Abstract

Who Reads the Classics Now?

Hazlitt, Henry | April 16, 1930 issue

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The article discusses books and authors. It is hardly necessary to remark that any culture worthy of the name must draw its life both from the finest minds of the present and the greatest minds of the past. If it confines itself to either to the exclusion of the other it becomes deformed. The disease of reading too exclusively the books of dead authors is probably confined, in the modern world, to the older pundits of India and China, and in America and Europe to a few scattered academicians. The real danger is that of reading too exclusively the works of our own time.

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LITERATURE; CULTURE; AUTHORS; AUTHORSHIP; BOOKS & reading; BOOKS
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