Seeing the past with the mind's eye: The consecration of the romantic historian

Abstract
In the case of William Hickling Prescott and Augustin Thierry, both blind, a second image was grafted onto the image of martyrdom: that of an "inner eye" allowing the historian to see what could not be seen--the past. Thus the Romantic historian was a magician, like his fellow poet. By giving the past he had perceived with his "inner eye" a semblance of life, he created illusions.