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Aldous Huxley recognized the special strength of the essay form “for saying almost everything about almost anything.” In 50 classic masterpieces, this collection testifies to Huxley’s words. The essays span a period of two-thousand years, and demonstrate the rich stylistic variety within the form. The divagatory style of Montaigne, who confesses, “I cannot keep my subject still. It goes along befuddled and staggering, with a natural drunkenness,” forms a counterpoint to the studied rigour of David Hume, and the oracular brilliance of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Alongside essays from these masters, appear some of the finest works by G. K. Chesterton, Virginia Woolf, Samuel Johnson, Charles Lamb, and William Hazlitt.

 

As with other Elsinore Books anthologies, we have favoured a thematic arrangement over a chronological one. The collection is divided into seven parts, with seven essays apiece. Our themes are: 1) Humour and Satire, 2) The Good Life, 3) Learning and Knowledge, 4) Philosophy, Politics and Religion, 5) Literature and Writing, 6) Nature and Travel, and 7) Miscellaneous Reflections. The collection is introduced by a short G. K. Chesterton essay on the nature of the form itself.

 

The Art of the Essay — Fifty Classic Masterpieces

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  • Introductory Essay

    The Essay — G. K. Chesterton

     

    Part 1: Humour and Satire

    On Running After One’s Hat — G. K. Chesterton

    The Clothing of Ghosts — Ambrose Bierce

    From Popular Fallacies — Charles Lamb

    Shaking Hands — Edward Everett

    Advice to Youth — Mark Twain

    Ogres — William Makepeace Thackeray

    A Modest Proposal — Jonathan Swift

     

    Part 2: The Good Life

    Circles — Ralph Waldo Emerson

    Self-Reliance — Ralph Waldo Emerson

    On the Shortness of Life — Seneca

    Live Unknown — Plutarch

    Good Humour — Samuel Johnson

    An Apology for Idlers — Robert Louis Stevenson

    On Old Age — Cicero

     

    Part 3: Learning and Knowledge

    Of Studies — Francis Bacon

    Of Books — Michel de Montaigne

    The American Scholar — Ralph Waldo Emerson

    The Study Of Life Not To Be Neglected For The Sake Of Books — Samuel Johnson

    In Defence of Ignorance — A. G. Gardiner

    The Old and the New Schoolmaster — Charles Lamb

    Limits of the Human Mind — Voltaire

     

    Part 4: Philosophy, Politics and Religion

    Answering the Question: What Is Enlightenment? — Immanuel Kant

    On Thinking for Oneself — Arthur Schopenhauer

    Of the Limits to the Authority of Society over the Individual — John Stuart Mill

    Civil Disobedience — Henry David Thoreau

    Of Atheism — Francis Bacon

    Thoughts of God — Mark Twain

    Of Miracles — David Hume

     

    Part 5: Literature and Writing

    The Poet — Ralph Waldo Emerson

    How Should One Read a Book? — Virginia Woolf

    On Familiar Style — William Hazlitt

    The Study of Poetry — Matthew Arnold

    The Art of Fiction — Henry James

    Why a Classic Is a Classic — Arnold Bennett

    On Style — Arthur Schopenhauer

     

    Part 6: Nature and Travel

    Walking — Henry David Thoreau

    On Going a Journey — William Hazlitt

    On Spring — Samuel Johnson

    A Wind-storm in the Forests — John Muir

    Nature — Ralph Waldo Emerson

    Night Walks — Charles Dickens

    Walking Tours — Robert Louis Stevenson

     

    Part 7: Miscellaneous Reflections

    New Year’s Eve — Charles Lamb

    On National Prejudices — Oliver Goldsmith

    On Giving Advice — Joseph Addison

    On The Pleasure of Hating — William Hazlitt

    On Lying in Bed — G. K. Chesterton

    Of Cannibals — Michel de Montaigne

    The Death of the Moth — Virginia Woolf

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