I shall venture to defend Gibbon to you.
I don't find him smug. It seems to me
that, behind the genuine belief in prog-
ress there is always, in Gibbon, a sub-
tlety, a sensitivity, occasionally a mel-
ancholy, which is totally absent from
(say) Voltaire. I suppose I have, by now,
got so used to the formal style that I
hardly notice it, and I enjoy all the
more the urbanity, the irony, the human-
ity, which underlies it. Also I love the
marvelous precision of language, the ex-
act choice of words to convey such del-
icate shades and ambiguities of meaning.
Do write again: I love
your letters, and I long to hear from you. Do keep well. I wish I could see you.
yours ever
Hugh
Hugh Trevor-Roper
Regius Professor of History
Oxford
Master of Peterhouse
Cambridge
Lord Dacre of Glanton
Letter to Gerald Brenan
[fragment]
11 March 1968
Richard Davenport-Hines
and Adam Sisman, editors
One Hundred Letters from
Hugh Trevor-Roper
Oxford University Press, 2014©
Tassos Paschalis
Northern Greece
2013
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