Prefaces and prologues to famous books
Durand_]
P.F. COLLIER & SON
1909 BY LITTLE BROWN & COMPANY
1910 BY P.F. COLLIER & SON
_No part of a book is so intimate as the Preface. Here, after the long labor of the work is over, the author descends from his platform, and speaks with his reader as man to man, disclosing his hopes and fears, seeking sympathy for his difficulties, offering defence or defiance, according to his temper, against the criticisms which he anticipates. It thus happens that a personality which has been veiled by a formal method throughout many chapters, is suddenly seen face to face in the Preface; and this alone, if there were no other reason, would justify a volume of Prefaces.
But there are other reasons why a Preface may be presented apart from its parent work, and may, indeed, be expected sometimes to survive it. The Prologues and Epilogues of Caxton were chiefly prefixed to translations which have long been superseded; but the comments of this frank and enthusiastic pioneer of the art of printing in England not only tell us of his personal tastes, but are in a high degree illuminative of the literary habits and standards of western Europe in the fifteenth century. Again, modern research has long ago put Raleigh's History of the World out of date; but his eloquent Preface still gives us a rare picture of the attitude of an intelligent Elizabethan, of the generation which colonised America, toward the past, the present, and the future worlds. Bacon's Great Restoration is no longer a guide to scientific method; but his prefatory statements as to his objects and hopes still offer a lofty inspiration.
And so with the documents here drawn from the folios of Copernicus and Calvin, with the criticism of Dryden and Wordsworth and Hugo, with Dr. Johnson's Preface to his great Dictionary, with the astounding manifesto of a new poetry from Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass —each of them has a value and significance independent now of the work which it originally introduced, and each of them presents to us a man._
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PREFACES AND PROLOGUES TO FAMOUS BOOKS
CONTENTS
PREFACES AND EPILOGUES
THE RECUYELL OF THE HISTORIES OF TROY
EPILOGUE TO BOOK II
EPILOGUE TO BOOK III
DICTES AND SAYINGS OF THE PHILOSOPHERS
GOLDEN LEGEND.
CATON (1483)
AESOP. (1483)
CHAUCER'S CANTERBURY TALES
MALORY'S KING ARTHUR. (1485)
ENEYDOS (1490)
DEDICATION OF THE INSTITUTES OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION
GENERAL SYLLABUS
DEDICATION OF THE REVOLUTIONS OF THE HEAVENLY BODIES
PREFACE TO THE HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION IN SCOTLAND
PREFATORY LETTER TO SIR WALTER RALEIGH ON THE FAERIE QUEENE
PREFACE TO THE HISTORY OF THE WORLD
PROOEMIUM, EPISTLE DEDICATORY, PREFACE, AND PLAN OF THE INSTAURATIO MAGNA, ETC.
EPISTLE DEDICATORY
PREFACE
PREFACE
PREFACE TO THE FIRST FOLIO EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS (1623)[A]
PREFACE TO THE PHILOSOPHIAE NATURALIS PRINCIPIA MATHEMATICA
PREFACE TO FABLES,
PREFACE TO JOSEPH ANDREWS
PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH DICTIONARY
TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE THE EARL OF CHESTERFIELD
PREFACE TO SHAKESPEARE
INTRODUCTION TO THE PROPYLÄEN [A]
PREFACES TO VARIOUS VOLUMES OF POEMS
PREFACE TO LYRICAL BALLADS
APPENDIX TO LYRICAL BALLADS
PREFACE TO POEMS
ESSAY SUPPLEMENTARY TO PREFACE
PREFACE TO CROMWELL
PREFACE TO LEAVES OF GRASS
INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF ENGLISH LITERATURE
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII