| Ferdinand Gregorovius, the youngest of eight brothers and sisters, was
                
                born at the little town of Neidenburg, in East Prussia, on January 19, 1821.
                
                Neidenburg, which owes its foundation to the Teutonic order, stands close to
                
                the Polish frontier, and is situated in a desolate tract of country, broken by
                
                pine-woods, hills, and lakes. The place, insignificant in itself, acquires an
                
                historic character from the still existing castle of the Teutonic knights, a
                
                monument of the Middle Ages, that played no unimportant role in the history of
                
                the Gregorovius family, and in particular was to exercise a weighty influence
                
                on the development of its youngest member. Gregorovius’s father was Justiz-ratk at Neidenburg. He found the
                
                old castle, originally one of the finest belonging to the order, in partial
                
                ruin, and it was owing to his exertions that its restoration was accomplished
                
                by the Burggrave of Marienburg, the Minister
                  
                  von Schon. The offices of the Court of Justice were now removed to the
                
                castle, and the family acquired therein a magnificent dwelling. The children
                
                grew up amidst the remains of great historic memories; the fortress was their
                
                pride, and they soon came to regard it as the property of the family. On the
                
                imagination of the boyish Ferdinand above all, the life which they led in its
                
                halls and corridors, its vaults and subterranean rooms, the distant views from
                
                its turret windows, made a powerful impression. To the influence of his
                
                surroundings, he himself attributed the fact of his early and decided bent towards
                
                antiquity and mediaevalism. He frequently expressed the opinion that the History of Rome in the Middle Ages would
                
                never have been written had not his youth been passed in that old castle of the
                
                Teutonic knights.
                
                 To this chief circumstance of his childhood was added, at the age of
                    
                    nine, the impression made by the Polish revolution of 1830. Owing to the
                    
                    proximity of Neidenburg to the scene 'of the bloody struggles called forth by
                    
                    the rising, he not only heard much concerning the events of the war, but had
                    
                    opportunity of adding to his information by personal observation. Soon after
                    
                    the outbreak of the revolution a regiment of Cossacks, driven across the
                    
                    frontier by the Polish rebels, sought shelter in Neidenburg. And again, after
                    
                    the defeat of Ostrolenka, the boy saw the unfortunate Polish fugitives
                    
                    surrendering by thousands to Russia. These events left a deep impression on his
                    
                    mind. They broke like sharp and disintegrating elements from the modern outer
                    
                    world into the world of his historic dreams, rudely linking the present with
                    
                    the past. For the first time he experienced the feeling of hatred towards the
                    
                    oppressor, of compassion with the oppressed. His interest in the Poles, on
                    
                    whose blood-soaked plains he looked from the Castle of Neidenburg, developed
                    
                    into sympathy, which strengthened from year to year, and afterwards found
                    
                    characteristic expression in the beginning of his literary career.
                    
                   In other respects no sound from the outer world penetrated the solitude
                  
                  of the remote East Prussian village and the monotonous provincial existence of
                  
                  its inhabitants. Gregorovius’s father was an austere man, who lived solely for
                  
                  his work. His mother, a tall and handsome woman, religious to enthusiasm, was a
                  
                  chronic invalid and died of consumption in 1831. Soon after the boy left home
                  
                  to attend the gymnasium at Gumbinnen, taking up his abode with a younger
                  
                  brother of his father, who was also an officer of justice at the place. His
                  
                  tastes were chiefly centred on history, geography, and ancient languages, and
                  
                  even in these boyish years he dreamed much of distant countries and ages. A
                  
                  great impression was made upon him when an army doctor, whom he once saw at
                  
                  Neidenburg, told him that he had spent three weeks in Rome. He gazed at the man
                  
                  in astonishment and then ran to tell his father of the wondrous fact. His
                  
                  thoughts took another flight to distant lands when, in 1833, one of his
                  
                  brothers joined the Bavarians to fight for the Greeks in their struggle for
                  
                  independence. On returning home for the holidays, he was accustomed to lie for
                  
                  hours on the hill where the castle stood, watching the clouds float overhead,
                  
                  and letting his thoughts, oblivious of time, wander with them over land and
                  
                  sea. Indeed, until the end of his life, next to works of history, accounts of
                  
                  travel in distant parts of the world formed a favourite entertainment of his
                  
                  leisure hours.
                  
                   His course at the gymnasium ended, he entered the university of
                  
                  Konigsberg in the autum of 1838, at the age of seventeen. And since his father
                  
                  belonged to a clerical family (his great-grandfather, grandfather, and father
                  
                  having each in succession been vicar of the same parish in East Prussia), at
                  
                  his father's wish Ferdinand studied theology. But he did so without
                  
                  inclination, and the fact that, with the exception of Caesar von Lengerke (a
                  
                  poet who had strayed into dogmatics), theology was taught in Konigsberg by a
                  
                  set of dull pedants, did not contribute to encourage a taste for a study that
                  
                  had been forced upon him. More than to any of the other professors he felt
                  
                  himself drawn to the philosopher, Karl Rosenkranz. An afterglow of the age of
                  
                  Kant still lingered over the University of Konigsberg, and Rosenkranz, the
                  
                  highly-cultured imaginative thinker and brilliant orator, commanded the enthusiasm
                  
                  of the younger generation. Gregorovius became one of his foremost pupils. He
                  
                  studied Kant and Hegel, and believed himself destined to be a philosopher. He
                  
                  attended the lectures of the historians Drumann and Voigt, but learning however
                  
                  vast, which lacked the vital spark of genius, failed to satisfy him.
                  
                  Everywhere, however, he experienced the influence of the free scientific spirit
                  
                  which still lingered at Konigsberg. The university was perhaps already on the
                  
                  decline; but conscious of standing like a lighthouse of German culture on the
                  
                  confines of Slavic barbarism, the German character in East Prussia and its
                  
                  ancient capital put forward all its strength. The work of culture undertaken by
                  
                  the Teutonic knights, the Reformation, Kant, the wars of liberation, the
                  
                  foundation of the State on the principles of humanity all these were the
                  
                  proudly cherished possessions of the East Prussians, and Gregorovius himself
                  
                  had received sufficient of the impress of this virile race to prize the
                  
                  intellectual training which, through his Alma Mater, it received.
                  
                   He left the university in the autumn of 1841, after having passed his
                  
                  first theological examination. That theology was not his vocation he had
                  
                  meantime more and more clearly recognized. For some years, first in Neidenburg,
                  
                  then at other places in East and West Prussia, he followed the calling of
                  
                  private tutor. He was daunted by the thought of wearing for life the fetters of
                  
                  an official position. He dreamed occasionally of an academic life, but resolved
                  
                  in any case to break with his theological antecedents; and still believing
                  
                  himself destined to become a philosopher, he took his degree in the philosophic
                  
                  faculty at Konigsberg with the dissertation, "Concerning the Conception of
                  
                  the Beautiful in Plotinus and the Neo-Platonists". Like his teacher
                  
                  Rosenkranz, he at the same time engaged in literary pursuits. He wrote several
                  
                  poems, chiefly lyrical, and in 1845, at the age of twenty-four, appeared before
                  
                  the public with his first book, the romance of Werdomar and Wladislaw, a work which at every turn reflects the Sturm und Drang period of intellectual
                  
                  development through which he was then passing. With its Polish-German
                  
                  complications, its pre-revolutionary provincialism and prison adventures, its
                  
                  Titanic pessimism and its enthusiastic hopes for the future, the romance was
                  
                  entirely the product of the time, and frequently arouses our surprise by the
                  
                  realism which displays the author's close observance of life. But the tone of
                  
                  the book is, above all, romantic. Echoes of Jean Paul, Holderlin, Eichendorff,
                  
                  and Immermann weave themselves into a wondrous symphony. In this youthful work
                  
                  Gregorovius pays his tribute to modern German romanticism, with the evident
                  
                  foreknowledge, it is true, of alienation from a world which did not in truth satisfy
                  
