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xxix

TO The Honourable Mrs. Robert O'Brien.
[_]
NOTE.

‘History as written,’ etc., p. xxvi, line 13— Coleridge expresses himself thus on Gibbon's ‘Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire’:

‘No distinct knowledge of the actual state of the empire can be obtained from Gibbon's rhetorical sketches. He takes notice of nothing but what may produce an effect; he skips on from eminence to eminence, without ever taking you through the valleys between. ... When I read a chapter in Gibbon, I seem to be looking through a luminous haze or fog; figures come and go, I know not how or why, all larger than life, or distorted, or discoloured. Nothing is real, vivid, true; all is scenical, and, as it were, exhibited by candle-light. And that poor scepticism which Gibbon mistook for Socratic philosophy has led him to misstate and mistake the character and influence of Christianity in a way which even an avowed infidel or atheist would not and could not have done. Gibbon was a man of immense reading, but he had no philosophy.’—Coleridge's ‘Table Talk,’ vol. ii. pp. 231, 232.

When will the Christian, the philosophical, and the true history of the ‘Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire’ be written?