Изображения страниц
PDF
EPUB

LIFE

OF

SIR WALTER SCOTT,

BARONET.

BY THE

REV. GEORGE GILFILLAN,

DUNDEE.

MOTHE

EDINBURGH:

WILLIAM OLIPHANT & CO.

210. m. 1.

MURRAY AND GIBB, EDINBURGH,

PRINTERS TO HER MAJESTY'S STATIONERY OFFICE

PREFACE.

HE purpose of the following work requires very little explanation. It was thought by its publishers-a view in which the author thoroughly coincided-that a popular life of Sir Walter Scott was a desideratum. There are indeed various lives of Sir Walter already. Lockhart's has long been the standard one, and continues to be justly regarded as a very able work, and as a mine of information on the subject. But it is too large, and, besides the personalities which abound in it and rather lessen its value, it contains a mass of correspondence and minute details which seem somewhat irrelevant and uninteresting now, Scott's letters being the dullest of all his productions. There are many smaller lives; but they are in general meagre outlines.

[ocr errors]

The author has sought to produce something between the large work of Lockhart and the slighter biographies. He has not catered for gossip, and his book will be found to contain little, although there are not a few new facts sprinkled throughout. It aims rather at being an accurate summary of the leading events in Scott's life, and a candid, full, and genial criticism on his principal works. How far its aim has been successfully gained, the public must decide.

The book, whatever be its defects, may be thought a 'word in season,' as connected in time with that centenary celebration which is at hand, and which may be regarded not merely as a tribute to Scott's memory, but as at once an acknowledgment and outcome of that large and loving spirit which is abroad in the age, and which has been partly the result of the extensive diffusion of Sir Walter's writings.

Shakspeare says:

'The evil that men do lives after them; the good

Is oft interred with their bones.'

It has been otherwise with Scott.

Whatever

was small and narrow in his history and opinions is forgotten. His real nature, which was as broad and catholic as the sun, remains with us, and is still powerfully affecting the world. Sitting the

« ПредыдущаяПродолжить »