[1.Preface]Whether the task I have
undertaken of writing a complete history of the Roman people from the very
commencement of its existence will reward me for the labour spent on it,
I neither know for certain, nor if I did know would I venture to say. For
I see that this is an old-established and a common practice, each fresh
writer being invariably persuaded that he will either attain greater certainty
in the materials of his narrative, or surpass the rudeness of antiquity
in the excellence of his style. However this may be, it will still be a
great satisfaction to me to have taken my part, too, in investing, to the
utmost of my abilities, the annals of the foremost nation in the world
with a deeper interest; and if in such a crowd of writers my own reputation
is thrown into the shade, I would console myself with the renown and greatness
of those who eclipse my fame. The subject, moreover, is one that demands
immense labour. It goes back beyond 700 years and, after starting from
small and humble beginnings, has grown to such dimensions that it begins
to be overburdened by its greatness. I have very little doubt, too, that
for the majority of my readers the earliest times and those immediately
succeeding, will possess little attraction; they will hurry on to these
modern days in which the might of a long paramount nation is wasting by
internal decay. I, on the other hand, shall look for a further reward of
my labours in being able to close my eyes to the evils which our generation
has witnessed for so many years; so long, at least, as I am devoting all
my thoughts to retracing those pristine records, free from all the anxiety
which can disturb the historian of his own times even if it cannot warp
him from the truth.
The traditions of what happened prior to the foundation of the City
or whilst it was being built, are more fitted to adorn the creations of
the poet than the authentic records of the historian, and I have no intention
of establishing either their truth or their falsehood. This much licence
is conceded to the ancients, that by intermingling human actions with divine
they may confer a more august dignity on the origins of states. Now, if
any nation ought to be allowed to claim a sacred origin and point back
to a divine paternity that nation is Rome. For such is her renown in war
that when she chooses to represent Mars as her own and her founder's father,
the nations of the world accept the statement with the same equanimity
with which they accept her dominion. But whatever opinions may be formed
or criticisms passed upon these and similar traditions, I regard them as
of small importance. The subjects to which I would ask each of my readers
to devote his earnest attention are these - the life and morals of the
community; the men and the qualities by which through domestic policy and
foreign war dominion was won and extended. Then as the standard of morality
gradually lowers, let him follow the decay of the national character, observing
how at first it slowly sinks, then slips downward more and more rapidly,
and finally begins to plunge into headlong ruin, until he reaches these
days, in which we can bear neither our diseases nor their remedies.
There is this exceptionally beneficial and fruitful advantage to be
derived from the study of the past, that you see, set in the clear light
of historical truth, examples of every possible type. From these you may
select for yourself and your country what to imitate, and also what, as
being mischievous in its inception and disastrous in its issues, you are
to avoid. Unless, however, I am misled by affection for my undertaking,
there has never existed any commonwealth greater in power, with a purer
morality, or more fertile in good examples; or any state in which avarice
and luxury have been so late in making their inroads, or poverty and frugality
so highly and continuously honoured, showing so clearly that the less wealth
men possessed the less they coveted. In these latter years wealth has brought
avarice in its train, and the unlimited command of pleasure has created
in men a passion for ruining themselves and everything else through self-indulgence
and licentiousness. But criticisms which will be unwelcome, even when perhaps
necessary, must not appear in the commencement at all events of this extensive
work. We should much prefer to start with favourable omens, and if we could
have adopted the poets' custom, it would have been much pleasanter to commence
with prayers and supplications to gods and goddesses that they would grant
a favourable and successful issue to the great task before us.
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