The Secret History

by

Donna Tartt

Julian Morrow Character Analysis

Julian Morrow is the Greek professor at Hampden college. To take classes with Julian, one must ask him personally, and he is highly selective. In addition, Julian insists upon acting as his students’ advisor and that the vast majority of the classes they take be with him. Much about Julian’s past is shrouded in mystery and legend, although he supposedly knows many of the most important literary figures of the 20th century, including T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound. Julian is an unusual teacher in many ways, but also an effective one. His students all end up highly competent in Greek, with the notable exception of Bunny. However, Julian is also manipulative, and it becomes clear that he cares more about himself than his students. Toward the end of the novel, Julian finds a letter from Bunny, which talks about the bacchanal and Bunny’s fear that Henry wants to murder him. Although at first Julian dismisses it as a fake, he eventually learns the truth. Rather than take any sort of moral stand, Julian flees the campus, never to be seen there again. This is heartbreaking to his students, especially Henry, who view him as a father figure.

Julian Morrow Quotes in The Secret History

The The Secret History quotes below are all either spoken by Julian Morrow or refer to Julian Morrow . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Human Capacity for Violence Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

The Greeks, you know, really weren’t very different from us. They were a very formal people, extraordinarily civilized, rather repressed. And yet they were frequently swept away en masse by the wildest enthusiasm—dancing, frenzies, slaughter, visions—which for us, I suppose would seem clinical madness, irreversible. Yet the Greeks—some of them, anyway—could go in and out of it as they pleased [. . .] The revelers were apparently hurled back into a non-rational, pre-intellectual state, where the personality was replaced by something completely different – and by ‘different’ I mean something to all appearances not mortal. Inhuman.

Related Characters: Julian Morrow (speaker), Richard Papen
Page Number: 40
Explanation and Analysis:

Beauty is terror. Whatever we call beautiful, we quiver before it. And what could be more terrifying and beautiful, to souls like the Greeks or our own, than to lose control completely? To throw off the chains of being for an instant, to shatter the accident of our mortal selves?

Related Characters: Julian Morrow (speaker), Richard Papen , Bunny (Edmund Corcoran)
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2  Quotes

Then Henry spoke. His words were low but deliberate and distinct. “Should I do what is necessary?”

To my surprise, Julian took both Henry’s hands in his own. “You should only, ever, do what is necessary,” he said.

Related Characters: Henry Winter (speaker), Julian Morrow (speaker), Richard Papen
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:

There is a recurrent scene from those dinners that surfaces again and again, like an obsessive undercurrent in a dream. Julian, at the head of the long table, rises to his feet and lifts his wineglass. “Live forever,” he says.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Julian Morrow (speaker)
Page Number: 91
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

And the horrible thing was, somehow, that I did know. “You killed somebody,” I said, “didn’t you?”

“Good for you,” he said. “You’re just as smart as I thought you were. I knew you’d figure it out, sooner or later, that’s what I’ve told the others all along.”

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Henry Winter (speaker), Charles Macauley , Camilla Macauley , Francis Abernathy , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 163
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Henry took a sip of his tea. “How,” he said, “can I possibly make the Dean of Studies understand that there is a divinity in our midst?”

Related Characters: Henry Winter (speaker), Richard Papen , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 317
Explanation and Analysis:

He was looking over the hills, at all that grand cinematic expanse of men and wilderness and snow that lay beneath us; and though his voice was anxious there was a strange dreamy look on his face. The business had upset him, that I knew, but I also knew that there was something about the operatic sweep of the search which could not fail to appeal to him and that he was pleased, however obscurely, with the aesthetics of the thing.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Bunny (Edmund Corcoran) , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 341
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Do you know how hard that was? Do you think Henry would lower himself to do something like that? No. It was all right, of course, for me to do it but he couldn’t be bothered. Those people had never seen anything like Henry in their lives. I’ll tell you the sort of thing he worried about. Like if he was carrying around the right book, if Homer would make a better impression than Thomas Aquinas.

Related Characters: Charles Macauley (speaker), Richard Papen , Henry Winter , Camilla Macauley , Julian Morrow
Explanation and Analysis:

I had always thought Henry’s coldness essential, to the marrow, and Julian’s only a veneer for what was, at bottom, a warm, kind-hearted nature. But the twinkle in Julian’s eye as I looked at him now, was mechanical and dead. It was as if the charming theatrical curtain had dropped away and I saw him for the first time as he really was: not the benign old sage, the indulgent and protective good-parent of my dreams, but ambiguous, a moral neutral, whose beguiling trappings concealed a being watchful, capricious, and heartless.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Henry Winter , Bunny (Edmund Corcoran) , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 508
Explanation and Analysis:

It has always been hard for me to talk about Julian without romanticizing him. In many ways, I loved him the most of all; and it is with him that I am most tempted to embroider, to flatter, to basically reinvent. I think that is because Julian himself was constantly in the process of reinventing the people and events around him, conferring kindness, or wisdom, or bravery, or charm, on actions which contained nothing of the sort. It was one of the reasons I loved him: for that flattering light in which he saw me, for the person I was when I was with him, for what it was he allowed me to be.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Julian Morrow
Page Number: 510
Explanation and Analysis:
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Julian Morrow Quotes in The Secret History

The The Secret History quotes below are all either spoken by Julian Morrow or refer to Julian Morrow . For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Human Capacity for Violence Theme Icon
).
Chapter 1 Quotes

The Greeks, you know, really weren’t very different from us. They were a very formal people, extraordinarily civilized, rather repressed. And yet they were frequently swept away en masse by the wildest enthusiasm—dancing, frenzies, slaughter, visions—which for us, I suppose would seem clinical madness, irreversible. Yet the Greeks—some of them, anyway—could go in and out of it as they pleased [. . .] The revelers were apparently hurled back into a non-rational, pre-intellectual state, where the personality was replaced by something completely different – and by ‘different’ I mean something to all appearances not mortal. Inhuman.

Related Characters: Julian Morrow (speaker), Richard Papen
Page Number: 40
Explanation and Analysis:

Beauty is terror. Whatever we call beautiful, we quiver before it. And what could be more terrifying and beautiful, to souls like the Greeks or our own, than to lose control completely? To throw off the chains of being for an instant, to shatter the accident of our mortal selves?

Related Characters: Julian Morrow (speaker), Richard Papen , Bunny (Edmund Corcoran)
Page Number: 42
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2  Quotes

Then Henry spoke. His words were low but deliberate and distinct. “Should I do what is necessary?”

To my surprise, Julian took both Henry’s hands in his own. “You should only, ever, do what is necessary,” he said.

Related Characters: Henry Winter (speaker), Julian Morrow (speaker), Richard Papen
Page Number: 71
Explanation and Analysis:

There is a recurrent scene from those dinners that surfaces again and again, like an obsessive undercurrent in a dream. Julian, at the head of the long table, rises to his feet and lifts his wineglass. “Live forever,” he says.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Julian Morrow (speaker)
Page Number: 91
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

And the horrible thing was, somehow, that I did know. “You killed somebody,” I said, “didn’t you?”

“Good for you,” he said. “You’re just as smart as I thought you were. I knew you’d figure it out, sooner or later, that’s what I’ve told the others all along.”

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Henry Winter (speaker), Charles Macauley , Camilla Macauley , Francis Abernathy , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 163
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

Henry took a sip of his tea. “How,” he said, “can I possibly make the Dean of Studies understand that there is a divinity in our midst?”

Related Characters: Henry Winter (speaker), Richard Papen , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 317
Explanation and Analysis:

He was looking over the hills, at all that grand cinematic expanse of men and wilderness and snow that lay beneath us; and though his voice was anxious there was a strange dreamy look on his face. The business had upset him, that I knew, but I also knew that there was something about the operatic sweep of the search which could not fail to appeal to him and that he was pleased, however obscurely, with the aesthetics of the thing.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Bunny (Edmund Corcoran) , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 341
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Do you know how hard that was? Do you think Henry would lower himself to do something like that? No. It was all right, of course, for me to do it but he couldn’t be bothered. Those people had never seen anything like Henry in their lives. I’ll tell you the sort of thing he worried about. Like if he was carrying around the right book, if Homer would make a better impression than Thomas Aquinas.

Related Characters: Charles Macauley (speaker), Richard Papen , Henry Winter , Camilla Macauley , Julian Morrow
Explanation and Analysis:

I had always thought Henry’s coldness essential, to the marrow, and Julian’s only a veneer for what was, at bottom, a warm, kind-hearted nature. But the twinkle in Julian’s eye as I looked at him now, was mechanical and dead. It was as if the charming theatrical curtain had dropped away and I saw him for the first time as he really was: not the benign old sage, the indulgent and protective good-parent of my dreams, but ambiguous, a moral neutral, whose beguiling trappings concealed a being watchful, capricious, and heartless.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Henry Winter , Bunny (Edmund Corcoran) , Julian Morrow
Page Number: 508
Explanation and Analysis:

It has always been hard for me to talk about Julian without romanticizing him. In many ways, I loved him the most of all; and it is with him that I am most tempted to embroider, to flatter, to basically reinvent. I think that is because Julian himself was constantly in the process of reinventing the people and events around him, conferring kindness, or wisdom, or bravery, or charm, on actions which contained nothing of the sort. It was one of the reasons I loved him: for that flattering light in which he saw me, for the person I was when I was with him, for what it was he allowed me to be.

Related Characters: Richard Papen (speaker), Julian Morrow
Page Number: 510
Explanation and Analysis: