登陆注册
15713400000055

第55章 ON MITFORD'S HISTORY OF GREECE(2)

In history this error is far more disgraceful.Indeed, there is no fault which so completely ruins a narrative in the opinion of a judicious reader.We know that the line of demarcation between good and bad men is so faintly marked as often to elude the most careful investigation of those who have the best opportunities for judging.Public men, above all, are surrounded with so many temptations and difficulties that some doubt must almost always hang over their real dispositions and intentions.The lives of Pym, Cromwell, Monk, Clarendon, Marlborough, Burnet, Walpole, are well known to us.We are acquainted with their actions, their speeches, their writings; we have abundance of letters and well-authenticated anecdotes relating to them: yet what candid man will venture very positively to say which of them were honest and which of them were dishonest men? It appears easier to pronounce decidedly upon the great characters of antiquity, not because we have greater means of discovering truth, but simply because we have less means of detecting error.The modern historians of Greece have forgotten this.Their heroes and villains are as consistent in all their sayings and doings as the cardinal virtues and the deadly sins in an allegory.We should as soon expect a good action from giant Slay-good in Bunyan as from Dionysius; and a crime of Epaminondas would seem as incongruous as a faux-pas of the grave and comely damsel called Discretion, who answered the bell at the door of the house Beautiful.

This error was partly the cause and partly the effect of the high estimation in which the later ancient writers have been held by modern scholars.Those French and English authors who have treated of the affairs of Greece have generally turned with contempt from the simple and natural narrations of Thucydides and Xenophon to the extravagant representations of Plutarch, Diodorus, Curtius, and other romancers of the same class,--men who described military operations without ever having handled a sword, and applied to the seditions of little republics speculations formed by observation on an empire which covered half the known world.Of liberty they knew nothing.It was to them a great mystery--a superhuman enjoyment.They ranted about liberty and patriotism, from the same cause which leads monks to talk more ardently than other men about love and women.A wise man values political liberty, because it secures the persons and the possessions of citizens; because it tends to prevent the extravagance of rulers, and the corruption of judges; because it gives birth to useful sciences and elegant arts; because it excites the industry and increases the comforts of all classes of society.These theorists imagined that it possessed something eternally and intrinsically good, distinct from the blessings which it generally produced.They considered it not as a means but as an end; an end to be attained at any cost.Their favourite heroes are those who have sacrificed, for the mere name of freedom, the prosperity--the security--the justice--from which freedom derives its value.

There is another remarkable characteristic of these writers, in which their modern worshippers have carefully imitated them--a great fondness for good stories.The most established facts, dates, and characters are never suffered to come into competition with a splendid saying, or a romantic exploit.The early historians have left us natural and simple descriptions of the great events which they witnessed, and the great men with whom they associated.When we read the account which Plutarch and Rollin have given of the same period, we scarcely know our old acquaintance again; we are utterly confounded by the melo-dramatic effect of the narration, and the sublime coxcombry of the characters.

These are the principal errors into which the predecessors of Mr Mitford have fallen; and from most of these he is free.His faults are of a completely different description.It is to be hoped that the students of history may now be saved, like Dorax in Dryden's play, by swallowing two conflicting poisons, each of which may serve as an antidote to the other.

The first and most important difference between Mr Mitford and those who have preceded him is in his narration.Here the advantage lies, for the most part, on his side.His principle is to follow the contemporary historians, to look with doubt on all statements which are not in some degree confirmed by them, and absolutely to reject all which are contradicted by them.While he retains the guidance of some writer in whom he can place confidence, he goes on excellently.When he loses it, he falls to the level, or perhaps below the level, of the writers whom he so much despises: he is as absurd as they, and very much duller.

It is really amusing to observe how he proceeds with his narration when he has no better authority than poor Diodorus.He is compelled to relate something; yet he believes nothing.He accompanies every fact with a long statement of objections.His account of the administration of Dionysius is in no sense a history.It ought to be entitled--"Historic doubts as to certain events, alleged to have taken place in Sicily."This scepticism, however, like that of some great legal characters almost as sceptical as himself; vanishes whenever his political partialities interfere.He is a vehement admirer of tyranny and oligarchy, and considers no evidence as feeble which can be brought forward in favour of those forms of government.

