Arnold (Matthew). Prose Selections. (Gates.) (In preparation.) Baker's Specimens of Argumentation. Modern. Six Speeches. 186 pp. 16mo... PRICE $ 80 50 50 I 75 Baldwin's Specimens of Prose Description. 1+149 pp. 16mo.. Browning: Selections. (Mason)... Burke: Selections. (Perry.) xxvi +298 pp. 16m0.. Clark's Practical Rhetoric. With Abundant Exercises. 395 pp. Briefer Practical Rhetoric. 307 PP. 12mo.. Art of Reading Aloud. 159 pp. 16mo... Coleridge's Prose Extracts. (Beers.) 146 pp. 16m0. *2 00 #1 25 60 12mo. 1 00 De Quincey's English Mail Coach and Joan of Arc. (Hart.) xxvi+138 pp. 16mo 16mo.. Ford's The Broken Heart. (Scollard.) xvi +132 pp. Johnson's Lives of Milton, Dryden, Swift, Addison, Pope, and Gray. 12mo. Rasselas. (Emerson.) lv + 179 pp. 16mo Lamont's Specimens of Exposition. xxx+180 pp. 16mo. 12 mo.. 35 50 50 $88 agoོæ8gu 8 ཤྩ 18888 ྤ888u 1 25 50 50 I 12 90 85 50 I 25 Modern Political Orations. In England 1838-88. (Wagner.) 344 PP. 12mo. 16mo..... Shaw's English Composition by Practice. Entertaining and practical. 203 Pp. 12mo. Smith's Synonyms Discriminated. 781 pp. 12mo. I 40 In two vols. (Library Ed.).... *5 oc The same. Abridged. Class-room Edition. (Fiske.) 502 pp. 12mo. Tennyson's Princess. (Sherman.).. Warren's The Novel Previous to the Seventeenth Century. In Greece, Spain, Italy, Germany, England, France, and China. 361 pp. 12mo ....... Prices net. Postage 8 per cent additional, excepting on retail books, marked *. Full Descriptive List of Text-books on English free. HENRY HOLT & CO., 29 W. 23D STREET, New York. SELECTIONS A.3.9. from the prose writings of MATTHEW ARNOLD Edited with Notes and an Introduction BY LEWIS E. GATES Assistant Professor of English, Harvard University 1& NEW YORK HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY HARVARD COPYRIGHT, 1897, BY HENRY HOLT & CO. THE MERSHON COMPANY PRESS, RAHWAY, N. J. PREFACE. THESE Selections from Arnold are meant to go with the Selections from Newman already included in English Readings. Newman and Arnold were both Oxford men; both were devoted believers in the academic ideal; both discussed and dealt practically with educational problems, and yet both touched life in many other ways and are remembered as men of letters or leaders of thought, rather than as mere academicians. Although Arnold never imposed himself on his generation as did Newman, never ruled the imaginations of large masses of men, or was so prevailing and picturesque a figure as Newman, yet no less than Newman he represents one distinct phase of nineteenthcentury academic culture; from 1855 to 1870 he was probably the man of letters whom the younger generation at Oxford most nearly accepted as their natural spokesman. The Selections aim to present, in the briefest possible compass, what is most characteristic in Arnold's criticism of literature and life. His conception of the critic was as the guardian of culture, as called upon to pass judgment on the various expressions of life, and especially upon books in their relation to life, and to determine their influence on the temper and ideals of the public. He is to be an adept in life, |