the fundamental treatise on the subject (published
between 687 and 709). The first portion, “Of
Things Human,” described the primeval age of
Rome, the divisions of city and country, the sciences
of the years, months, and days, lastly, the public
transactions at home and in war; in the second half,
“Of Things Divine,” the state-theology,
the nature and significance of the colleges of experts,
of the holy places, of the religious festivals, of
sacrificial and votive gifts, and lastly of the gods
themselves were summarily unfolded. Moreover,
besides a number of monographs— e. g. on
the descent of the Roman people, on the Roman gentes
descended from Troy, on the tribes—there
was added, as a larger and more independent supplement,
the treatise “Of the Life of the Roman People”—a
remarkable attempt at a history of Roman manners,
which sketched a picture of the state of domestic life,
finance, and culture in the regal, the early republican,
the Hannibalic, and the most recent period.
These labours of Varro were based on an empiric knowledge
of the Roman world and its adjacent Hellenic domain
more various and greater in its kind than any other
Roman either before or after him possessed—a
knowledge to which living observation and the study
of literature alike contributed. The eulogy of
his contemporaries was well deserved, that Varro had
enabled his countrymen—strangers in their
own world—to know their position in their
native land, and had taught the Romans who and where
they were. But criticism and system will be sought
for in vain. His Greek information seems to
have come from somewhat confused sources, and there
are traces that even in the Roman field the writer
was not free from the influence of the historical
romance of his time. The matter is doubtless
inserted in a convenient and symmetrical framework,
but not classified or treated methodically; and with
all his efforts to bring tradition and personal observation
into harmony, the scientific labours of Varro are
not to be acquitted of a certain implicit faith in
tradition or of an unpractical scholasticism.(38)
The connection with Greek philology consists in the
imitation of its defects more than of its excellences;
for instance, the basing of etymologies on mere similarity
of sound both in Varro himself and in the other philologues
of this epoch runs into pure guesswork and often into
downright absurdity.(39) In its empiric confidence
and copiousness as well as in its empiric inadequacy
and want of method the Varronian vividly reminds us
of the English national philology, and just like the
latter, finds its centre in the study of the older
drama. We have already observed that the monarchical
literature developed the rules of language in contradistinction
to this linguistic empiricism.(40) It is in a high
degree significant that there stands at the head of
the modern grammarians no less a man than Caesar himself,
who in his treatise on Analogy (given forth between
696 and 704) first undertook to bring free language
under the power of law.