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THE WORKS

OF

ISAAC DISRAELI.

LITERARY CHARACTER;

OR THE HISTORY OF

MEN OF GENIUS,

Drawn from their own Feelings and Confessions.

LITERARY MISCELLANIES;

AND AN INQUIRY INTO

THE CHARACTER OF JAMES THE FIRST.

BY ISAAC DISRAELI.

A NEW EDITION,

EDITED BY HIS SON,

THE RIGHT HON. B. DISRAELI,

CHANCELLOR OF HER MAJESTY'S EXCHEQUER,

LONDON:

ROUTLEDGE, WARNES, AND ROUTLEDGE,

FARRINGDON STREET.

NEW YORK: 18, BEEKMAN STREET.

1859.

270. b. 35.
b.35.

LONDON:

SAVILL AND EDWARDS, PRINTERS, CHANDOS STREET,

COVENT GARDEN.

PREFACE.

THE following Preface was prefixed to an Edition of the author's Miscellaneous Works in 1840. They were comprised in a thick 8vo volume, and included the CALAMITIES AND QUARRELS OF AUTHORS, now published separately. This Preface is of interest for the expression of the author's own view of these works.

THIS volume comprises my writings on subjects chiefly of our vernacular literature. Now collected together, they offer an unity of design, and afford to the general reader and to the student of classical antiquity some initiation into our national Literature. It is presumed also, that they present materials for thinking not solely on literary topics; authors and books are not alone here treated of,-a comprehensive view of human nature necessarily enters into the subject from the diversity of the characters portrayed, through the gradations of their faculties, the influence of. their tastes, and those incidents of their lives prompted by their fortunes or their passions. This present volume, with its brother "CURIOSITIES OF LITERATURE," now constitute a body of reading which may awaken knowledge in minds only seeking amusement, and refresh the deeper studies of the learned by matters not unworthy of their curiosity.

The LITERARY CHARACTER has been an old favourite with many of my contemporaries departed or now living, who have found it respond to their own emotions.

THE MISCELLANIES are literary amenities, should they be found to deserve the title, constructed on that principle early adopted by me, of interspersing facts with speculation.

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