Erasmus' services to a new way of learning took various forms. He wrote school-books, bringing out his view that boys were kept too long over grammar, and ought to begin reading some good author as soon as possible. His own "Colloquies" were meant partly as models of colloquial Latin; the book was long a standard one in education. These lively dialogues are prose idylls with an ethical purpose,—the dramatic expression of the writer's views on the life of the day. Thus the dialogue between the Learned Lady and the Abbot depicts monastic illiteracy; that between the Soldier and the Carthusian brings out the seamy side of the military calling. Lucian has influenced the form; but the dramatic skill which blends earnestness with humour is the author's own; there are touches here and there which might fairly be called Shakspearian. This is part one of two.
The Colloquies, Volume 1
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The Praise of Folly : Philosophical Essay on Superstitions
Desiderius Erasmus
book
Against War
Desiderius Erasmus, Sheba Blake
book
In Praise of Folly
Desiderius Erasmus
book
The Praise of Folly
Desiderius Erasmus
audiobookbook
Manual of a Christian Knight
Desiderius Erasmus
book
The Colloquies, Volume 2
Desiderius Erasmus
book
The Complaint of Peace
Desiderius Erasmus
book
Delphi Collected Works of Desiderius Erasmus (Illustrated)
Desiderius Erasmus
book
The Praise of Folly/Against War
Desiderius Erasmus
audiobook
In Praise of Folly
Desiderius Erasmus
book
