Audiolibro: Note-Books of Samuel Butler
- Download Preface audio
- Download Biographical Statement audio
- Download Lord, What is Man? audio
- Download Elementary Morality audio
- Download The Germs of Erewhon and of Life and Habit audio
- Download Memory and Design audio
- Download Vibrations audio
- Download Mind and Matter audio
- Download On the Making of Music, Pictures and Books audio
- Download Handel and Music, part 1 audio
- Download Handel and Music, part 2 audio
- Download A Painter’s Views on Painting, part 1 audio
- Download A Painter’s Views on Painting, part 2 audio
- Download The Position of a Homo Unius Libri audio
- Download Cash and Credit audio
- Download The Enfant Terrible of Literature audio
- Download Unprofessional Sermons audio
- Download Higgledy-Piggledy audio
- Download Titles and Subjects audio
- Download Written Sketches, part 1 audio
- Download Written Sketches, part 2 audio
- Download Material for a Projected Sequel to Alps and Sanctuaries, part 1 audio
- Download Material for a Projected Sequel to Alps and Sanctuaries, part 2 audio
- Download Material for Erewhon Revisited audio
- Download Truth and Convenience audio
- Download First Principles, part 1 audio
- Download First Principles, part 2 audio
- Download Rebelliousness audio
- Download Reconciliation audio
- Download Death audio
- Download The Life of the World to Come, part 1 audio
- Download The Life of the World to Come, part 2 audio
- Download Poems audio
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Early in his life Samuel Butler began to carry a note-book and to write down in it anything he wanted to remember; it might be something he heard some one say, more commonly it was something he said himself. In one of these notes he gives a reason for making them:
“One’s thoughts fly so fast that one must shoot them; it is no use trying to put salt on their tails.”
So he bagged as many as he could hit and preserved them, re-written on loose sheets of paper which constituted a sort of museum stored with the wise, beautiful, and strange creatures that were continually winging their way across the field of his vision. As he became a more expert marksman his collection increased and his museum grew so crowded that he wanted a catalogue. In 1874 he started an index, and this led to his reconsidering the notes, destroying those that he remembered having used in his published books and re-writing the remainder. The re-writing shortened some but it lengthened others and suggested so many new ones that the index was soon of little use and there seemed to be no finality about it. In 1891 he attached the problem afresh and made it a rule to spend an hour every morning re-editing his notes and keeping his index up to date. At his death, in 1902, he left five bound volumes, with the contents dated and indexed, about 225 pages of closely written sermon paper to each volume, and more than enough unbound and unindexed sheets to made a sixth volume of equal size. - Summary by Henry Festing Jones
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