The Pleasures of Life
room my silen
every season,
and S
murmur to me,
f the skies a
and
OC
on for this is, I think, that people are over
r. Now on the contrary, it may be s
ngs, and a sma
dew upon a th
thousands, perhap
ly lest we should even now fall into the error of the Greeks, and suppose that language and definitions can be instruments of investigation as well as of thought, but lest, as too often happens, we should
It is wonderful how much innocent happiness we thoughtlessly throw away. An Eastern proverb says th
r fear they should not understand them; but there are few who need complain
years ago consulting Mr. Darwin as to the selection of a course of study. He asked me what intereste
the brain is often exhausted, and of their leisure time much must be devoted to air and exercise. The laborer and mechanic, on the contrary, besides working often for much shorter hours, have in their work-time taken sufficient bodily exercise, and could therefore give any l
t he often wonders at what they lose. We suffer much, no doubt, fr
s and the world frown upon me, it would be a taste for reading. I speak of it of course only as a worldly advantage, and not in the slightest degree as superseding or derogating from the higher office and surer and stronger panoply of religious princip
hey will take any book they chance to find in a room at a friend's house; they will buy a novel at a railway-stall if it has an attractive title; indeed, I believe in some cases even the binding affects their choice. The selection is, no doubt, far from easy. I have often wished some one would
ctly to the pleasure of reading, and have ventured to include some which, though less frequently mentioned, are especial favorites of my own.
ny of them-Tennyson, Ruskin, and others-I have myself derived the keenest enjoyment; and I hav
ing for criticism; indeed one object which I have had in view is to stimulate
s far as I have seen, have been most frequently recommended, than as sugges
ation in four things-old wood to burn, old wine to drink, old friends to trust, and old books to read." Still, this can not be accepted without important qualifications. The most recent books of history and science contain or ought to contain, the most accurate
stant times and far-away regions are well worth reading on that very account, even if to us they seem scarcely to deserve their reputation. It is true that to many, such works are accessible only in
ng to most English readers, but the effect it has produced on the most numerous race of men constitutes in itself a peculiar interest. The Ethics of Aristotle, perhaps, appear to some disadvantage from the very fact that they have so profoundly influenced our views of morality. The Koran, like the Analects of
usey selected for the commencement of the Library of the Fathers, and which, as he observes, has "been translated again and again into almost every European language, and in all loved;" though Luther was of opinion that St. Augustine "wrote nothing to the purpose concerning faith." But then Luther was no great admirer of the Father. St. Jerome, he says
al's Pensées, Spinoza's Tractatus Theologico-Politicus, Butler's Analogy of Religion, Jeremy Taylor's H
at any rate the Phaedo, the Apology, and the Republic, will be of course read by all who wish to know anything of the history of
ing, so that they seem now almost self-evident, while his actual observations, though very remarkable-as, for instance, when he observes that bees on one journey confine themselves to one kind of f
ometimes tell in exactly the opposite sense. If this method has proved less fruitful, if in metaphysics we have made but little advance, that very fact in one point of view leaves the Dialogues of Socrates as instructive now as ever they wer
he greatest oration of the greatest of orators; Lucretius, Plutarch's Lives,
f the most popular branches of literature. Yet how few, co
runhild and Kriemhild, indeed, are far from perfect, but we meet with few such "live" women in Greek or Roman literature. Nor
esty" of the Agamemnon, and Mark Pattison considered it "the grandest work of creative genius in the whole range of literature"); or, as Sir M. E. Grant Duff recommends, the Persae; Sophocles (Oedipus Tyrannus), Euripid
ch Talboys Wheeler has given a most interesting epitome in the first two volumes of his History of India); the Shah-nameh, the work of the great Persian poet
subject is on that very account even more interesting than ever. I will, however, only mention, and that rather from a literary than a historical point of view, Herodotus, Xenophon (the Anabasis), Thucydides, and Tacitus (Germania); an
on, I take as the basis of my list. I will therefore only mention Bacon's Novum Organum, Mill's Logic, and Darwin's Origin of Species; in Political Economy, which some of our rulers do
ls, perhaps those most
oldt's Travels, and
fess I should like to
very one would have read Shakespeare, Milton (Paradise Lost, Lycidas, Comus and minor poems), Chaucer, Dant
Arabian Nights, Don Quixote, Boswell's Life of Johnson, White's Natural History of Selborne, Burke's Select Works (Payne), the Essays of
tists. Macaulay considered Marivaux's La Vie de Marianne the best novel in any language, but my number is so nearly complete that I must content myself with English: and will suggest Thackeray (Vanity Fair and Pendennis), Dickens (Pickwick and David Copperfield), G. Eliot (A
ecollections of peaceful home hours, after the labors and anxieties of the day. How thankful we ought to be
F 100
ing Authors
Bi
ions of Mar
cte
tle's
s of Co
"Le Bouddha
postolic
pis' Imitat
f St. Augusti
an (por
ctatus Theolo
hism of Posit
l's P
Analogy o
oly Living
Pilgrim's
Christ
*
t any rate, the Apol
n's Mem
tle's
enes' D
iis, De Amicitia,
rch's
's Human
Discours su
Conduct of th
*
o
si
rg
pitomized in Ta
ory of India,
Shah
belung
s Morte
*
Sh
akuntala or
us' Pro
y of O
les' O
ides'
' The Knight
ra
*
Tales (perhaps in M
C. Clarke's,
kes
st, Lycidas, Comus,
Divina
's Fair
en's
t's
(Mr. Arnold
ssay on
y on
of th
u
Childe
r
*
odo
Anabasis an
cyd
us' G
i
Decline
istory o
History
French R
ort Histor
story of
*
ian
Gulliver
Robins
s Vicar of
es' Don
s Life o
li
r's Wil
ic, School for Scan
s Past a
*
Novum
lth of Nati
olitical
's V
dt's T
ural Histor
Origin
list's
's L
*
n's
gne's
's E
lay's
on's
on's
s Sele
s' Se
*
Zadig and
ust, and Au
ay's Va
den
ns' P
Copp
Last Days
liot's A
y's Wes
t's
f Positive Philosophy; Pycroft, Course of English Reading; Baldwin, The Book L
at some one would publish a sel