                  him. We cannot say that he realized in irony or in political and philosophic
                  
                  radicalism the discrepancy between his ideals and actuality as did Heine and
                  
                  Heine's young German comrades. But his longings went out towards great men and
                  
                  great deeds. "Epic without action," he says in the preface to his
                  
                  book, "such is our time"; and to him mankind seemed wandering in a
                  
                  wilderness of romanticism, from the labyrinths of which they could only be
                  
                  released by the appearance of some heroic leader.
                  
                   Werdomar and Wladislaw met with no striking success; but in Konigsberg, where the romance
                  
                  appeared in the University Press, it received attention, and soon after
                  
                  Gregorovius returned to make a longer sojourn in the capital of East Prussia.
                  
                  Destitute of means as he was, he could not make up his mind to abandon the work
                  
                  of teaching; in fact, he continued it as his chief means of subsistence during
                  
                  the next six years. Konigsberg, moreover, offered a stimulating intellectual
                  
                  atmosphere, the means for the continuation of scientific and literary studies,
                  
                  and to these he dedicated the greater part of his leisure.
                  
                   Next to philosophy, history once more exercised its fascinations over
                  
                  him, and at Drumann’s instigation he undertook a monograph on the Emperor
                  
                  Hadrian, a work doing all honor to the young scholar's industry and learning,
                  
                  which was finished at the beginning of 1848, but which, owing to the storms of
                  
                  the revolution and difficulties with publishers, only appeared in 1851. In a
                  
                  retrospect of Gregorovius’s intellectual development, this history of the
                  
                  Emperor Hadrian still awakens our interest from a twofold point of view, as
                  
                  having been his first historical work of importance, and as the first evidence
                  
                  of the direction of his thoughts towards Rome.
                  
                   In the meantime the outbreak of the revolution of 1848 had irresistibly
                  
                  diverted the attention of the historian from the distant past to the tumultuous
                  
                  movement of the present. At this time, owing to the bold political ideas of
                  
                  Johann Jacoby and Walesrode’s humorous satirical utterances, free-thinking
                  
                  Konigsberg was conspicuous as one of the centres of the revolution. Several of
                  
                  Gregorovius’s older and younger fellow-students, among them Wilhelm Jordan and
                  
                  Rudolf Gottschall, appeared before the public as poets of a new period of Sturm und Drang, and Gregorovius himself
                  
                  entered with enthusiasm into the agitation of popular meetings and clubs, which
                  
                  served as organs to the hopes and fears, the love and hatred of that excited
                  
                  period. He hoped for the regeneration of the German people, but not for this
                  
                  alone. His sympathies, in accordance with his democratic creed, were
                  
                  essentially cosmopolitan. That which he desired for Germany, he also demanded
                  
                  as an inalienable right for the other struggling nationalities. He was more
                  
                  especially saddened by the cruel suppression of the revolt of the Poles, for
                  
                  whose struggles for independence, ever since his boyish years at Neidenburg
                  
                  when he witnessed the tragic vicissitudes of the revolution of 1830 - he had
                  
                  always retained the strongest sympathy. His views on this question he made
                  
                  known in the early summer of 1848, in the historical-political treatise, Die Idee des Polentums. Somewhat later
                  
                  he published his Polen und Magyarenlieder.
                  
                  But in spite of all, his character in the main was not in sympathy with
                  
                  politics, but with culture. In his history of Hadrian he notes with
                  
                  satisfaction that so few wars were made under this Emperor; for what was wanted
                  
                  was a peaceful history of mankind, a history of society. And never even in the
                  
                  midst of political strife did he lose sight of the Cultur-ideal, of the importance of which, during this very crisis
                  
                  of struggle for national development, Germany was reminded by the first
                  
                  centenary festival of Goethe.
                  
