Re Emma H and Bryant's possible misogynism, I read it as an historian taking a personal view based on his own taste and morals. Not altogether the right objective view, but damning by ignoring unpleasantries is the writer's preorogative.
We do, of course, look at the work of earlier historians through a prism of hindsight. Misogynism, like racism, is reprehensible to us, perhaps even incomprehensible, but I don't think we should burn earlier writers' books for such un-PC behaviour, not even if it had then the obvious goal of division, such as the anti-Jewish propaganda of the mid-1930s in Germany (and Britain, France, USA ...).
We cannot revise the facts of history, and should not revise earlier historians. Good historians like Bryant need to be read objectively.
In their lifetimes Emma and Nelson suffered a significant degree of ostracism from a somewhat hypocritical society, notably the Court which was itself rife with adulterous intrique but decided to "cut" Nelson at levees on his return from Naples.
He soon became again their darling (especially of course, at the end of the Peace of Amiens when invasion seemed all too possible and he appeared to be the only hope), but others of a more fastidious nature still managed quite elegant slights, such as the then Duke of Marlborough at Blenheim in 1802. His true friends could put up with Emma even if disapproving of his conduct. See Colin White's very good recent articles on Frances Nesbit-Nelson for an exposiiton - indeed, a realisation - of that approach.
Bryant seems to have been of the old school - I join ranks with him - who thought / think that N's treatment of his wife was disgraceful, and who consider Emma to be, as my grandmama would say, "no better than she ought to be". Others of course, have recently adopted Emma as some kind of laudable standard-bearer, which I don't quite get, but I too am of the opinion that the country treated her (and by extension, Horatia) very shabbily after N's death.
Bryant was writing for a wide audience entirely sheltered from modern celeb multi-media culture. His readership was expected to include children of school age (sigh, "educational experts" do not expect these days that young people can read and enjoy serious history - the fault, Horatio, lies with themselves, as Shakespeare might very well have put it), so Bryant would have been circumspect in his treatment of N's sexual peccadiloes. Incidentally, N wrote a very steamy letter to Frances N on his departure for the Mediterranean in 1797 which almost never gets a mention even these days.
As for Bryant's referencing, I had forgotten that several of his books in fact set a new standard in that respect. My most recent reading of his (for current research and therefore more sensitive to any deficiencies in that area) has been his multi-volume Pepys, in several disparate editions including 1 first edition (oh! calloo calay!), 1 post-war utility reprint, and 1 1980s paperback.
The first edition (Years of Peril), is sparsely footnoted but has a wonderful Bibliographical Notes (for which read "end-notes" or "references in the text") section; the 1950s thin reprint (The Saviour of the Navy, which I also have in other editions somewhere in my library (must weed out the wood-pulp to see the mighty oaks), has almost no footnotes and no end references, like most of the books I was brought up with; but the p-back The Man in the Making - reprinted from Bryant's 1967 revised edition - has again the detailed bibliographical notes.
So it seems I was deprived during my early history education (1950s and early 1960s) of Bryant's then newish-fangled source citations, as a direct result of Hitler's machinations in central Europe in the 1930s. Ah, the connections of history!
Moderator, forgive me if this appears to be a rant against modern social mores - I'm just a grumpy old man, as my daughters often remind me!
Justin
girding his loins to read and transcribe 21 unpublished letters from Edward Gayner to Nelson at the BL in the morning, thanks to Colin White's scholarly generosity
_________________ [color=#0000FF][b]Justin Reay FSA FRHistS Naval and Maritime Art Historian[/b][/color]
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