Heart and Science
y of buyers and borrowers of novels; and you judge of works of fiction by certain inbred prefer
t tells no story, or that blunders perpetually in trying to tell a story-a novel so entirely devoid of all sense of the dramatic side of human life, that not even a theatrical thief can find
k; and I have never succeeded in keeping an equal balance. In the present story you will find the s
f work-that I may have little time to lose. Without waiting for future opportunities, I have kept your
ers with a vigour and breadth of treatment, derived from the nearest and truest view that I could get of the one model, Nature. Whether I shall at once succeed in adding to the circle of your friends in the world of fiction-or whether you will hur
came to think of writing this book. The question may be readily answered in better words than mine. My book has
ON.-"It was always
y have a good thing, t
nry IV.,
ON-"I am no great be
be derived from the adv
ure tends, when pushed
t." (Letter to
The education of the
p-Humility." (Lecture
al Inst
the book, let me conclude by telling
are purposely left in ignorance of the hideous secrets of Vivisection. The outside of the laboratory is a necessary object in my landscape-but I never once open the door and invite you to look in. I trace, in one of my characters, the result of the habitual practice of cruelty (no matter under what pretence) in fatally deteriorating the nature
nt withdraws, and lea
Werewolf
Romance
Billionaires
Werewolf
Romance
Werewolf