In the following pages it will be observed that, in order not to distract the reader, I have refrained from adding large numbers of notes, references, and discussions, such as are customary in works of this kind. I am aware that by telling a straightforward story in this manner I lay myself open to the suspicions of my fellow-workers, for there is always some tendency to take not absolutely seriously a book which neither prints chapter and verse for its every statement, nor often interrupts the text with erudite arguments. In the case of the subject which is here treated, however, it has seemed to me unnecessary to encumber the pages in this manner, since the sources of my information are all so well known; and I have thus been able to present the book to the reader in a style consonant with a principle of archæological and historical study to which I have always endeavoured to adhere—namely, the avoidance of as many of those attestations of learning as may be discarded without real loss. A friend of mine, an eminent scholar, in discussing with me the scheme of this volume, earnestly exhorted me on the present occasion not to abide by this principle. Remarkingxiv that the trouble with my interpretation of history was that I attempted to make the characters live, he urged me at least to justify the manner of their resuscitation in the eyes of the doctors of science by cramming my pages with extracts from my working notes, relevant or otherwise, and by smattering my text with Latin and Greek quotations. I trust, however, that he was speaking in behalf of a very small company, for the sooner this kind of jargon of scholarship is swept into the world's dust-bin, the better will it be for public education. To my mind a knowledge of the past is so necessary to a happy mental poise that it seems absolutely essential for historical studies to be placed before the general reader in a manner sympathetic to him. "History," said Emerson, "no longer shall be a dull book.
The Pupil
Henry James
bookThe Headmaster's Wife
Thomas Christopher Greene
bookThe Librarian
Mikhail Elizarov
bookThe Governess and Other Stories
Stefan Zweig
bookThe Electric Hotel
Dominic Smith
bookAunt Jane's Nieces and Uncle John : An Engaging Tale of Family Struggles, Loyalty, and Adventure in Early 20th-Century America
L. Frank Baum
bookHannah, a Witch
Uri Rogoza
bookUtpressaren i Rasteburg
Sture Appelberg
bookDen lilla domaren
Anonym
bookUncle Sam's Emancipation; Earthly Care, A Heavenly Discipline; and Other Sketches
Harriet Beecher Stowe
bookA Damsel in Distress
P.G. Wodehouse, Sheba Blake
bookPremium Short Stories Collection - Blackmailing, Crank, Spook & Classic Tales
E F Benson
book