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"Why take the style of these heroic times?
For nature brings not back the mastodon --
Nor we those times; and why should any man
Remodel models?"
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What Tennyson thus said of his own first essay in the Idyls of the
King, in the introduction to the Morte D'Arthur, occurs as
probably the aptest expression of most men's immediate thought with
regard to such a subject as The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries.
Though Tennyson was confessedly only remodeling the thoughts of the
Thirteenth Century, we would not be willing to concede
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"That nothing new was said, or else,
Something so said, 'twas nothing,"
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for the loss of the Idyls would make a large lacuna in the literature
of the Nineteenth Century. "If it is allowed to compare little
things with great," a similar intent to that of the Laureate has
seemed sufficient justification for the paradox the author has tried to
set forth in this volume. It may prove "nothing worth, mere chaff
and draff much better burnt," but many friends have insisted they
found it interesting. Authors usually blame friends for their
inflictions upon the public, and I fear that I can find no better
excuse, though the book has been patiently labored at, with the idea
that it should represent some of the serious work that is being done by
the Catholic Summer School on Lake Champlain, now completing
nearly a decade and a half of its existence. This volume is, it is
hoped, but the first of a series that will bring to a wider audience
some of the thoughts that have been gathered for Summer School friends
by many workers, and will put in more permanent form contributions that
made summer leisure respond to the Greek term for school.
The object of the book is to interpret, in terms that will be readily
intelligible to this generation, the life and concerns of the people of
a century who, to the author's mind, have done more for human
progress than those of any like period in human history. There are few
whose eyes are now holden as they used to be, as to the surpassing
place in the history of culture of the last three centuries of the
Middle Ages. Personally the author is convinced, however, that
only a beginning of proper appreciation has come as yet, and he feels
that the solution of many problems that are vexing the modern world,
especially in the social order, are to be found in these much
misunderstood ages, and above all in that culmination of medieval
progress -- the period from 1200 to 1300.
The subject was originally taken up as a series of lectures in the
extension course of the Catholic Summer School, as given each year
in Lent and Advent at the Catholic Club, New York City.
Portions of the material were subsequently used in lectures in many
cities in this country from Portland, Me., to Portland, Ore.,
St. Paul, Minn., to New Orleans, La. The subject was
treated in extenso for the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences
in 1906, after which publication was suggested.
The author does not flatter himself that the book adequately represents
the great period which it claims to present. The subject has been the
central idea of studies in leisure moments for a dozen years, and
during many wanderings in Europe, but there will doubtless prove to be
errors in detail, for which the author would crave the indulgence of
more serious students of history. The original form in which the
material was cast has influenced the style to some extent, and has made
the book more wordy than it would otherwise have been, and has been the
cause of certain repetitions that appear more striking in print than
they seemed in manuscript. There were what seemed good reasons for not
delaying publication, however, and leisure for further work at it,
instead of growing, was becoming more scant. It is intrusted to the
tender mercies of critics, then, and the benevolent reader, if he
still may be appealed to, for the sake of the ideas it contains, in
spite of their inadequate expression.
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