Gibbon
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He is at some pains in his Memoirs to show the length and quality of his pedigree, which he traces back to the times of the Second and Third Edwards. Noting the fact, we pass on to a nearer ancestor, his grand father, who seems to have been a person of considerable energy of character and business talent. He made a large fortune, which he lost in the South-Sea Scheme, and then made another before his death. He was one of the Commissioners of Customs, and sat at the Board with the poet Prior; Bolingbroke was heard to declare that no man knew better than Mr. Edward Gibbon the commerce and finances of England. His son, the historian's father, was a person of very inferior stamp. He was educated at Westminster and Cambridge, travelled on the Continent, sat in Parliament, lived beyond his means as a country gentleman, and here his achievements came to an end. He seems to have been a kindly but a weak and impulsive man, who however had the merit of obtaining and deserving his son's affection by genial sympathy and kindly treatment.
Of his studies, or rather his reading—his early and invincible love of reading, which he would not exchange for the treasures of India—he gives us a full account, and we notice at once the interesting fact that a considerable portion of the historical field afterwards occupied by his great work had been already gone over by Gibbon before he was well in his teens. My indiscriminate appetite subsided by degrees into the historic line, and since philosophy has exploded all innate ideas and natural propensities, I must ascribe the choice to the assiduous perusal of the Universal History as the octavo volumes successively appeared. This unequal work referred and introduced me to the Greek and Roman historians, to as many at least as were accessible to an English reader. All that I could find were greedily devoured, from Littlebury's lame Herodotus to Spelman's valuable Xenophon , to the pompous folios of Gordon's Tacitus , and a ragged Procopius of the beginning of the last century. Referring to an accident which threw the continuation of Echard's Roman History in his way, he says, To me the reigns of the successors of Constantine were absolutely new, and I was immersed in the passage of the Goths over the Danube, when the summons of the dinner-bell reluctantly dragged me from my intellectual feast.... I procured the second and third volumes of Howell's History of the World , which exhibit the Byzantine period on a larger scale. Mahomet and his Saracens soon fixed my attention, and some instinct of criticism directed me to the genuine sources. Simon Ockley first opened my eyes, and I was led from one book to another till I had ranged round the circle of Oriental history. Before I was sixteen I had exhausted all that could be learned in English of the Arabs and Persians, the Tartars and Turks, and the same ardour urged me to guess at the French of D'Herbelot and to construe the barbarous Latin of Pocock's Abulfaragius . Here is in rough outline a large portion at least of the Decline and Fall already surveyed. The fact shows how deep was the sympathy that Gibbon had for his subject, and that there was a sort of pre-established harmony between his mind and the historical period he afterwards illustrated.
James Cotter Morison
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English Men of Letters
EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY
GIBBON
JAMES COTTER MORISON, M.A.
LINCOLN COLLEGE, OXFORD
London
CONTENTS
GIBBON
GIBBON'S EARLY LIFE UP TO THE TIME OF HIS LEAVING OXFORD.
FOOTNOTES:
FOOTNOTES:
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AT LAUSANNE.
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IN THE MILITIA.
THE ITALIAN JOURNEY.
FOOTNOTES:
LITERARY SCHEMES.—THE HISTORY OF SWITZERLAND.—DISSERTATION ON THE SIXTH ÆNEID.—FATHER'S DEATH.—SETTLEMENT IN LONDON.
FOOTNOTES:
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FOOTNOTES:
LIFE IN LONDON.—PARLIAMENT.—THE BOARD OF TRADE.—THE DECLINE AND FALL.—MIGRATION TO LAUSANNE.
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FOOTNOTES:
THE FIRST THREE VOLUMES OF THE DECLINE AND FALL.
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THE LAST TEN YEARS OF HIS LIFE IN LAUSANNE.
FOOTNOTES:
THE LAST THREE VOLUMES OF THE DECLINE AND FALL.
LAST ILLNESS.—DEATH.—CONCLUSION.
ENGLISH MEN OF LETTERS.
EDITED BY JOHN MORLEY.
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
Язык
Английский
Год издания
2006-07-17
Темы
Great Britain -- Intellectual life -- 18th century; Historians -- Great Britain -- Biography; Gibbon, Edward, 1737-1794; Gibbon, Edward, 1737-1794. History of the decline and fall of the Roman empire; Scholars -- Great Britain -- Biography; Rome -- History -- Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D. -- Historiography