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A

DICTIONARY OF QUOTATIONS

FROM

ENGLISH AND AMERICAN POETS

BASED UPON BOHN'S EDITION, REVISED, CORRECTED

AND ENLARGED

TWELVE HUNDRED QUOTATIONS ADDED FROM AMERICAN AUTHORS

BY

ANNA L WARD

"The multiplicity of facts and writings is become so great that
everything must now be reduced to extracts." — VOLTAIRE

NEW YORK: 46 EAST 14TH STREET
THOMAS Y. CROWELL & CO.
BOSTON: 100 PURCHASE STREET

B677

COPYRIGHT, 1883,

BY THOMAS Y. CROWELL & COMPANY.

Levi L. Barbour 1-26-26

PREFACE.

I

HAVE examined this Dictionary of Poetical Quotations carefully, and, bearing in mind the multitude of difficulties which must have beset the making of it, I can honestly say that, in my opinion, they have been triumphed over by the maker. At first sight, it may seem easy to compile such a work. One has but to go through any dictionary of the language, and select as many of the words which are things as are likely to have inspired the poets, and then proceed to illustrate these words with extracts from the poets,

-the expression, words which are things, covering what is felt as well as what is seen, - whatever comes home to the business and bosoms of men, as well as whatever surrounds them in the material universe. This seems easy, I say, but a little reflection will show that it involves labor: not merely of the hand in transcription of the extracts to be used, but of the mind in determining what extracts should be used; the labor of reading scores of works similar to the one contemplated, and of devising improvements for them; and the labor of reading hundreds of other works, in order to procure the materials for these improvements. In old Burton's time (the thought is his, not mine), men made books as apothecaries made their medicines, — by pouring out of one bottle into another; but this is no longer possible, for reading has become so general that plagiarism is readily detected, and criticism so outspoken that would-be plagiarists are afraid. If books have not entirely ceased to be drugs in the market, as publishers sometimes complain, it is not because they are still compounded after the old recipes, for every apothecary – I mean every bookmaker — is supplied with essences and flavors and tinctures of his own.

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