Ever since
I started reading about World War II, probably going back to 2011 but gaining
some steam during the initial days of Covid, I started finding Churchill
everywhere. It was a weird instance of synchronicity. I’d read an article in Astronomy
magazine about the space race and Churchill’s name would turn up. I’d thumb
through a book on the Crusades and there would be old Winston. Watched a YouTube
video on the 1947 UFO flap and they’d mention the British Prime Minister’s
curiosity in the phenomenon. Pick three random self-help books off the B&N
shelves and scan the index, and chances are you’ll find Churchill’s name there,
and a nifty quote somewhere in the meat of the book in question.
So I found
it very pleasing to discover the fact that young Winston was a huge fan of
Edward Gibbon’s The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire.
[As you
may know, my oldest daughter Little One is now in Italy for her college spring semester
sophomore year, studying philosophy, theology, literature and art in Rome. I am
reading through Gibbon’s late-18th century history of the Roman Empire in sympathetic
solidarity with her – though I don’t believe that’s one of the works assigned
to her. And as of this posting, I am 52 pages in … about 4 percent done …]
To quote a
mature Churchill:
“I set out
upon Gibbon’s Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire and was immediately dominated
both by the story and the style. I devoured Gibbon. I rode triumphantly though
it from end to end and enjoyed it all.” Wikipedia states – I know, I know –
that the British statesman “modeled much of his own literary style on Gibbon’s …
like Gibbon, he dedicated himself to producing a ‘vivid historical narrative,
ranging widely over period and place, enriched by analysis and reflection.’ ”
How awesome
this is to a bookworm history buff like me!
I spent a
month about a dozen years ago commuting to work listening to an audio book of
the first volume of his World War II memoirs, The Gathering Storm. If I
continue to enjoy Gibbon as much as I am so far – that is, the remaining 96
percent – perhaps I’ll revisit Winston later this fall.
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