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OF

A RECLUSE.

-Not a Recluse by choice? then how?

By doom
Of doctors,-broken health and shattered nerves;
Or, if by choice, because he chose the less
Of dual evils, a sequestered life,
Mid books, companions of his solitude,
To escape the greater, else inevitable,
Insana mens in corpore insano."

NICIAS FOXCAR.

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RICHARD BENTLEY, NEW BURLINGTON STREET,
Publisher in Ordinary to Her Majesty.

1870.

[All rights reserved.]

PREFATORY.

THE wish that one's enemy had written a book is, perhaps, in these latter days, scarcely gratified to the full unless he has also written a preface. A preface is, in the nature of things, more or less deprecatory and apologetic. And we all know the sharp edge of the saw, Qui s'excuse, s'accuse. If, therefore, a preface be indited at all, brevity is the soul of wit in it; for the less said, the sooner mended.

How the present Recluse came to be one,-is not his excuse, that is to say his self-accusation, intimated in certain lines on the title-page? Being a Recluse, he had need of his recreations. And here they be some of them; more to follow, if the reader have a mind thereto. But only a reader who cares for themes with variations-the themes from some

one composer, the variations from very many-and who likes to compare accent and tone, and characteristic phrasing in the parallel passages: only such a reader, perhaps, will be capable of understanding what there is of recreation in such pages; to say nothing of understanding what it is to be a Recluse.

LONDON, March 31, 1870.

F. J.

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