Since he was a little boy my middle son has been a serial enthusiast. Back then it was rocks, carnivorous plants, Dmitri Mendeleev and the periodic table, coins, electronics – one focus of interest after another. He wasn’t fickle or easily distracted by the next shiny thing. Rather, he is blessed to find the world filled with interesting things, and it would be a shame to neglect any of them. Guy Davenport might have been writing about Michael in his introductory note to The Hunter Gracchus (1996): “I am not writing for scholars or fellow critics, but for people who like to read, to look at pictures, and to know things.”
In our most recent
telephone conversation, the topic was the Byzantine general Belisarius (c.
505-565 A.D.), who served under Emperor Justinian I. Belisarius reconquered much
of the territory formerly part of the Western Roman Empire, including North
Africa, that had been lost less than a century earlier to the barbarians. Belisarius is
judged a military tactician of genius, rivalling Alexander and Julius Caeser.
Michael is a first lieutenant, a cyber officer, in the Marine Corps, so the
appeal is obvious. What we know of Belisarius’ life is a mingling of history,
rumor and legend. Edward Gibbon’s account in Chap. 41 of his Decline and
Fall of the Roman Empire makes compelling reading. Here he describes the defeat
of the Moors in 535:
“The formidable strength
and artful conduct of Belisarius secured the neutrality of the Moorish princes,
whose vanity aspired to receive in the emperor's name the ensigns of their
regal dignity. They were astonished by the rapid event, and trembled in the
presence of their conqueror. But his approaching departure soon relieved the
apprehensions of a savage and superstitious people. . . . and when the Roman
general hoisted sail in the port of Carthage, he heard the cries and almost
beheld the flames of the desolated province. Yet he persisted in his
resolution; and leaving only a part of his guards to reinforce the feeble
garrisons, he entrusted the command of Africa to the eunuch Solomon, who proved
himself not unworthy to be the successor of Belisarius.”
For amateur readers and non-scholars, history can be frustrating. How do we sift myth from reality when original sources are scarce and authorities disagree? Who do we trust? And what of those with no historical rigor who settle for complacent legend and contented ignorance? Maryann Corbett considers such things in her poem “Late Night Thoughts While Watching the History Channel” (which a friend of mine always calls the "Hitler Channel"):
“Is it by God’s mercy
that children are born
not knowing
the long reach of old
pain?
“That the five-year-old,
led by the hand
past the graffiti,
cannot fathom
his mother’s tightening
grip,
“or why, when a box of
nails
clatters to the tile
like gunfire,
his father’s face
contorts?
“So slow is the knitting
of reasons,
the
small mind’s patching of meaning from such ravel
“as a cousin’s offhand
story,
or a yellowed clipping
whose old news
flutters from a bottom
drawer,
“or some bloodless snippet
of history
dully intoned as you
doze off, in the recliner—
“so slow that only now, in
my seventh decade,
do I turn from these
sepia stills,
this baritone voiceover,
chanting
the pain of immigrant
forebears,
my thought impaled on a
memory:
“my twelve-year-old self,
weeping
on Sundays fifty years
ago
when my father drove us
to mass
but stood outside,
puffing his Chesterfields,
“doing what his father had
done,
and his father’s father
before him,
wordless to tell me why.”
History is more than
academic. It overlaps the personal. We all dwell in history, even Americans. Not long before his death, my brother
learned that our mother’s side of the family – the names are Hayes, McBride,
Hendrickson – was once Roman Catholic. How did he learn this? Why hadn’t we known
this before? What caused the severance? With his death, what he learned sinks again into the gloom. “The small mind’s patching of meaning from such
ravel.”