The Human Comedy: Introductions and Appendix
THE HUMAN COMEDY: INTRODUCTIONS AND APPENDIX CONTENTS Honore de Balzac Introduction and brief biography by George Saintsbury. Appendix List of titles in French with English translations and grouped in the various classifications. Author's introduction Balzac's 1842 introduction to The Human Comedy.
last week turned out forty-two reams of our best correspondence paper on
which these poets had scribbled the first draft of their verses. Now I
don't think the club should furnish the poets with the raw material for
their poems any more than, to go back to Confucius's shoemaker, it should
supply leather for our cobblers."
"What do you mean by raw material for poems?" asked Sir Walter, with a
frown.
"Pen, ink, and paper. What else?" said Demosthenes.
"Doesn't it take brains to write a poem?" said Raleigh.
"Doesn't it take brains to make a pair of shoes?" retorted Demosthenes,
swallowing a pebble in his haste.
"They've got a right to the stationery, though," put in Blackstone. "A
clear legal right to it. If they choose to write poems on the paper
instead of boring people to death with letters, as most of us do, that's
their own affair."
"Well, they're very wasteful," said Demosthenes.
"We can meet that easily enough," observed Cassius. "Furnish each
writing-table with a slate. I should think they'd be pleased with that.
It's so much easier to rub out the wrong word."
THE HUMAN COMEDY: INTRODUCTIONS AND APPENDIX CONTENTS Honore de Balzac Introduction and brief biography by George Saintsbury. Appendix List of titles in French with English translations and grouped in the various classifications. Author's introduction Balzac's 1842 introduction to The Human Comedy.