Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Life-Work of Pliny the Younger
They divert me and give me a welcome rest. Sometimes I go out hunting, but never forget my journal; I return home, if with no wild beast that I have slain, at least with some literary trophy. I devote some hours to my colonists (peasants who hire the land), too few hours in their opinion. But the ever lasting complaints of the country-folk are a perpetual bar to me, interfering seriously with any devotion on my part to the study of our literature or to the events of our political life. Farewell.
In the letter of Pliny here quoted, is to be found that element which we So rarely meet with in historic memoirs - the everyday Side of life. The Letters of Pliny the Younger, one of the most remarkable books handed down to us by antiquity, belongs to a class of literature quite apart from, yet in close harmony with, the taste of our own age, ex cluding as it does all that is external and relative; somewhat superficial, but there fore only the more graceful and pleasingly original. One reads this precious little volume like an interesting novel full of living characters, movements and emotions. It issomething in the style of our diaries and family journals, or of the memoirs of the eighteenth century.
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