登陆注册
15754400000015

第15章

As my aim is not to give an account of historians but to point out those great thinkers whose methods have furthered the advance of this spirit of historical criticism, I shall pass over those annalists and chroniclers who intervened between Thucydides and Polybius. Yet perhaps it may serve to throw new light on the real nature of this spirit and its intimate connection with all other forms of advanced thought if I give some estimate of the character and rise of those many influences prejudicial to the scientific study of history which cause such a wide gap between these two historians.

Foremost among these is the growing influence of rhetoric and the Isocratean school, which seems to have regarded history as an arena for the display either of pathos or paradoxes, not a scientific investigation into laws.

The new age is the age of style. The same spirit of exclusive attention to form which made Euripides often, like Swinburne, prefer music to meaning and melody to morality, which gave to the later Greek statues that refined effeminacy, that overstrained gracefulness of attitude, was felt in the sphere of history. The rules laid down for historical composition are those relating to the aesthetic value of digressions, the legality of employing more than one metaphor in the same sentence, and the like; and historians are ranked not by their power of estimating evidence but by the goodness of the Greek they write.

I must note also the important influence on literature exercised by Alexander the Great; for while his travels encouraged the more accurate research of geography, the very splendour of his achievements seems to have brought history again into the sphere of romance. The appearance of all great men in the world is followed invariably by the rise of that mythopoeic spirit and that tendency to look for the marvellous, which is so fatal to true historical criticism. An Alexander, a Napoleon, a Francis of Assisi and a Mahomet are thought to be outside the limiting conditions of rational law, just as comets were supposed to be not very long ago.

While the founding of that city of Alexandria, in which Western and Eastern thought met with such strange result to both, diverted the critical tendencies of the Greek spirit into questions of grammar, philology and the like, the narrow, artificial atmosphere of that University town (as we may call it) was fatal to the development of that independent and speculative spirit of research which strikes out new methods of inquiry, of which historical criticism is one.

The Alexandrines combined a great love of learning with an ignorance of the true principles of research, an enthusiastic spirit for accumulating materials with a wonderful incapacity to use them. Not among the hot sands of Egypt, or the Sophists of Athens, but from the very heart of Greece rises the man of genius on whose influence in the evolution of the philosophy of history Ihave a short time ago dwelt. Born in the serene and pure air of the clear uplands of Arcadia, Polybius may be said to reproduce in his work the character of the place which gave him birth. For, of all the historians - I do not say of antiquity but of all time -none is more rationalistic than he, none more free from any belief in the 'visions and omens, the monstrous legends, the grovelling superstitions and unmanly craving for the supernatural' ([Greek text that cannot be reproduced](11)) which he himself is compelled to notice as the characteristics of some of the historians who preceded him. Fortunate in the land which bore him, he was no less blessed in the wondrous time of his birth. For, representing in himself the spiritual supremacy of the Greek intellect and allied in bonds of chivalrous friendship to the world-conqueror of his day, he seems led as it were by the hand of Fate 'to comprehend,' as has been said, 'more clearly than the Romans themselves the historical position of Rome,' and to discern with greater insight than all other men could those two great resultants of ancient civilisation, the material empire of the city of the seven hills, and the intellectual sovereignty of Hellas.

Before his own day, he says, (12) the events of the world were unconnected and separate and the histories confined to particular countries. Now, for the first time the universal empire of the Romans rendered a universal history possible. (13) This, then, is the august motive of his work: to trace the gradual rise of this Italian city from the day when the first legion crossed the narrow strait of Messina and landed on the fertile fields of Sicily to the time when Corinth in the East and Carthage in the West fell before the resistless wave of empire and the eagles of Rome passed on the wings of universal victory from Calpe and the Pillars of Hercules to Syria and the Nile. At the same time he recognised that the scheme of Rome's empire was worked out under the aegis of God's will. (14) For, as one of the Middle Age scribes most truly says, the [Greek text which cannot be reproduced] of Polybius is that power which we Christians call God; the second aim, as one may call it, of his history is to point out the rational and human and natural causes which brought this result, distinguishing, as we should say, between God's mediate and immediate government of the world.

With any direct intervention of God in the normal development of Man, he will have nothing to do: still less with any idea of chance as a factor in the phenomena of life. Chance and miracles, he says, are mere expressions for our ignorance of rational causes.

