LM Montgomery on “Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire” by Edward Gibbon

More on Decline and Fall.

“I finished ‘Decline and Fall’ this evening. It is the third time I have read it…It is a monumental piece of work. I know of no historian so coldly impersonal as Gibbon. He seems more like a machine recording history … This makes for the proper impartiality; but it is also largely accountable for what, after all, must be called the monotony of his style. Almost the only portions of his history in which we get a glimpse of Gibbon himself — the intellect behind the machine — are in his famous chapters on Christianity and his sprinkling of sly spicy smutty stories. Naturally these — the chapters, I mean — are therefore the most interesting part of the work … Gibbon doesn’t overdo but his smirk rather gives the effect of a Satyr leering suddenly around the columns of Karnak.”

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3 Responses to LM Montgomery on “Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire” by Edward Gibbon

  1. Michael says:

    “his smirk rather gives the effect of a Satyr leering suddenly around the columns of Karnak.”

    Brilliant. Learned, concise, unexpected, persuasive, complete.

  2. spd rdr says:

    I admit, after reading that line I’ll never be able to read Gibbon in the same way again (shaking head and smiling ear to ear). A bow on the present.

  3. red says:

    Isn’t that great? That was exactly the image I got of him during the “smutty” parts. Ha!

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