Thomas Hill Green
An Estimate of The Value and Influence of
Works of Fiction In Modern Times
Edited With Introduction and Notes
By
Fred Newton Scott
Professor of Rhetoric in the University of Michigan
George Wahr
Ann Arbor
Michigan
1911
COPYRIGHT
Fred Newton Scott
1911
THE ANN ARBOR PRESS
ANN ARBOR, MICH.
PREFACE
For a good many years I have used this essay of Green's with an advanced class in the theory of prose fiction. It has worked well. It always arouses discussion, and in doing so it has the great virtue that it imperiously leads the argument away from superficialities and centers it upon fundamentals. Its service as a stimulus to high thinking cannot easily be overestimated. For any student, and especially for one who has known only the unidea'd criticism of fiction so popular today, it is a fine thing to come in contact with a high-minded, sturdy, and uncompromising thinker such as Green is. As Green says of the hearer of tragedy, "He bears about him, for a time at least, among the rank vapors of the earth, something of the freshness and fragrance of the higher air." I trust that this reprint, by making the essay more easily accessible than it has been heretofore, will help to raise the grade of student thought and taste and criticism.
F. N. S.
University of Michigan
December 1, 1910.