Democracy he hates with a perfect hatred, a hatred which, in the first volume of his history, appears only in his episodes and reflections, but which, in those parts where he has less reverence for his guides, and can venture to take his own way, completely distorts even his narration.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 素问识

    素问识

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 从零开始的帝国复兴

    从零开始的帝国复兴

    长枪长矛对抗坦克大炮?落后时代的神龙帝国遭受先进时代的旭日帝国入侵,几近亡国。穿越到玄天大陆李胤铭携带时代进化,附身亡国皇太子,逃往南瞻部洲,重建帝国,逆天改命,完成了冷兵器时代到核时代的跃变。一场捍卫国家尊严的复国战争即将拉开!山河破碎风飘絮,从零开始复帝国!注:本文智斗为主,武斗为辅,男主无修为。
  • 圣图轮回

    圣图轮回

    悠久岁月前,天道不仁,以万物为刍狗,各方人杰斗天斗地,欲建立新天,但是最终只能在溃败中将希望埋葬在不为人知的地方,等待后人的到来。所谓的大智者,早早布下了棋局,自封在时与空的狭缝中,默默注视着棋局的变化。然而有人曾经留下了更为珍贵的希望种子,在未来萌发。背负天图,手掌古老神碑,酝酿万世轮回,楚玄河到底该怎么一步步走出这个棋局,撕开这个世界最为血淋淋的面纱,或许新天就在楚玄河的手中造化而生。
  • 蜜宠成瘾:神秘BOSS来我家

    蜜宠成瘾:神秘BOSS来我家

    被谈了七年的男朋友开除算什么?宿醉起来发现身边竟然躺着一个男人时那才叫一个酸爽!对方一开口就让她给他负责。负责?她喝断片了,他捡现成的,竟然还好意思叫她负责?“我留50块钱坐车,其余的全部都归你了。夜店最好的牛郎,也不过这个价。”“钱我收下了,以后,我就是你的人了。”“滚犊子!”“老婆,我太瘦了,滚不起来。”“一边呆着去!”“已经是墙角了,再挪就镶进墙里了。”“……”(此文是个坑,欢迎众位美眉往下跳。。。)
  • 盛世小丫头:霸道校草无限宠

    盛世小丫头:霸道校草无限宠

    冉芯童回国后,被爸妈无奈逼到了圣米兰学校,拉着闺蜜一起,学校门口竟然遇到了慕安哲,居然是他,一定要给他点颜色瞧瞧。有兴趣的请加《盛小》读者交流群527107547
  • 洁心何许

    洁心何许

    面对流言蜚语除了难堪,许洁连争辩的勇气也没有。暗恋着哥哥的丑闻就像故技重施的下贱,被她小心翼翼的隐藏。所有人都看出来了,只有她自己在跳梁。
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 太上临凡

    太上临凡

    道修,体修,孰强孰弱?正修,妖修,谁正谁邪?奇异体质催生出的双丹田能否跟上进度?妖目中的神通能否照亮前行的路?当这个因天生妖目,而被所有人抛弃的少年得知,自己体内竟是相克相制的废物灵根时,他哀嚎,他绝望了。然而天无绝人之路。阴差阳错之下,他竟踏上了由妖修入道的路。“只要还活着,我的道便不会停止。这是太上,也无法阻拦的事情。”
  • 黑暗武皇

    黑暗武皇

    “帝星将陨,将星无光!血煞冲凌霄,神之荣光暗淡,魔性迷蒙,善与恶的鸿沟崩塌。当血色蜘蛛踏碎神殿,历史的脉络将重现”在陨星坠落之时,神恩大陆的先知亚伯拉罕如是预言着!一切的开端也是从陨星坠落那一刻开始!西泽世界历史新篇章由那个人来书写那重要的一笔,那个黑发黑瞳的青年!
  • 修仙之陌上花开

    修仙之陌上花开

    这一世,谁许我浪迹天涯,笑过打马,不离不弃青丝白发。这一世,谁许我花前月下,共赏烟花,琴瑟和鸣凤求鸳答。这一世,谁许我一世牵挂,相思难罢,地老天荒此情不拔。这一世,谁许我三千墨画,绘我风华,容颜可拟闭月羞花。