“Dicam dumtaxat quod est historicon”: Varro and/on the past
Varro’s approach to his subjects is usually systematic and synchronic, but there are frequent diachronic
digressions and observations on time and the past, often divided into three stages (remote past, near past, and
present). I discuss Rust. 2.1, with a progressive concept of three successive stages in human history from
Dicaearchus, and a fragment from Censorinus, where Varro distinguishes tria discrimina temporum. A significant
affinity emerges between etymological research and the study of origins: both involve the study of antiquitas or the
origo, and both use the genealogical-reconstructive method. The same image of gradus descendere indicates the
sequence of logical and chronological steps in describing human history (Rust. 2.1.3–5) and etymological research
(Ling. 5.7–9). Varro is fully aware of the difficulties in reconstructing the ancient past and the origins of language,
because uncertainty is a characteristic of the origo of human history and of words.