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Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1

by Isaac Disraeli

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Curiosities of Literature, Vol. 1 is a collection of essays and anecdotes in the form of a literary miscellany. Written in the early 19th century by Isaac Disraeli, the work combines criticism, biographical sketches, and reflections on the history of literature, arts, and politics. It highlights the significance of libraries and the preservation of literary heritage, recounting notable examples from antiquity to modern times. The volume emphasises the role of books and authors in shaping cultural development and examines the phenomenon of bibliomania. Disraeli’s compilation is distinguished by its engaging style and the integration of historical context with personal observations, offering insight into the literary culture of the period and the enduring importance of literary collections. The work also includes a biography of the author by his son, along with notes that clarify or correct the original text in light of subsequent discoveries.

From the opening pages

This is the first collected edition of a series of works which have separately attained to a great popularity: volumes that have been always delightful to the young and ardent inquirer after knowledge. They offer as a whole a diversified miscellany of literary, artistic, and political history, of critical disquisition and biographic anecdote, such as it is believed cannot be elsewhere found gathered together in a form so agreeable and so attainable. To this edition is appended a Life of the Author by his son, also original notes, which serve to illustrate or to correct the text, where more recent discoveries have brought to light facts unknown when these volumes were originally published. London , 1881. ISAAC DISRAELI. ON THE LIFE AND WRITINGS OF MR. DISRAELI. BY HIS SON. The traditionary notion that the life of a man of letters is necessarily deficient in incident, appears to have originated in a misconception of the essential nature of human action. The life of every man is full of incidents, but the incidents are insignificant, because they do not affect his species; and in general the importance of every occurrence is to be measured by the degree with which it is recognised by mankind. An author may influence the fortunes of the world to as great an extent as a statesman or a warrior; and the deeds and performances by which this influence is created and exercised, may rank in their interest and importance with the decisions of great Congresses, or the skilful valour of a memorable field. M. de Voltaire was certainly a greater Frenchman than Cardinal Fleury, the Prime Minister of France in his time. His actions were more important; and it is certainly not too much to maintain that the exploits of Homer, Aristotle, Dante, or my Lord Bacon, were as considerable events as anything that occurred at Actium, Lepanto, or Blenheim. A Book may be as great a thing as a battle, and there are systems of philosophy that have produced as great revolutions as any that have disturbed even the social and political existence of our centuries. The life of the author, whose character and career we are venturing to review, extended far beyond the allotted term of man: and, perhaps, no existence of equal duration ever exhibited an uniformity more sustained. The strong bent of his infancy was pursued through youth, matured in manhood, and maintained…

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