Page:The ethics of Aristotle.djvu/320

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L ¢¢¢`¢` and the New World at large, which we hope will preserve " Perpetual Peace " under the auspices of the League of N That is only one small item, however, in a library list is running on to the final centuries of its Thousand. The slice of this huge provision is, as a matter of course, given to tyrannous demands of fiction. But in carrying out the publishers and editors contrived to keep in mind that like men and women, have their elective afhnities. The volume, for instance, will be found to have its companion both in the same section and just as significantly in sections. With that idea too, novels like Walter Scott’s and Fortunes of Nigel, Lytton’s Harold, and Dickens’s Tale T zoo Cities, have been used as pioneers of history and treated a sort of holiday history books. The poets next, and we may tum to the finest critic of Victorian times, Matthew Arnold, as their showman, and nndjitj in his essay on Maurice de Guerin a clue to the " magical power;) of poetry." y i`§¥Y William Hazlitt’s " Table Talk " may help again to show thei relationship of one author to another, which is another of the Friendship of Books. His incomparable essay, “ Going a ]ourney," forms a capital prelude to Co1eridge’s "Bio—§Ci iii`. graphia Literaria"; and so throughout the long labyrinth the Library shelves, one can follow the magic clue in prose or isiil 5 verse that leads to the hidden treasury. In that way everyyfg reader becomes his own critic and Doctor of Letters. i ifgf ~ » . » n f i “ — i»i K 1- V K p rk K _ _ __ V {yi; `i_`, li i . r  » in .‘.t.. ljir X i¥.· .1.; liis 1 »·»»i .“.— r riisi i ` W Y W V if W ii T .‘.i, G °`}’; srsi ; “i. ? ` trti ` i`‘tr sigsti “? lY{YY[li¥.€ i`si G p sp ` l p if M are if j ii, srpp yllp pp p , y pp i r y r pppp _ page _,._ rppp p_p,,,»,p iT p.p_p