Since the 1960s, a time when Freud and Freudianism were still at their refulgent height, Paul Roazen has dedicated himself to the historical study of Freud and psychoanalysis. In the ensuing years, with the tide of judgment about Freud shifting in a more conflicted direction, he has steadfastly continued this endeavor. Roazen’s lodestar has been his conviction about the seminal importance of Freud in the intellectual, literary, and moral (although more problematically so in the psychotherapeutic) life of the past 100 years. Equally, Roazen has been determined to maintain a fair and objective judgment of psychoanalysis and to distinguish himself from what he regards as the flawed hagiographic accounts of Freud that formerly were dominant and the present tendency toward debunking the Master. I believe it can be said that Roazen has creditably held fast and contributed to the position that Freud’s importance warrants the best that scholarship can offer.