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Comfort Found in Good Old Books

Chapter 21: TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
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About This Book

A grieving reader recounts how sustained engagement with classic works provided personal comfort and then offers practical guidance for others seeking cultural enrichment. The essays survey major texts and traditions — the Bible, Shakespeare, classical Greek and Roman authors, the Arabian Nights, Augustine, Cervantes, Thomas à Kempis, Omar Khayyám, Dante, Milton, Bunyan, Johnson and Boswell, Defoe, Swift, and similar classics — and include notes on editions and approaches to reading. Favoring literature of emotional power over mere information, the writer recommends selections and reading methods, arguing that a steady habit of studying great books yields both consolation and lasting moral and intellectual stimulation.


HERE ENDS COMFORT FOUND IN GOOD OLD BOOKS, BEING A SERIES OF ESSAYS ON GREAT BOOKS AND THEIR WRITERS, BY GEORGE HAMLIN FITCH. PUBLISHED BY PAUL ELDER AND COMPANY AND PRINTED FOR THEM BY THEIR TOMOYÉ PRESS IN THE CITY OF SAN FRANCISCO UNDER THE DIRECTION OF JOHN HENRY NASH IN THE MONTH OF JUNE AND THE YEAR NINETEEN HUNDRED & ELEVEN

TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES

Minor punctuation corrections have been made without comment.

Corrected spelling on p. 46, "Sigura" to "Sigurd" (Sigurd the Volsung, by William Morris).

Added page number (82) to "Index" listing for "VEDDER, ELIHU" on p. 171.

Word Variations:

  • "Alexander" (1) and "Alexandre" (1) (---- Dumas)
  • "every-day" (2) and "everyday" (3)
  • "Scheherezade" (3) and "Sheherezade" (1)