About This Book
This essay, prepared as an introductory lecture series, maintains that authentic literature arises from and reflects the sentiments and life of its age, serving as a continuous transmission of thought and feeling across generations. Using an extended allegory of vessels launched on a river, the author contrasts ephemeral works with enduring texts and argues that the best way to understand literature is to study the people, customs, and popular life that produced it. Illustrations drawn from Greek, French, and English traditions show how literature both reveals and informs the social and moral currents of its time.
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