1912. Scott's original intent for these essays was to link together
literary temperaments as dissimilar as those which are included in
this volume and to trace the moral and religious teachings of the
various writers, however, his rambling spirit took him far afield
and rather than keep strictly to a sermonic theme he has done so in
an incidental fashion. Contents: Chesterton as Writer and Critic;
Chesterton as a Religious Writer; William De Morgan; The Paradox in
the Life and Writings of Tolstoi; Ruskin; The Lost Art of Reading;
Hawthorne; and George Eliot. See other titles by this author
available from Kessinger Publishing.
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