“Moore found “in dueling annals ‘astonishing proofs of the force and prevalence of wayward fashion over sound judgment and reason; of the despotic tyranny and usurpation of the flitting phantom ‘honour’”. Throughout history societies have lived within the walls and under the roof of ideas and conventions slowly drying up into things they could only half or fitfully believe in, but could not break away from, for fear of a disruption of the social fabric. Men are always dying, a Great War essayist wrote, ‘for other people’s opinions, prejudices they have inherited from someone else, ideas they have borrow second-hand. Modern man, more than his ancestors, has an overblown false consciousness, a brain stuffed not mainly with lessons from life, but with the thinking of whole generations and centuries, heavy enough to weigh down the feeble carrier; and today ghostly voices find sponsors to supply them with megaphones.
For the same shabby reasons men have always been killing, as well as being killed.” (Kiernan 328-329)
This book is extremely well-written in a scholarly sense, though perhaps too scholarly and demanding of a text for most laymen with only a passing interest in the subject to enjoy. If you have a background in literature, you will be delighted for the treasures found therein, for, in truth, it has perhaps 20 times more material on dueling gleaned from works of literature than it does from actual historical accounts, though the level of familiarity that Kiernan shows from his selective and erudite use of literary sources is nothing less than completely masterful. Not light reading, but a very important source for study on this topic, martial arts, culture, and the evolution of combat sports in the West in general—for bare knuckle boxing and gloved boxing arose out of dueling culture. I still wish for a more comprehensive study of dueling throughout European and world history—even though this study purports to be a study of dueling in Europe (and it does cover much of European history), the focus is largely on England and Scotland, though France, Germany, Spain, Russia, and Italy are also given substantial coverage. It would be a very important scholarly work indeed that covered dueling throughout the world throughout history.
One of the most interesting qualities of the text is its interrogation of the worth of dueling itself as it was represented and dealt with throughout the ages, and the relationship of this questioning to ideas and ideals of class, nobility, gentility, and violence itself.