CONTENTS
- [INTRODUCTION.]
- [Book i.]OSWALD
- [Book ii.]CORINNE AT THE CAPITOL.
- [Book iii.]CORINNE.
- [Book iv.]ROME.
- [Book v.]THE TOMBS, THE CHURCHES, AND THE PALACES.
- [Book vi.]THE MANNERS AND CHARACTER OF THE ITALIANS.
- [Book vii.]ITALIAN LITERATURE.
- [Book viii.]THE STATUES AND THE PICTURES.
- [Book ix.]THE POPULAR FESTIVAL, AND MUSIC.
- [Book x.]HOLY WEEK.
- [Book xi.]NAPLES AND THE HERMITAGE OF ST SALVADOR.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
- [The crowd break their ranks as the horses pass]
- [Corinne at the Capitol]
- [Corinne showing Oswald her pictures]
INTRODUCTION.
In Lady Blennerhassett's enthusiastic and encyclopædic book on Madame de Stael she quotes approvingly Sainte-Beuve's phrase that "with Corinne Madame de Stael ascended the Capitol." I forget in which of his many dealings with an author who, as he remarks in the "Coppet-and-Weimar" causeries, was "an idol of his youth and one that he never renounced," this fancy occurs. It must probably have been in one of his early essays; for in his later and better, Sainte-Beuve was not wont to give way to the little flashes and crackles of conceit and epigram which many Frenchmen and some Englishmen think to be criticism. There was, however, some excuse for this. In the first place (as one of Charles Lamb's literal friends would have pointed out), Madame de Stael, like her heroine, did actually "ascend the Capitol," and received attentions there from an Academy. In the second, there can be no doubt that Corinne in a manner fixed and settled the high literary reputation which she had already attained. Even by her severest critics, and even now when whatever slight recrudescence of biographical interest may have taken place in her, her works are little read, Corinne is ranked next to De l'Allemagne as her greatest production; while as a work of form, not of matter, as literature of power, not of knowledge, it has at last a chance of enduring when its companion is but a historical document—the record of a moment that has long passed away.