                   Among the writings that appeared in connection with this festival,
                  
                  Gregorovius’s Wilhelm Meister in seinen
                    
                    socialistischen Elementen was one of the most remarkable. “As the final aim
                  
                  of Nature and History”, he observes in this ingenious work, “is to find man, so
                  
                  all genuine poetry is only directed towards the discovery of man. This is the
                  
                  motive of all true tragedy, all comedy, and all epic poetry. Goethe is the
                  
                  Columbus who in his Wilhelm Meister has discovered for us the America of Humanism”. In the Wanderjahre, Goethe as a prophet foresees the future of mankind and
                  
                  indicates its chief features. Echoes of the latest revolutionary storms, the
                  
                  current of socialistic ideas from France, are blended together in this analysis
                  
                  of Goethe’s social philosophy. In the form, and partly also in the constructive
                  
                  dialectics, of Gregorovius’s literary contribution to the festival, the
                  
                  influence of a many years' study of Hegel is unmistakable; but his absorption
                  
                  in Goethe's manner of thought already points to his alienation from the
                  
                  abstract formalism of Hegel, which not long after became an accomplished fact.
                  
                   In 1851 he appeared once more as a poet with the drama, The Death of
                  
                  Tiberius, a work which, if it showed no marked dramatic talent, revealed at
                  
                  least the fine epic and lyric gift of which he was to give frequent proofs in
                  
                  after years. The fact that about the same time he erected literary monuments to
                  
                  two Roman emperors, shows his increasing interest in the Roman world. At this
                  
                  period he also entered with zest into the study of Italian literature : Dante
                  
                  especially he read with enthusiasm. Longings for the home of the artist's
                  
                  ideals and of physical beauty grew in him, the narrower and more oppressive
                  
                  became the circumstances of his life in Konigsberg. Some incentive from outside
                  
                  alone was needed to set him free.
                  
                   One of his Konigsberg friends, Ludwig Borntrager, a young and gifted
                  
                  historic painter, was sent by the doctors to Italy on account of some ailment
                  
                  of the chest. Gregorovius determined to follow. His means for this undertaking
                  
                  being scanty, he trusted to his talents, and in the spring of 1852 left
                  
                  Konigsberg, relying, as he himself said, in his lucky star which pointed the
                  
                  way to the South.
                  
                   The Romische Tagebucher begin
                  
                  at this date, and to them we may turn for an account of his journey, the early
                  
                  years of his sojourn in Italy, his visit to Corsica, his arrival in Rome, and
                  
                  his later experiences and labours in the Eternal City. The Roman Journals speak
                  
                  for themselves, and the author therein reveals himself entirely as he was. It
                  
                  only remains for me to complete them, by adding to my account of his earlier
                  
                  and pre-Roman days a few personal recollections.
                  
                   I too spent the winter of 1852-3 in Italy, in beautiful Nice, which had
                  
                  not then passed into the possession of France. There, in the supplement to the Augsburg Allgemeine Zeitung, I read
                  
                  with ever-increasing interest the spirited descriptions of travel in Corsica,
                  
                  which first made Gregorovius’s name known to wider circles. They wakened in me
                  
                  the ardent desire personally to become acquainted with so distinguished an
                  
                  author and so sympathetic a personality. Who he was, and whether he still
                  
                  remained in Italy, I did not know. When, however, I came to Rome in the spring
                  
                  of 1853, fresh articles in the Allgemeine
                    
                    Zeitung, pictures of Roman social conditions and customs, convinced me that
                  
                  he was in Rome, and inquiries among German compatriots confirmed the welcome
                  
                  fact. I was obliged to inquire his abode from the police, no one having seen
                  
                  him for a long time. I was assured that for months he had lived in retirement,
                  
                  exclusively occupied with his work on Corsica. Some were of opinion that he had
                  
                  left for Naples, and I had almost renounced the hope of finding him, when one
                  
                  day, at the sight of the well-known building on Monte Citorio, I was inspired
                  
                  by a happy thought which was crowned with success by the omniscient Papal
                  
                  police.
                  
