a Roman prisoner, esteemed and occasionally envied
for his Hellenic culture by Scipio Aemilianus and
the first men of Rome generally, he saw the streams,
which had so long flowed separately, meet together
in the same channel and the history of the states
of the Mediterranean resolve itself into the hegemony
of Roman power and Greek culture. Thus Polybius
became the first Greek of note, who embraced with serious
conviction the comprehensive view of the Scipionic
circle, and recognized the superiority of Hellenism
in the sphere of intellect and of the Roman character
in the sphere of politics as facts, regarding which
history had given her final decision, and to which
people on both sides were entitled and bound to submit.
In this spirit he acted as a practical statesman,
and wrote his history. If in his youth he had
done homage to the honourable but impracticable local
patriotism of the Achaeans, during his later years,
with a clear discernment of inevitable necessity, he
advocated in the community to which he belonged the
policy of the closest adherence to Rome. It
was a policy in the highest degree judicious and beyond
doubt well-intentioned, but it was far from being
high-spirited or proud. Nor was Polybius able
wholly to disengage himself from the vanity and paltriness
of the Hellenic statesmanship of the time. He
was hardly released from exile, when he proposed to
the senate that it should formally secure to the released
their former rank in their several homes; whereupon
Cato aptly remarked, that this looked to him as if
Ulysses were to return to the cave of Polyphemus to
request from the giant his hat and girdle. He
often made use of his relations with the great men
in Rome to benefit his countrymen; but the way in which
he submitted to, and boasted of, the illustrious protection
somewhat approaches fawning servility. His literary
activity breathes throughout the same spirit as his
practical action. It was the task of his life
to write the history of the union of the Mediterranean
states under the hegemony of Rome. From the first
Punic war down to the destruction of Carthage and Corinth
his work embraces the fortunes of all the civilized
states—namely Greece, Macedonia, Asia Minor,
Syria, Egypt, Carthage, and Italy—and exhibits
in causal connection the mode in which they came under
the Roman protectorate; in so far he describes it as
his object to demonstrate the fitness and reasonableness
of the Roman hegemony. In design as in execution,
this history stands in clear and distinct contrast
with the contemporary Roman as well as with the contemporary
Greek historiography. In Rome history still remained
wholly at the stage of chronicle; there existed doubtless
important historical materials, but what was called
historical composition was restricted—with
the exception of the very respectable but purely individual
writings of Cato, which at any rate did not reach
beyond the rudiments of research and narration—partly
to nursery tales, partly to collections of notices.
The Greeks had certainly exhibited historical research
and had written history; but the conceptions of nation
and state had been so completely lost amidst the distracted
times of the Diadochi, that none of the numerous historians
succeeded in following the steps of the great Attic
masters in spirit and in truth, or in treating from
a general point of view the matter of world-wide interest
in the history of the times.