Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The National Quarterly Review, Vol. 19: Nos. For June and September, 1869
If these changes were confined to the authors, artists and works of the present day, they could easily be accounted for. It might be alleged, without much injustice, that in the mid dle of the nineteenth century fame is bought and sold like any other commodity; although a considerable share of it is often obtained by impudence alone, without either talent, or education; so that those who have most money, or most impudence may reasonably calculate on securing most fame in a given time. If the money and impudence are combined, as they very generally are, in such cases, then the aspirant for fame has to wait but a short time for the full gratification of his ambition. True, the fame gained in this manner is not the genuine article; it is quite as spurious as the reputation of the quack doctor, who by means of the same pill, bolus, or bottle, undertakes to cure all diseases that ?esh is heir to. But there are none of the vicissitudes to which we allude in the fame of this class of authors or artists when their fame is once obscured it never regains its lustre; once dead it has no resurrection.
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