“Contempt for the past is an inbuilt feature of modernity, its preoccupation with change and the future, its determination to be new and different, its deep intolerance (in President Obama’s revealing words) of those who stand ‘against the tide of history’.”
I’ve written before about Nicholas
Tate’s Seven Books That Everyone Once Read and No One Now Does,
published last year by Ludovika University Press in Budapest, Hungary. Now I
have a copy of the book and have finished reading it. For those of us who read,
who value the great books of our precursors, it serves as a tonic, a reminder
of what the culture has lost but also what individuals can preserve. The sentence
cited above is taken from near the conclusion of the book, the section despairingly
titled “For the First Time in History, the Past is ‘Dead and Silent.’”
A quality that distinguishes
our age from earlier periods is this drive to extinguish the past. A theme I
have often addressed at Anecdotal Evidence is the impossibility of originality.
Even those most vehemently stricken with “presentism” are nothing new. Without
a million anonymous forebears, they would not exist, nor would we. I’m not
convinced it’s possible to write good prose or poetry without reference to some
earlier work, consciously or otherwise. Guy Davenport once put it to me more
bluntly: every book is a reply to an already existing volume. Tate continues:
“The last half-century,
with its identity politics and the increasing dominance of a left liberal pensée
unique, has further intensified this attitude towards the past as a result
of the West’s self-flagellation over its historical record in relation to its
former colonial subjects, women, sexual minorities, and other minority groups.
Although this has helpfully revised the historical record, it has left us with
an image of the past as the site of oppression, discrimination, and trauma and
encouraged the idea that one studies or teaches about the past mainly to wag
one’s finger at it for the disgraceful ways in which it failed to conform to
current liberal values.”
Believers in such creeds
are characterized by naïveté about human nature. As Evelyn Waugh put it in Robbery
Under Law: The Mexican Object-Lesson (1939): “Barbarism is never finally
defeated; given propitious circumstances, men and women who seem quite orderly,
will commit every conceivable atrocity.” At the same time, they fail to
appreciate what is best about our species. One of the authors of Tate’s seven books
is Edward Gibbon. In Vol. I, Chap. 3, “Of the Constitution of the Roman Empire,
in the Age of the Antonines” in The History of the Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire, he writes: “History is indeed little more than the register of
crimes, follies, and misfortunes of mankind.”
Gibbon is describing the
reign of Antoninus Pius, emperor of Rome from 138 to 161. He was the adoptive
son of Hadrian and in turn adopted Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus, who
succeeded him as co-emperors. The irony of Gibbon’s bleakly clear-eyed view of
human history is that it comes in the context of his praise for Antoninus, one
of the “Five Good Emperors.” Here is the context:
“Antoninus diffused order
and tranquility over the greatest part of the earth. His reign is marked by the
rare advantage of furnishing very few materials for history; which is, indeed,
little more than the register of the crimes, follies, and misfortunes of
mankind.”
Humanity is infinitely more complex than the simple-minded deniers of history would have it. Here are Gibbon’s subsequent sentences: “In private life, he was an amiable, as well as a good man. The native simplicity of his virtue was a stranger to vanity or affectation. He enjoyed, with moderation, the conveniencies of his fortune, and the innocent pleasures of society; and the benevolence of his soul displayed itself in a cheerful serenity of temper.”
A.E. Housman died ninety years ago today, on April 30, 1936, at age seventy-seven. The poet, of course, was also a classical scholar who edited Juvenal, Lucan and Propertius, and was famous for his five-volume critical edition of the minor Roman poet Manilius’ Astronomicon. Here is Housman’s Poem XXXI from A Shropshire Lad (1896), “On Wenlock Edge the wood’s in trouble”: “Then ’twas the Roman, now ’tis I.”
