Historic truth ought to be no less sacred than religion. If the precepts of faith raise our soul above the interests of this world, the lessons of history, in their turn, inspire us with the love of the beautiful and the just, and the hatred of whatever presents an obstacle to the progress of humanity. These lessons, to be profitable, require certain conditions. It is necessary that the facts be produced with a rigorous exactness, that the changes political or social be analysed philosophically, that the exciting interest of the details of the lives of public men should not divert attention from the political part they played, or cause us to forget their providential mission.
History of the British Empire
Charles Payne
bookA History of Rome During the Later Republic and Early Principate
A. H. J. Greenridge
bookFrench History from Caesar to Waterloo
Mary Robinson
bookHistory of the Byzantine Empire
Charles Oman
bookA History of Giants
Henry Lanier
bookA Short History of Babylon
George Rawlinson
bookA History of the Hundred Years War
Ephraim Emerton
bookA Short History of Carthage
Charles Rollin
bookHellenic History
George Botsford
bookA History of Imperial Europe
Ramsay Muir
bookStories from Roman History
Lena Dalkeith
bookStories from Greek History
Ethelwyn Lemon
book