The spirit of rationalism which we recognised in Herodotus as a vague uncertain attitude and which appears in Thucydides as a consistent attitude of mind never argued about or even explained, is by Polybius analysed and formulated as the great instrument of historical research.

同类推荐
  • 太上老君外日用妙经

    太上老君外日用妙经

    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。
  • 一贯问答

    一贯问答

    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。
  • 道迹灵仙记

    道迹灵仙记

    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。
  • 为霖道霈禅师秉拂语录

    为霖道霈禅师秉拂语录

    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。
  • 古琴疏

    古琴疏

    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。
热门推荐
  • 鬼王霸宠:神医萌妃

    鬼王霸宠:神医萌妃

    一朝穿越,废材重生,渣男靠边站,渣姐离远点,有怨抱怨,有仇报仇,但是…虾米?让她嫁给一个病怏怏的王爷?还是长相奇丑,性格爆裂,而且还活不多久的人!她的老天爷啊,她怎么这么倒霉啊。算了,既来之则安之,既然上苍如此安排,那么她接受。反正等那个病秧子归西了,她就可以继承她的一切,还可以包美男,这岂不是美哉了吗?千萌萌心中想着各种歪歪,可是谁知…
  • 星空下第一刀

    星空下第一刀

    三星将魂技?我不要,太低级了!为什么??没办法,我脑袋里装着两三个藏书阁呢,珍藏版的绝迹版的你喜欢哪个?我告诉你就行了,你实在学不会,好吧,既然这样那只能请李寻欢指点你一两招了?李寻欢是谁?他呀是我从另一个世界带来的武学宗师!!!李寻欢都带来了,应该知道我玩的是什么刀了吧?
  • 迷失的语录

    迷失的语录

    Evenwhenallseemsburnttoash,inourstory,thereisalwaysanotherchaptertobetold.即使一切化为灰烬,在我们的故事里,总会有另一篇章被传颂于世。
  • 娘娘不承欢:皇上是匹狼

    娘娘不承欢:皇上是匹狼

    她千不该万不该,就是把后宫给撤了,现在好了,这个男人如狼似虎,精力旺盛得吓人,夜夜找她承欢,靠之,她不想年纪轻轻就因为纵欲过度而英年早逝啊!她决定了要恢复后宫,但是这匹色狼好像只认定了她一个人耶,怎么办?
  • 极武魔仙

    极武魔仙

    蝼蚁翻身,废体修真!苏彻重生修真界,以武入道,以魔证心,掌阴阳,夺造化。待我武臻造极,定要逆转这不公的仙道!本书不小白不脑残,各位看官放心收藏!
  • 龙之逍遥行

    龙之逍遥行

    一个真实年龄与现实样貌、心智及其不符的皇子。一个从小生活在父亲庇护下的少年,在好玩的心态下游历大陆,会造就什么样的传奇故事呢。。。
  • 修之殇

    修之殇

    所谓背弃者的未来,就是被大火淹没和自我救赎。2022年,特异病毒——修病毒,无声出现,无人知道他的来历,亦无人知道它所带来的恐怖,这是一场人类的浩劫,也是大自然的自救。相信,灾厄如期而至!
  • 如果,世界只剩1加1

    如果,世界只剩1加1

    隐藏在黑暗深处不为人知的秘密……终是成了这场渊源之战的牺牲品……痛苦……仇恨……冷漠世故……纠结于尘网之间的人啊,,究竟……何去何从……
  • 隐身登陆

    隐身登陆

    本书是将史册所记载的,或文学作品所描绘的以及人们口头流传的著名战争故事,加以取舍,进行分类,以简洁生动的语言,向你展示一千零一个五光十色的战争画面。这一千零一个战争画面,无论是运筹帷幄,还是刀光剑影;无论是千里奔袭,还是短兵相接;无论是统帅将领,还是士卒平民;无论是长矛大刀,还是导弹火箭……
  • 龙霸乾坤

    龙霸乾坤

    “这江湖哇,正如一句话所说的,有人的地方是就是江湖,没人的呢,那它就是大海,给真龙游的大海!”世界上有真龙么?我不知道,那有真龙转世么?我也不知道。。。。。。金鳞不喜在人间,可叹乾坤困我心,今朝酒醒他日醉,醉醒梦来化作龙