Of all the studies
by which men acquire citizenship of the intellectual commonwealth,
no single one is so indispensable as the study of the past.
To know how the world developed to the point at which our
individual memory begins; how the religions, the institutions,
the nations among which we live, became what they are;
to be acquainted with the great of other times, with customs
and beliefs differing widely from our own - these things
are indispensable to any consciousness of our position,
and to any emancipation for the accidental circumstances
of our education. It is not only to the historian that
history is valuable, not only to the professed student
of archives and documents, but to all who are capable of
a contemplative survey of human life. But the value of
history is so multiform that those to whom some one of
its sides appeals with special force are in constant danger
of forgetting all others.
I
      History is valuable,
to begin with, because it is true; and this, though not
the whole of its value, is the foundation and condition
of all the rest. That all knowledge, as such, is in some
degree good, would appear to be at least probable; and
the knowledge of every historical fact possesses this element
of goodness, even if it posses no other....
      ...Another and
a greater utility, however, belongs also to history. It
enlargens the imagination, and suggests possibilities of
action and feeling which would not have occurred to an
uninstructed mind. It selects from past lives the elements
which were significant and important; it fills our thoughts
with splendid examples, and with the desire for greater
ends than unaided reflection would have discovered. It
relates the present to the past, and thereby the future
to the present. It makes visible and living the growth
and greatness of nations, enabling us to extend our hopes
beyond the span of our lives. In all these ways, a knowledge
of history is capable of giving to statesmanship, and to
our daily thoughts, a breadth and scope unattainable by
those whose view is limited to the present.
      What the past
does for us may be judged, perhaps, by the consideration
of those younger nations whose energy and enterprise are
winning the envy of Europe. In them we see developing a
type of man, endowed with all the hopefulness of the Renaissance
or the Age of Pericles, persuaded that his more vigorous
efforts can quickly achieve whatever proved too difficult
for the generations that preceded him. Ignorant and contemptuous
of the aims that inspired these generations, unaware of
the complex problems that they attempted to solve, his
rapid success in comparatively simple achievements encourages
his confident belief that the future belongs to him. But
to those who have grown up surrounded by monuments of men
and deeds whose memory they cherish, there is a curious
thinness about the thoughts and emotions that inspire this
confidence; optimism seems to be sustained by a too exclusive
pursuit of what can be easily attained; and hopes are not
transmuted into ideals by the habit of appraising current
events by their relation to the history of the past. Whatever
is different from the present is despised. That among those
who contributed nothing to the dominion of Mammon great
men lived, that wisdom may reside in those whose thought
are not dominated by the machine, is incredible to this
temper of mind. Action, Success, Change, are its watchwords;
whether the action is noble, the success in a good cause,
or the change an improvement in anything except wealth,
are questions which there is no time to ask. Against this
spirit, whereby all leisure, all care for the ends of life,
are sacrificed to the struggle to be first in a worthless
race, history and the habit of living with the past are
the surest antidotes; and in our age, more than ever before,
such antidotes are needed.
      The record of
great deeds is a defeat of Time; for it prolongs their
power through many ages after they and their authors have
been swallowed by the abyss of the non-existent. And, in
regard to the past, where contemplation is not obscured
by desire and the need for action, we see, more clearly
than in the lives about us, the value for good and evil,
of the aims men have pursued and the means they have adopted.
It is good, from time to time, to view the present as already
past, and to examine what elements it contains that will
add to the world's store of permanent possessions, that
will live and give life when we and all our generation
have perished. In the light of this contemplation all human
experience is transformed, and whatever is sordid or personal
is purged away. And, as we grow in wisdom, the treasure-house
of the ages opens to our view; more and more we learn to
know and love the men through whose devotion all this wealth
has become ours. Gradually, by the contemplation of great
lives, a mystic communion becomes possible, filling the
soul like music from an invisible choir. Still, out of
the past, the voices of heroes call us. As, from a loft
promontory, the bell of the ancient cathedral, unchanged
since the day when Dante returned from the kingdom of the
dead, still sends its solemn warning across the waters,
so their voice still sounds across intervening sea of time;
still, as then, its calm deep tones speak to the solitary
tortures of cloistered aspiration, putting the serenity
of things eternal in place of the doubtful struggle against
ignoble joys and transient pleasures. Not by those about
them were they heard; but they spoke to the winds of heaven,
and the winds of heaven tell the tale to the great of later
days. The great are not solitary; out of the night come
the voices of those who have gone before, clear and courageous;
and so through the ages they march, a mighty procession,
proud, undaunted, unconquerable. To join in this glorious
company, to swell the immortal paeon of those whom fate
could not subdue - this may not be happiness; but what
is happiness to those whose souls are filled with that
celestial music? To them is given what is better than happiness:
to know the fellowship of the great, to live in the inspiration
of lofty thoughts, and to be illuminated in every perplexity
by the fire of nobility and truth.
