of it is the product of immature minds, and of a yearning
for experience rather than a knowledge of life.
There is no more obligation on the part of the person
who would be well informed and cultivated to read
all this than there is to read all the colored incidents,
personal gossip, accidents, and crimes repeated daily,
with sameness of effect, in the newspapers, some of
the most widely circulated of which are a composite
of the police gazette and the comic almanac. A
great deal of the reading done is mere contagion, one
form or another of communicated grippe, and it is
consoling and even surprising to know that if you
escape the run of it for a season, you have lost nothing
appreciable. Some people, it has been often said,
make it a rule never to read a book until it is from
one to five years old, By this simple device they
escape the necessity of reading most of them, but this
is only a part of their gain. Considering the
fact that the world is full of books of the highest
value for cultivation, entertainment, and information,
which the utmost leisure we can spare from other pressing
avocations does not suffice to give us knowledge of,
it does seem to be little less than a moral and intellectual
sin to flounder about blindly in the flood of new
publications. I am speaking, of course, of the
general mass of readers, and not of the specialists
who must follow their subjects with ceaseless inquisition.
But for most of us who belong to the still comparatively
few who, really read books, the main object of life
is not to keep up with the printing-press, any more
than it is the main object of sensible people to follow
all the extremes and whims of fashion in dress.
When a fashion in literature has passed, we are surprised
that it should ever have seemed worth the trouble
of studying or imitating. When the special craze
has passed, we notice another thing, and that is that
the author, not being of the first rank or of the second,
has generally contributed to the world all that he
has to give in one book, and our time has been wasted
on his other books; and also that in a special kind
of writing in a given period—let us say,
for example, the historico-romantic—we
perceive that it all has a common character, is constructed
on the same lines of adventure and with a prevailing
type of hero and heroine, according to the pattern
set by the first one or two stories of the sort which
became popular, and we see its more or less mechanical
construction, and how easily it degenerates into commercial
book-making. Now while some of this writing has
an individual flavor that makes it entertaining and
profitable in this way, we may be excused from attempting
to follow it all merely because it happens to be talked
about for the moment, and generally talked about in
a very undiscriminating manner. We need not in
any company be ashamed if we have not read it all,
especially if we are ashamed that, considering the
time at our disposal, we have not made the acquaintance