Excerpt from The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries
"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?"
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 -
"That nothing new was said, or else,
Something so said, twas nothing, "
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.
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