      But history is
more than the record of individual men, however great:
it is the province of history to tell the biography, not
only of men, but of Man; to present the long procession
of generations as but the passing thoughts of one continuous
life; to transcend their blindness and brevity in the slow
unfolding of the tremendous drama in which all play their
part. In the migrations of races, in the birth and death
of religions, in the rise and fall of empires, the unconscious
units, without any purpose beyond the moment, have contributed
unwittingly to the pageant of the ages; and, from the greatness
of the whole, some breath of greatness breathes over all
who participated in the march. In this lies the haunting
power of the dim history beyond written records. There,
nothing is known but the cloudy outlines of huge events;
and, of all the separate lives that came and went, no memory
remains. Through unnumbered generations, forgotten sons
worshipped at the tombs of forgotten fathers, forgotten
mothers bore warriors whose bones whitened the silent steppes
of Asia. The clash of arms, the hatreds and oppressions,
the blind conflicts of dumb nations, are all still, like
a distant waterfall; but slowly, out of the strife, the
nations that we know emerged, with a heritage of poetry
and piety transmitted from the buried past.
      And this quality,
which is all that remains of pre-historic times, belongs
also to the later periods where the knowledge of details
is apt to obscure the movement of the whole. We, too, in
all our deeds, bear our part in a process of which we cannot
guess the development: even the obscurist are actors in
a drama of which we know only that it is great. Whether
any purpose that we value will be achieved, we cannot tell;
but the drama itself, in any case, if full of Titanic grandeur.
This quality it is the business of the historian to extract
from the bewildering multitude of irrelevant details. From
old books, wherein the loves, the hopes, the faiths of
bygone generations lie embalmed, he calls pictures before
our minds, pictures of high endeavors and brave hopes,
living through his care, in spite of failure and death.
Before all is wrapped in oblivion, the historian must compose
afresh, in each succeeding age, the epitaph upon the life
of Man.
      The past alone
is truly real: the present is but a painful, struggling
birth into the immutable being of what is no longer. Only
the dead exist fully. The lives of the living are fragmentary,
doubtful, and subject to change; but the lives of the dead
are complete, free from the sway of Time, the all-but omnipotent
lord of the world. Their failures and successes, their
hopes and fears, have become eternal - our efforts cannot
now abate one jot of them. Sorrows long buried in the grave,
tragedies of which only a fading memory remains, loves
immortalized by Death's hallowing touch - these have a
power, a magic, an untroubled calm, to which no present
can attain.
      Year by year,
comrades die, hopes prove vain, ideals fade; the enchanted
land of youth grows more remote, the road of life more
wearisome; the burden of the world increases until the
labour and the pain become almost too heavy to be borne;
joy fades from the weary nations of the earth and the tyranny
of the future saps men's vital force; all that we love
is waning, waning from the dying world. But the past, ever
devouring the transient offspring of the present, lives
by the universal death; steadily, irresistibly, it adds
new trophies to its silent temple, which all the ages build;
every great deed, every splendid life, every achievement
and every heroic failure, is there enshrined. On the banks
of the river of Time, the sad procession of human generations
is marching slowly to the grave; in the quiet country of
the Past, the march is ended, the tired wanderers rest,
and all their weeping is hushed.
The Independent Review
July 1904
"On the banks of the river
of Time, the sad procession of human generations
is marching slowly to the grave; in the quiet country
of the Past, the march is ended, the tired wanderers
rest, and all their weeping is hushed."