                   Gregorovius dwelt at this time in the neighborhood of Monte Pincio, not
                  
                  far from the Piazza Barberini. I found him at home, and as I entered his room
                  
                  and he rose from his writing-table, we recognized at the first glance that we
                  
                  were not entirely unknown to one another. For without being aware who he was, I
                  
                  had met him with Jacob Burckhardt in the Vatican Gallery a few days beforehand,
                  
                  attracted by his looks, had begged for information concerning a marble statue,
                  
                  the drapery of which had aroused the interest of the two men as well as my own.
                  
                  Our meeting was, therefore, in a certain sense a second meeting, and we soon
                  
                  found ourselves in animated conversation. Corsica, Rome, Nice, Italy, Germany,
                  
                  there was no lack of numerous bonds of interest The author of the Corsican Reisebilder entirely fulfilled the
                  
                  conception I had formed of him. A slight, dignified figure of distinguished and
                  
                  at the same time genial bearing, a manly and expressive head, with a thick
                  
                  black beard, high open forehead, and quick, penetrating dark eyes : the
                  
                  character of his features though serious was rapidly illumined by the play of
                  
                  imagination, and his conversation was characterized by a thoughtful flow, a
                  
                  full and gentle voice that betrayed wealth of intellectual gifts and a poetic
                  
                  temperament. A bond of sympathy was formed between us. Before we parted walks
                  
                  were arranged for the succeeding days; he called on me : we frequently met on
                  
                  the Pincio, at the Vatican, in the Café
                    
                    delle Belle Arti, and enjoyed a succession of lovely Roman spring days,
                  
                  which, however, passed only too rapidly away, and in whose course I had, among
                  
                  other opportunities, that of marvelling at my companion's already surprising
                  
                  local knowledge. During the winter Gregorovius had worked hard; the MSS. of his
                  
                  book on Corsica had already been dispatched to Germany, and he was occupied
                  
                  with fresh projects of travel. He proposed to spend the following months in an
                  
                  expedition to Naples and Sicily, and having seen the Easter ceremonies in Rome,
                  
                  would not wait for the festival of SS. Peter and Paul, which I wished to
                  
                  attend. Our wanderings together in Rome consequently soon came to an end; but
                  
                  we parted in the hope of a speedy meeting, for the goal of my next journey was
                  
                  also bella Napoli.
                  
                   We thus met again in the beginning of July 1853, on the shores of Santa
                  
                  Lucia, and spent a delightful month in wandering about the neighborhood of
                  
                  Naples, a month made enjoyable to me chiefly by the society of my gifted German
                  
                  companion. Together we ascended Vesuvius, saw Pompeii and the great historic
                  
                  district from Pozzuoli to Baiae, crossed to Procida and Ischia, made the
                  
                  journey to Salerno and the temples of Paestum, and thence wandered along the
                  
                  gulf to Amalfi and across the mountain tract of St Angelo to Sorrento, when we
                  
                  finally betook ourselves to a quiet villegiatura on the Island of Capri. During
                  
                  the weeks of a Neapolitan summer I had the opportunity of becoming more
                  
                  intimately acquainted with the author of the Corsican Reisebilder and learnt many particulars of his earlier life.
                  
                  Nothing could have been more interesting and stimulating than these excursions
                  
                  in his society. He felt himself happy in beautiful Italy, in the realization of
                  
                  his longings through so many years of Northern fogs happy in its scenery, its
                  
                  art, its antiquity, and among its people. He looked on Italy and the Italians
                  
                  not merely with the eye of the historian and poet, but with a genial desire for
                  
                  social intercourse and enjoyment of the present. He was equally ready for
                  
                  thoughtful, philosophic conversation, and for easy chat and jesting with the
                  
                  naive people of the South. He loved especially to associate with children, and
                  
                  here his imagination was always active. The mere names of places involuntarily
                  
                  awoke historic associations, and in a few words uttered at a spot he frequently
                  
                  drew a characteristic picture of the surrounding landscape which made an
                  
                  indelible impression on his hearers.
                  
                   Italy was to be to him a second home; other plans drew me to the North.
                  
                  At the end of July 1853 I took leave of Gregorovius on the Marina of Capri, and
                  
                  twenty-five years passed before I saw him again. Not that I remained without
                  
                  news of him, for the acquaintance begun in Italy was continued in an animated
                  
                  correspondence and ripened into a lifelong friendship. In the meanwhile
                  
                  appeared the works which have made his name famous : the incomparable book on
                  
                  Corsica, Die Grabmaler der Papste,
                  
                  the classic idyllic epic Euphorion, the five volumes of the Wanderjahre in Italien, the monumental Geschichte Rom's im Mittelalter, the
                  
                  monograph on Lucrezia Borgia. This is
                  
                  not the place to speak of these works at greater length; they have won their
                  
                  rank in literature and would secure the renown of the author, even had he
                  
                  received no other recognition than that of the Romans, who awarded him for the
                  
                  first time to a non-Catholic the citizenship of the Eternal City, and who, by a
                  
                  resolution of their municipality, ordered the translation into Italian of his
                  
                  principal work. The Roman Journals give the most graphic account of the public
                  
                  and private circumstances of the Italian period of my friend’s life, and to
                  
                  them I may therefore refer the reader.
                  
                   One characteristic of the Journals may, however, be mentioned namely,
                  
                  their dramatic pathos and their artistic finish in connection with the rise,
                  
                  the elaboration, and the completion of the History
                    
                    of Rome in the Middle Ages. The idea of this work as the mission of his
                  
                  life filled Gregorovius with enthusiasm; the passionate longing to carry out
                  
                  the task, and the untiring labour which he dedicated to it, were the motives
                  
                  which, above all else, riveted him to Rome for many years and endowed his sojourn
                  
                  in Italy with a noble consecration. The great task accomplished, the Roman
                  
                  period of his life reached its natural end, and the attractions of his German
                  
                  fatherland reasserted themselves. In 1874 he left Rome, and, in common with his
                  
                  brother Colonel Julius and his step-sister Ottilie, founded a new home in
                  
                  Munich. Here, in the city of the fine arts, there was no lack of associations
                  
                  with Italy. The University and the Bavarian Academy of Sciences, of which he
                  
                  was elected a member, afforded him the necessary means for intellectual
                  
                  activity, while the proximity of Italy facilitated intercourse with the
                  
                  beautiful country that had become to him a second fatherland. He, whose twofold
                  
                  relations with Italy and Germany were so firmly fixed and widespreading, could
                  
                  not indeed renounce his connections with Italy. Back and back they drew him
                  
                  across Alps and Apennines to the South. If he spent the summer and autumn in
                  
                  Germany, he generally passed the winter and spring amid the circle of his
                  
                  Italian friends, and usually in Rome. Likewise for many years he drew the
                  
                  material for his literary work in great part from Italy, or the relations
                  
                  between Italy and Germany.
                  
                   Meanwhile between him and me the question of another meeting had often
                  
                  been discussed. Invitations to visit one another in England and Germany had
                  
                  often been exchanged, but hindrances of every kind had prevented the fulfillment
                  
                  of such plans. Gregorovius, the German humanist and the Roman citizen,
                  
                  cherished a to me not wholly explicable prejudice against England, which he
                  
                  never overcame in spite of repeated invitations to cross the strip of sea which
                  
                  divided the "white cliffs of Albion" from the Continent. Not until
                  
                  the summer of 1878, twenty-five years after our farewell in Capri, did I see my
                  
                  friend again : this time in Munich. I found him but little changed during the
                  
                  long interval. He seemed to have grown more serious, more laconic, more
                  
                  reserved; this impression, however, wore away after a few days' intercourse.
                  
