Studies in Literature and History

E-text prepared by Stacy Brown, Thierry Alberto, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net)

BY THE LATE
P.C., G.C.I.E., K.C.B., D.C.L., LL.D.
LONDON JOHN MURRAY, ALBEMARLE STREET, W. 1915

In the Second Series of his Asiatic Studies the late Sir Alfred Lyall republished a number of articles that he had contributed to various Reviews up to the year 1894. After that date he wrote frequently, especially for the Edinburgh Review , and he left amongst his papers a note naming a number of articles from which he considered that a selection might be made for publication.
The present volume contains, with two exceptions, the articles so mentioned, together with one that was not included by the author.
While Indian official subjects have been excluded, readers of the earlier 'Studies' will recognise that many of the writings in this volume follow out lines of thought suggested in the earlier works, or apply in a larger sphere the results of observations made when the author was studying Indian myths and Indian religions in Berar, or the 'rare and antique stratification of society' in Rajputana. The two addresses on religion placed at the end of the volume form the most obvious example, but there is a close connection between a group of the other articles and the views developed in Asiatic Studies .
In the last edition of that work a chapter on 'History and Fable' was inserted because of its bearing on the author's general views 'regarding the elementary commixture of fable and fact in ages that may be called prehistoric.' In this chapter the author made a rapid survey of the 'kinship between history and fable,' tracing it through the times of myth and romance to the period of the historic novel. 'At their birth,' he says, 'history and fable were twin sisters;' and again, 'There is always a certain quantity of fable in history, and there is always an element of history in one particular sort of fable.' The reviews of English and Anglo-Indian fiction, and of 'Heroic Poetry' in the present work, give opportunities of further illustrations from fiction of his views: which reappear from another standpoint in the 'Remarks on the Reading of History'—a short address, which it has been thought worth while to reprint, though it was not specially indicated by the author for publication.

Sir Alfred C. Lyall
О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2008-06-30

Темы

Religion; History; Literature; English literature; Utilitarianism

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