was contemporary with our Civil War, and followed
the daily events with intense interest. A brother
of his was killed at Gettysburg, and he had many friends
in the army. He paid at least one memorable visit
to Meade’s headquarters in the field, and at
the end of the war had a mass of memories and impressions
of the great conflict. He never ceased his inquiries;
he never lost a chance to get a particular account
from those who took part in battles or campaigns;
and before he began his Story of the Civil War, he
too could have said, “I made the most careful
and particular inquiry” of generals and officers
on both sides, and of men in civil office privy to
the great transactions. His knowledge drawn from
living lips was marvelous, and his conversation, when
he poured this knowledge forth, often took the form
of a flowing narrative in an animated style. While
there are not, so far as I remember, any direct references
in his two volumes to these memories, or to memoranda
of conversations which he had with living actors after
the close of the war drama, and while his main authority
is the Official Records of the Union and Confederate
Armies, which, no one appreciated better
than he, were unique historical materials, nevertheless
this personal knowledge trained his judgment and gave
color to his narrative.
It is pretty clear that Thucydides
spent a large part of a life of about threescore years
and ten in gathering materials and writing his history.
The mass of facts which he set down or stored away
in his memory must have been enormous. He was
a man of business, and had a home in Thrace as well
as in Athens, traveling probably at fairly frequent
intervals between the two places; but the main portion
of the first forty years of his life was undoubtedly
spent in Athens, where, during those glorious years
of peace and the process of beautifying the city, he
received the best education a man could get.
To walk about the city and view the buildings and
statues was both directly and insensibly a refining
influence. As Thucydides himself, in the funeral
oration of Pericles, said of the works which the Athenian
saw around him, “the daily delight of them banishes
gloom.” There was the opportunity to talk
with as good conversers as the world has ever known;
and he undoubtedly saw much of the men who were making
history. There was the great theater and the
sublime poetry. In a word, the life of Thucydides
was adapted to the gathering of a mass of historical
materials of the best sort; and his daily walk, his
reading, his intense thought, gave him an intellectual
grasp of the facts he has so ably handled. Of
course he was a genius, and he wrote in an effective
literary style; but seemingly his natural parts and
acquired talents are directed to this: a digestion
of his materials, and a compression of his narrative
without taking the vigor out of his story in a manner
I believe to be without parallel. He devoted
a life to writing a volume. His years after the
peace was broken, his career as a general, his banishment
and enforced residence in Thrace, his visit to the
countries of the Peloponnesian allies with whom Athens
was at war, all these gave him a signal
opportunity to gather materials, and to assimilate
them in the gathering. We may fancy him looking
at an alleged fact on all sides, and turning it over
and over in his mind; we know that he must have meditated
long on ideas, opinions, and events; and the result
is a brief, pithy narrative. Tradition hath it
that Demosthenes copied out this history eight times,
or even learned it by heart. Chatham, urging the
removal of the forces from Boston, had reason to refer
to the history of Greece, and, that he might impress
it upon the lords that he knew whereof he spoke, declared,
“I have read Thucydides.”
Of Tacitus likewise is conciseness
a well-known merit. Living in an age of books
and libraries, he drew more from the written word than
did Thucydides; and his method of working, therefore,
resembled more our own. These are common expressions
of his: “It is related by most of the writers
of those times;” I adopt the account “in
which the authors are agreed;” this account
“agrees with those of the other writers.”
Relating a case of recklessness of vice in Messalina,
he acknowledges that it will appear fabulous, and
asserts his truthfulness thus: “But I would
not dress up my narrative with fictions, to give it
an air of marvel, rather than relate what has been
stated to me or written by my seniors.”
He also speaks of the authority of tradition, and tells
what he remembers “to have heard from aged men.”
He will not paraphrase the eloquence of Seneca after
he had his veins opened, because the very words of
the philosopher had been published; but when, a little
later, Flavius the tribune came to die, the historian
gives this report of his defiance of Nero. “I
hated you,” the tribune said to the emperor;
“nor had you a soldier more true to you while
you deserved to be loved. I began to hate you
from the time you showed yourself the impious murderer
of your mother and your wife, a charioteer, a stage-player,
an incendiary.” “I have given the
very words,” Tacitus adds, “because they
were not, like those of Seneca, published, though the
rough and vigorous sentiments of a soldier ought to
be no less known.” Everywhere we see in
Tacitus, as in Thucydides, a dislike of superfluous
detail, a closeness of thought, a compression of language.
He was likewise a man of affairs, but his life work
was his historical writings, which, had we all of
them, would fill probably four moderate-sized octavo
volumes.
To sum up, then: Thucydides and
Tacitus are superior to the historians who have written
in our century, because, by long reflection and studious
method, they have better digested their materials and
compressed their narrative. Unity in narration
has been adhered to more rigidly. They stick
closer to their subject. They are not allured
into the fascinating bypaths of narration, which are
so tempting to men who have accumulated a mass of
facts, incidents, and opinions. One reason why
Macaulay is so prolix is because he could not resist
the temptation to treat events which had a picturesque
side and which were suited to his literary style;
so that, as John Morley says, “in many portions
of his too elaborated history of William III. he describes
a large number of events about which, I think, no
sensible man can in the least care either how they
happened, or whether indeed they happened at all or
not.” If I am right in my supposition that
Thucydides and Tacitus had a mass of materials, they
showed reserve and discretion in throwing a large
part of them away, as not being necessary or important
to the posterity for which they were writing.
