Defeating The Enemy (December 1960 | Volume: 12, Issue: 1)

Defeating The Enemy

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Authors: Bruce Catton

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December 1960 | Volume 12, Issue 1

One of the benefits that come from the study of history, which after all is nothing more than the examination of assorted human lives, is the recurrent discovery that the human spirit is basically unconquerable. This is revealed in big ways and in little ways—in the story of a nation, and in the story of a single individual—and wherever it is met it is like a bright light glowing in the dark. Simple strength of will can win over the longest odds. Wish hard enough and what you wish for can come true. Possibly the moral, if a moral must be looked for, is that the dreams we serve had better be lofty; some day they may turn into realities.

One is bound to indulge in some such reflections when one examines the career of the greatest of all American historians, Francis Parkman. This man, who combined the very best in professional capacity and dedication with the talents of a superlative literary craftsman, pulled himself up by his own bootstraps. He had all the gifts a historian could wish for, but he also had handicaps enough to destroy all that had been given him. What finally made him and his work imperishable was nothing less than strength of will. Sheer determination beat the odds.

A good way to see what this man was like, and to understand how he did the splendid things he did, is to read the assembled Letters of Francis Parkman , edited and given a very fine introduction by Wilbur R. Jacobs. Covering the long span from his late teens in 1841 to the autumn of his death in 1893, these letters show Parkman driving on relentlessly to do, finally, what he set out to do—to describe the conflict in colonial America of English, French, and Indians which laid the foundation for the American nation, and to do it so accurately and with such narrative skill that no one since then has had to cover the same ground.

He got into this immense project in the simplest way imaginable—because it interested him. As a youth he was bookish, but he also liked the wilderness, hunting, camping, the Indians; and he quickly realized, as he himself wrote, that “these two preferences, books and the woods, could be reconciled, and could even help one another, in the field of Franco-American history. That is why I took it up.” He became, in fact, one of those supremely fortunate men who are able to spend their lives doing exactly what they always most wanted to do.

He had certain advantages. He was born a Boston Brahmin, heir to a comfortable fortune. He got, at Harvard, as good an education as the America of that day could provide—he became master of five languages, studied history under the stimulating Jared Sparks, got an excellent grounding in the classics, and all in all was as well prepared for the historian’s