                  His aspect had lost nothing with maturer age (he had now completed his
                  
                  fifty-seventh year); he retained his characteristic air of distinction,
                  
                  preserved the elasticity that marks the man of the world; and if he was
                  
                  occasionally overtaken by melancholy, or the sensitiveness of the poetic
                  
                  temperament asserted itself, the freshness with which he surrendered himself to
                  
                  the impressions of Nature and art was almost as keen as ever. It was, as is
                  
                  almost needless to say, interesting at his side to visit the world of art in
                  
                  Munich, hitherto unknown to me; still more interesting during the weeks that
                  
                  followed, in the Bavarian Alps and the Salzkammergut, to revive the memories of
                  
                  the month of travel we had spent together in Italy. I shall only mention a few
                  
                  of the characteristic occurrences of the time. We drove from Munich direct to
                  
                  Traunstein, a little town picturesquely situated on a slope of the Bavarian
                  
                  Alps, where for years Gregorovius had been accustomed to enjoy his summer
                  
                  holiday. As we walked through the streets during a sojourn of several days, I
                  
                  was struck by the frequency with which in passing my friend was greeted not by
                  
                  strangers, but by the inhabitants of the town, by men and women seated at the
                  
                  doors of their houses and by children at play, and by the friendliness with
                  
                  which he returned these greetings. Often he would not rest satisfied with
                  
                  greetings alone, but would stop and address questions both to parents and
                  
                  children, from which it was evident that not only was he acquainted with the
                  
                  circumstances and events of their lives, but sympathised with them. Nothing
                  
                  could have been more pleasantly genial than these meetings between the good
                  
                  citizens of Traunstein and the "Herr Professor," as they called
                  
                  Gregorovius. Similar occurrences of our travels in Italy were recalled to my
                  
                  memory, and I recognized how unchanged the quarter of a century had left the
                  
                  noble basis of my friend's character.
                  
                   Another incident enlivened our journey from Traunstein to Reichenhall.
                  
                  Instead of taking the railway, we had chosen the carriage road through the
                  
                  mountains. A short time before I had reminded him of something in our earlier
                  
                  expeditions that he had forgotten. In moments when the glorious view of the
                  
                  bays and islands of South Italy, and the joie de vivre that the sight of them
                  
                  called forth, had rendered us more especially light-hearted and happy, we had
                  
                  given vent to our feelings by a full-throated shout that we had christened by
                  
                  the name of existenz-schrei. When on
                  
                  this drive from Traunstein to Reichenhall we approached the entrance to the
                  
                  mountains in the full freshness and glory of a late summer morning and engaged
                  
                  in stimulating talk, the old feeling suddenly laid hold of us, and
                  
                  simultaneously we raised our voices in the half-forgotten existenz-schrei. It was an echo of our youthful years, a sound in
                  
                  which present and past united to strike the very chords of the soul.
                  
                   Eight years later I met Gregorovius again, this time in Frankfort, on
                  
                  his way to Switzerland. Still impelled by the old Herodotus-like love of
                  
                  travel, he had meanwhile added to his knowledge of Italy, acquaintance with
                  
                  other countries. He had been in Greece, Egypt, Syria, and Asia Minor, and had
                  
                  published the results of his travels in studies on the history and the scenery
                  
                  of Athens, the charming idyll Corfu, and the monograph Athenais, Geschichte einer Byzantinischen Kaiserin. For the rest, I
                  