This could only be the result of a careful comparison
of their materials, and of long meditation on their
relative value. I suspect that they cared little
whether a set daily task was accomplished or not;
for if you propose to write only one large volume
or four moderate-sized volumes in a lifetime, art is
not too long nor is life too short.
Another superiority of the classical
historians, as I reckon, arose from the fact that
they wrote what was practically contemporaneous history.
Herodotus was born 484 B.C., and the most important
and accurate part of his history is the account of
the Persian invasion which took place four years later.
The case of Thucydides is more remarkable. Born
in 471 B.C., he relates the events which happened
between 435 and 411, when he was between the ages
of thirty-six and sixty. Tacitus, born in 52
A.D., covered with his Annals and History the years
between 14 and 96. “Herodotus and Thucydides
belong to an age in which the historian draws from
life and for life,” writes Professor Jebb.
It is manifestly easier to describe a life you know
than one you must imagine, which is what you must
do if you aim to relate events which took place before
your own and your father’s time. In many
treatises which have been written demanding an extraordinary
equipment for the historian, it is generally insisted
that he shall have a fine constructive imagination;
for how can he re-create his historic period unless
he live in it? In the same treatises it is asserted
that contemporary history cannot be written correctly,
for impartiality in the treatment of events near at
hand is impossible. Therefore the canon requires
the quality of a great poet, and denies that there
may be had the merit of a judge in a country where
there are no great poets, but where candid judges abound.
Does not the common rating of Thucydides and Tacitus
refute the dictum that history within the memory of
men living cannot be written truthfully and fairly?
Given, then, the judicial mind, how much easier to
write it! The rare quality of a poet’s
imagination is no longer necessary, for your boyhood
recollections, your youthful experiences, your successes
and failures of manhood, the grandfather’s tales,
the parent’s recollections, the conversation
in society, all these put you in vital
touch with the life you seek to describe. These
not only give color and freshness to the vivifying
of the facts you must find in the record, but they
are in a way materials themselves, not strictly authentic,
but of the kind that direct you in search and verification.
Not only is no extraordinary ability required to write
contemporary history, but the labor of the historian
is lightened, and Dryasdust is no longer his sole
guide. The funeral oration of Pericles is pretty
nearly what was actually spoken, or else it is the
substance of the speech written out in the historian’s
own words. Its intensity of feeling and the fitting
of it so well into the situation indicate it to be
a living contemporaneous document, and at the same
time it has that universal application which we note
in so many speeches of Shakespeare. A few years
after our Civil War, a lawyer in a city of the middle
West, who had been selected to deliver the Memorial
Day oration, came to a friend of his in despair because
he could write nothing but the commonplaces about
those who had died for the Union and for the freedom
of a race which had been uttered many times before,
and he asked for advice. “Take the funeral
oration of Pericles for a model,” was the reply.
“Use his words where they will fit, and dress
up the rest to suit our day.” The orator
was surprised to find how much of the oration could
be used bodily, and how much, with adaptation, was
germane to his subject. But slight alterations
are necessary to make the opening sentence this:
“Most of those who have spoken here have commended
the law-giver who added this oration to our other
customs; it seemed to them a worthy thing that such
an honor should be given to the dead who have fallen
on the field of battle.” In many places
you may let the speech run on with hardly a change.
“In the face of death [these men] resolved to
rely upon themselves alone. And when the moment
came they were minded to resist and suffer rather
than to fly and save their lives; they ran away from
the word of dishonor, but on the battlefield their
feet stood fast; and while for a moment they were
in the hands of fortune, at the height, not of terror,
but of glory, they passed away. Such was the end
of these men; they were worthy of their country.”
Consider for a moment, as the work
of a contemporary, the book which continues the account
of the Sicilian expedition, and ends with the disaster
at Syracuse. “In the describing and reporting
whereof,” Plutarch writes, “Thucydides
hath gone beyond himself, both for variety and liveliness
of narration, as also in choice and excellent words.”
“There is no prose composition in the world,”
wrote Macaulay, “which I place so high as the
seventh book of Thucydides.... I was delighted
to find in Gray’s letters, the other day, this
query to Wharton: ’The retreat from Syracuse, is
it or is it not the finest thing you ever read in
your life?’” In the Annals of Tacitus we
have an account of part of the reign of Emperor Nero,
which is intense in its interest as the picture of
a state of society that would be incredible, did we
not know that our guide was a truthful man. One
rises from a perusal of this with the trite expression,
“Truth is stranger than fiction;” and one
need only compare the account of Tacitus with the
romance of Quo Vadis to be convinced that true history
is more interesting than a novel. One of the
most vivid impressions I ever had came immediately
after reading the story of Nero and Agrippina in Tacitus,
from a view of the statue of Agrippina in the National
Museum at Naples.
