[Waverley, Or ’Tis Sixty Years Hence Complete by Sir Walter Scott]@TWC D-Link bookWaverley, Or ’Tis Sixty Years Hence Complete CHAPTER V 21/55
Others, dispersed in different paths of life, "my dim eyes now seek for in vain." Of five brothers, all healthy and promising in a degree far beyond one whose infancy was visited by personal infirmity, and whose health after this period seemed long very precarious, I am, nevertheless, the only survivor.
The best loved, and the best deserving to be loved, who had destined this incident to be the foundation of literary composition, died "before his day," in a distant and foreign land; and trifles assume an importance not their own, when connected with those who have been loved and lost. WAVERLEY; OR, 'T IS SIXTY YEARS SINCE. "Under which King, Bezonian? Speak, or die!" Henry IV., Part II. EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION TO WAVERLEY. "What is the value of a reputation that probably will not last above one or two generations ?" Sir Walter Scott once asked Ballantyne.
Two generations, according to the usual reckoning, have passed; "'T is Sixty Years since" the "wondrous Potentate" of Wordsworth's sonnet died, yet the reputation on which he set so little store survives.
A constant tide of new editions of his novels flows from the press; his plots give materials for operas and plays; he has been criticised, praised, condemned: but his romances endure amid the changes of taste, remaining the delight of mankind, while new schools and little masters of fiction come and go. Scott himself believed that even great works usually suffer periods of temporary occultation.
His own, no doubt, have not always been in their primitive vogue.
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