WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Way of All Flesh cover

The Way of All Flesh

Chapter 2: PREFACE
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The narrative takes the form of an autobiographical family saga in which a reflective narrator recounts several generations' domestic life and the pressures that shape his development. Scenes range from intimate village detail to formative schooling, following the protagonist's struggle with parental authority, rigid religiosity, and social expectations. The work examines heredity, conscience, and the toll of hypocrisy through candid, satirical portraits and moral questioning, moving from childhood memory to adult crises and concluding with philosophical reflections on freedom, belief, and the possibility of personal integrity amid inherited constraints.

PREFACE

Samuel Butler began to write “The Way of All Flesh” about the year 1872, and was engaged upon it intermittently until 1884. It is therefore, to a great extent, contemporaneous with “Life and Habit,” and may be taken as a practical illustration of the theory of heredity embodied in that book. He did not work at it after 1884, but for various reasons he postponed its publication. He was occupied in other ways, and he professed himself dissatisfied with it as a whole, and always intended to rewrite or at any rate to revise it. His death in 1902 prevented him from doing this, and on his death-bed he gave me clearly to understand that he wished it to be published in its present form. I found that the MS. of the fourth and fifth chapters had disappeared, but by consulting and comparing various notes and sketches, which remained among his papers, I have been able to supply the missing chapters in a form which I believe does not differ materially from that which he finally adopted. With regard to the chronology of the events recorded, the reader will do well to bear in mind that the main body of the novel is supposed to have been written in the year 1867, and the last chapter added as a postscript in 1882.

R. A. STREATFEILD.