It will be worth our while now to
sum up what I think may be established with sufficient
time and care. Natural ability being presupposed,
the qualities necessary for a historian are diligence,
accuracy, love of truth, impartiality, the thorough
digestion of his materials by careful selection and
long meditating, and the compression of his narrative
into the smallest compass consistent with the life
of his story. He must also have a power of expression
suitable for his purpose. All these qualities,
we have seen, were possessed by Thucydides and Tacitus;
and we have seen furthermore that, by bringing to
bear these endowments and acquirements upon contemporary
history, their success has been greater than it would
have been had they treated a more distant period.
Applying these considerations to the writing of history
in America, it would seem that all we have to gain
in method, in order that when the genius appears he
shall rival the great Greek and the great Roman, is
thorough assimilation of materials and rigorous conciseness
in relation. I admit that the two things we lack
are difficult to get as our own. In the collection
of materials, in criticism and detailed analysis, in
the study of cause and effect, in applying the principle
of growth, of evolution, we certainly surpass the
ancients. But if we live in the age of Darwin,
we also live in an age of newspapers and magazines,
when, as Lowell said, not only great events, but a
vast “number of trivial incidents, are now recorded,
and this dust of time gets in our eyes”; when
distractions are manifold; when the desire “to
see one’s name in print” and make books
takes possession of us all. If one has something
like an original idea or a fresh combination of truisms,
one obtains easily a hearing. The hearing once
had, something of a success being made, the writer
is urged by magazine editors and by publishers for
more. The good side of this is apparent.
It is certainly a wholesome indication that a demand
exists for many serious books, but the evil is that
one is pressed to publish his thoughts before he has
them fully matured. The periods of fruitful meditation
out of which emerged the works of Thucydides and Tacitus
seem not to be a natural incident of our time.
To change slightly the meaning of Lowell, “the
bustle of our lives keeps breaking the thread of that
attention which is the material of memory, till no
one has patience to spin from it a continuous thread
of thought.” We have the defects of our
qualities. Nevertheless, I am struck with the
likeness between a common attribute of the Greeks and
Matthew Arnold’s characterization of the Americans.
Greek thought, it is said, goes straight to the mark,
and penetrates like an arrow. The Americans,
Arnold wrote, “think straight and see clear.”
Greek life was adapted to meditation. American
quickness and habit of taking the short cut to the
goal make us averse to the patient and elaborate method
of the ancients. In manner of expression, however,
we have improved. The Fourth of July spread-eagle
oration, not uncommon even in New England in former
days, would now be listened to hardly anywhere without
merriment. In a Lowell Institute lecture in 1855
Lowell said, “In modern times, the desire for
startling expression is so strong that people hardly
think a thought is good for anything unless it goes
off with a pop, like a ginger-beer cork.”
No one would thus characterize our present writing.
Between reserve in expression and reserve in thought
there must be interaction. We may hope, therefore,
that the trend in the one will become the trend in
the other, and that we may look for as great historians
in the future as in the past. The Thucydides or
Tacitus of the future will write his history from
the original materials, knowing that there only will
he find the living spirit; but he will have the helps
of the modern world. He will have at his hand
monographs of students whom the professors of history
in our colleges are teaching with diligence and wisdom,
and he will accept these aids with thankfulness in
his laborious search. He will have grasped the
generalizations and methods of physical science, but
he must know to the bottom his Thucydides and Tacitus.
He will recognize in Homer and Shakespeare the great
historians of human nature, and he will ever attempt,
although feeling that failure is certain, to wrest
from them their secret of narration, to acquire their
art of portrayal of character. He must be a man
of the world, but equally well a man of the academy.
If, like Thucydides and Tacitus, the American historian
chooses the history of his own country as his field,
he may infuse his patriotism into his narrative.
He will speak of the broad acres and their products,
the splendid industrial development due to the capacity
and energy of the captains of industry; but he will
like to dwell on the universities and colleges, on
the great numbers seeking a higher education, on the
morality of the people, their purity of life, their
domestic happiness. He will never be weary of
referring to Washington and Lincoln, feeling that
a country with such exemplars is indeed one to awaken
envy, and he will not forget the brave souls who followed
where they led. I like to think of the Memorial
Day orator, speaking thirty years ago with his mind
full of the Civil War and our Revolution, giving utterance
to these noble words of Pericles: “I would
have you day by day fix your eyes upon the greatness
of your country, until you become filled with love
of her; and when you are impressed by the spectacle
of her glory, reflect that this empire has been acquired
by men who knew their duty and had the courage to
do it; who in the hour of conflict had the fear of
dishonor always present to them; and who, if ever they
failed in an enterprise, would not allow their virtues
to be lost to their country, but freely gave their
lives to her as the fairest offering which they could
present at her feast. They received each one
for himself a praise which grows not old, and the noblest
of all sepulchers. For the whole earth is the
sepulcher of illustrious men; not only are they commemorated
by columns and inscriptions in their own country,
but in foreign lands there dwells also an unwritten
memorial of them, graven not on stone, but in the
hearts of men.”