                  found him entirely unchanged. Advancing age showed itself in the added greyness
                  
                  of his beard and hair; his intellectual vigour and his activity revealed no
                  
                  diminution. Accustomed as I was to the late morning hours of London, I was
                  
                  greatly struck when, the morning after his arrival from Munich, and
                  
                  notwithstanding the long railway journey of the previous day, he announced that
                  
                  he had gone for a walk through the streets at 5 A.M., therein following an old
                  
                  habit, which led him to study the physiognomy of the place in which he found
                  
                  himself even at hours when the traffic of the day had hardly begun. This walk,
                  
                  however, did not prevent our exploring together the ancient imperial city from
                  
                  morning till evening the following day. We saw the monuments in the squares,
                  
                  the statue to Charles the Great on the bridge over the Main, the Palm-garden,
                  
                  the Romersaal, the Cathedral, the Stadel Institute, and, above all, Goethe's
                  
                  house, which we found decorated with wreaths, for it was the poet's birthday.
                  
                  Naturally, personal reminiscences were indulged in, and only too quickly passed
                  
                  the hours of this delightful day
                  
                   Gregorovius’s most important work during the years that followed was his Geschichte der Stadt Athen im Mittelalter (1889). The last memorial that I received from him was a copy of a festival
                  
                  oration which he delivered in the Bavarian Academy of Sciences on The Great Monarchies, or the World Empires
                    
                    of History, a pamphlet insignificant in compass, but in contents and style
                  
                  a grand achievement, in which as historian and philosopher he erected a noble
                  
                  monument to himself.
                  
                   Scarcely had he finished this work when his brother Julius fell
                  
                  seriously ill. Tenderly nursed by brother and sister, he recovered, contrary to
                  
                  expectation; but his tedious convalescence was scarcely over when the other
                  
                  brother received the summons of Fate. His illness lasted but a few weeks, and
                  
                  on May 1, 1891, soon after the completion of his seventieth year, Ferdinand
                  
                  Gregorovius passed away.
                  
                   Of the impression evoked by his character and personality, his talents
                  
                  and his achievements, the sympathy shown during his illness, and the grief
                  
                  called forth both in Italy and Germany by his death, gave eloquent testimony.
                  
                  The King of Italy and the Prince Regent of Bavaria, the Burgermeister of Munich
                  
                  and the Syndic of Rome, the German and the Italian Press gave public expression
                  
                  to their feeling. Different as may be the opinions concerning him, that he
                  
                  united in a rare degree the spirit of the learned inquirer with the creative
                  
                  power of the artist, that his character was firmly rooted in the noblest
                  
                  humanistic ideals, no one could doubt. To an almost unparalleled degree in the
                  
                  second half of the nineteenth century, Ferdinand Gregorovius realised in
                  
                  Germany the ideal of a Humanist. Nothing ignoble dared approach him. Democratic
                  
                  in his convictions, he was aristocratic in the same sense that Goethe and
                  
                  Schiller were aristocratic. Above all, he valued that liberty and independence
                  
                  which he had acquired by heroic exertions and enduring work. In the
                  
                  consciousness of this he was happy in spite of all else that life may have
                  
                  denied him. And as he remained free from the pedantry and exclusiveness of his
                  
                  craft, as in himself he united the character of the scholar and the man of the
                  
                  world, so his historical studies offered no obstruction to the keenest sympathy
                  
                  with the great movements of the time. In this sense history was to him, as
                  
                  Freeman puts it, “the politics of the past, politics the history of the present”.
                  
                   It is my ardent hope that the publication of Gregorovius’s Roman Journals may contribute to the
                  
                  more complete understanding of his character among his contemporaries. Where it
                  
                  has seemed necessary I have added short notes explanatory of people and events.
                  
                  The carefully-compiled index will, I hope, serve the reader as a satisfactory
                  
                  key to the rich treasury of the many years' chronicle of a noble,
                  
                  highly-cultured intellect.
                  
                   
                     
                   FRIEDRICH ALTHAUS.
                  
                   
                     
                   LONDON, May 1892
                  
                 |