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prove。  He analyses the results which follow inevitably from

certain antecedents; in order that on a recurrence of the same

crisis men may know how to act。



His object was to discover the laws of the past so as to serve as a

light to illumine the future。  We must not confuse the recognition

of the utility of history with any ideas of a didactic aim。  Two

points more in Thucydides remain for our consideration:  his

treatment of the rise of Greek civilisation; and of the primitive

condition of Hellas; as well as the question how far can he be said

really to have recognised the existence of laws regulating the

complex phenomena of life。







CHAPTER III







THE investigation into the two great problems of the origin of

society and the philosophy of history occupies such an important

position in the evolution of Greek thought that; to obtain any

clear view of the workings of the critical spirit; it will be

necessary to trace at some length their rise and scientific

development as evinced not merely in the works of historians

proper; but also in the philosophical treatises of Plato and

Aristotle。  The important position which these two great thinkers

occupy in the progress of historical criticism can hardly be over…

estimated。  I do not mean merely as regards their treatment of the

Greek Bible; and Plato's endeavours to purge sacred history of its

immorality by the application of ethical canons at the time when

Aristotle was beginning to undermine the basis of miracles by his

scientific conception of law; but with reference to these two wider

questions of the rise of civil institutions and the philosophy of

history。



And first; as regards the current theories of the primitive

condition of society; there was a wide divergence of opinion in

Hellenic society; just as there is now。  For while the majority of

the orthodox public; of whom Hesiod may be taken as the

representative; looked back; as a great many of our own day still

do; to a fabulous age of innocent happiness; a BELL' ETE DELL'

AURO; where sin and death were unknown and men and women were like

Gods; the foremost men of intellect such as Aristotle and Plato;

AEschylus and many of the other poets (1) saw in primitive man 'a

few small sparks of humanity preserved on the tops of mountains

after some deluge;' 'without an idea of cities; governments or

legislation;' 'living the lives of wild beasts in sunless caves;'

'their only law being the survival of the fittest。'



And this; too; was the opinion of Thucydides; whose ARCHAEOLOGIA as

it is contains a most valuable disquisition on the early condition

of Hellas; which it will be necessary to examine at some length。



Now; as regards the means employed generally by Thucydides for the

elucidation of ancient history; I have already pointed out how

that; while acknowledging that 'it is the tendency of every poet to

exaggerate; as it is of every chronicler to seek to be attractive

at the expense of truth; he yet assumes in the thoroughly

euhemeristic way; that under the veil of myth and legend there does

yet exist a rational basis of fact discoverable by the method of

rejecting all supernatural interference as well as any

extraordinary motives influencing the actors。  It is in complete

accordance with this spirit that he appeals; for instance; to the

Homeric epithet of 'Greek text which cannot be reproduced'; as

applied to Corinth; as a proof of the early commercial prosperity

of that city; to the fact of the generic name HELLENES not

occurring in the ILIAD as a corroboration of his theory of the

essentially disunited character of the primitive Greek tribes; and

he argues from the line 'O'er many islands and all Argos ruled;' as

applied to Agamemnon; that his forces must have been partially

naval; 'for Agamemnon's was a continental power; and he could not

have been master of any but the adjacent islands; and these would

not be many but through the possession of a fleet。'



Anticipating in some measure the comparative method of research; he

argues from the fact of the more barbarous Greek tribes; such as

the AEtolians and Acarnanians; still carrying arms in his own day;

that this custom was the case originally over the whole country。

'The fact;' he says; 'that the people in these parts of Hellas are

still living in the old way points to a time when the same mode of

life was equally common to all。'  Similarly; in another passage; he

shows how a corroboration of his theory of the respectable

character of piracy in ancient days is afforded by 'the honour with

which some of the inhabitants of the continent still regard a

successful marauder;' as well as by the fact that the question;

'Are you a pirate?' is a common feature of primitive society as

shown in the poets; and finally; after observing how the old Greek

custom of wearing belts in gymnastic contests still survived among

the more uncivilised Asiatic tribes; he observes that there are

many other points in which a likeness may be shown between the life

of the primitive Hellenes and that of the barbarians to…day。'



As regards the evidence afforded by ancient remains; while adducing

as a proof of the insecure character of early Greek society the

fact of their cities (2) being always built at some distance from

the sea; yet he is careful to warn us; and the caution ought to be

borne in mind by all archaeologists; that we have no right to

conclude from the scanty remains of any city that its legendary

greatness in primitive times was a mere exaggeration。  'We are not

justified;' he says; 'in rejecting the tradition of the magnitude

of the Trojan armament; because Mycenae and the other towns of that

age seem to us small and insignificant。  For; if Lacedaemon was to

become desolate; any antiquarian judging merely from its ruins

would be inclined to regard the tale of the Spartan hegemony as an

idle myth; for the city is a mere collection of villages after the

old fashion of Hellas; and has none of those splendid public

buildings and temples which characterise Athens; and whose remains;

in the case of the latter city; would be so marvellous as to lead

the superficial observer into an exaggerated estimate of the

Athenian power。'  Nothing can be more scientific than the

archaeological canons laid down; whose truth is strikingly

illustrated to any one who has compared the waste fields of the

Eurotas plain with the lordly monuments of the Athenian acropolis。

(3)



On the other hand; Thucydides is quite conscious of the value of

the positive evidence afforded by archaeological remains。  He

appeals; for instance; to the character of the armour found in the

Delian tombs and the peculiar mode of sepulture; as corroboration

of his theory of the predominance of the Carian element among the

primitive islanders; and to the concentration of all the temples

either in the Acropolis; or in its immediate vicinity; to the name

of 'Greek text which cannot be reproduced' by which it was still

known; and to the extraordinary sanctity of the spring of water

there; as proof that the primitive city was originally confined to

the citadel; and the district immediately beneath it (ii。 16)。  And

lastly; in the very opening of his history; anticipating one of the

most scientific of modern methods; he points out how in early

states of civilisation immense fertility of the soil tends to

favour the personal aggrandisement of individuals; and so to stop

the normal progress of the country through 'the rise of factions;

that endless source of ruin'; and also by the allurements it offers

to a foreign invader; to necessitate a continual change of

population; one immigration following on another。  He exemplifies

his theory by pointing to the endless political revolutions that

characterised Arcadia; Thessaly and Boeotia; the three richest

spots in Greece; as well as by the negative instance of the

undisturbed state in primitive time of

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