Ohio History Journal

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JOURNAL OF CYRUS P

JOURNAL OF CYRUS P. BRADLEY.

 

 

INTRODUCTORY NOTE BY GEORGE H. TWISS.

A history, in the common acceptation of the term, means a

relation of facts and important dates, a chronological record of

battles, sieges, revolutions, coronations and rebellions, while no

account is generally looked for of the moral and mental condition

of the people, whose action form the subject of the work, and

an account would doubtless, if introduced, be thought irrelevant,

out of place. This is not as it should be. The state of the arts and

sciences, the character of its penal code, the habits and manners of

the people, their religion, their advancements in morals and the

gradual progress of improvement form the bone and sinew of all

history- they are the talisman by which may be deduced and

explained and accounted for, the secondary, resulting effects as

displayed in the actions of men individually, and of nations, col-

lectively. Bradley's Journal, Vol. 9, Sept. 16, 1835.

I write a good many letters, and I compose them as I do my

Journal, with the greatest rapidity - a perfect absence of thought

and care for elegance of expression or beauty of style. My first

draft, however imperfect, always goes. By writing considerably

for the newspapers, my journal and other light stuff, I have at-

tained a sort of free and easy style of writing, which, when I

write to a friend, an intimate, an equal, tends to make an interest-

ing, an appropriate letter, but my acquirements, so far as regards

anything of the complimentary, respectful style, which is expected

from youth to age, or from one who asks a favor, are exceedingly

limited. I have always been accustomed to let my feelings sway

my words and actions - hence I am in danger of falling into a

blunt, chatty style of writing, which may appear rude, or even

offend those who are punctilious in regard to such matters. In

seeking to avoid this Scylla of letter writers, there is much risk

of foundering on the Charybdis of affection and absurd stiffness

and humility. - This is by far the worse extreme. I can much

better endure resentment than ridicule.

Bradley's Journal, Sept. 15, 1835.

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