Essays of Robert Louis Stevenson
Essays of Robert Louis Stevenson
Book Excerpt
riters of prose.
Montaigne talks endlessly on the most trivial subjects without ever
becoming trivial. To those who really love reading and have some
sympathy with humanity, Montaigne's Essays are a "perpetual refuge
and delight," and it is interesting to reflect how far in literary
fame this man, who talked about his meals, his horse, and his cat,
outshines thousands of scholarly and talented writers, who discussed
only the most serious themes in politics and religion. The great
English prose writers in the field of the personal essay during the
seventeenth century were Sir Thomas Browne, Thomas Fuller, and Abraham
Cowley, though Walton's Compleat Angler is a kindred work. Browne's
_Religio Medici_, and his delightful _Garden of Cyrus_, old Tom
Fuller's quaint Good Thoughts in Bad Times and Cowley's charming
Essays are admirable examples of this school of composition.
Burton's wonderful Anatomy of Melancholy is a colossal personal
essay. Some of the papers of Stee
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