The Age of Fable
Excerpt
No new edition of Bulfinch’s classic work can be
considered
complete without some notice of the American scholar to whose
wide
erudition and painstaking care it stands as a perpetual
monument.
“The Age of Fable” has come to be ranked with older
books like
“Pilgrim’s Progress,” “Gulliver’s
Travels,” “The Arabian Nights,”
“Robinson Crusoe,” and five or six other productions of
world-wide
renown as a work with which every one must claim some
acquaintance
before his education can be called really complete. Many
readers
of the present edition will probably recall coming in contact
with
the work as children, and, it may be added, will no doubt
discover
from a fresh perusal the source of numerous bits of knowledge
that
have remained stored in their minds since those early years.
Yet
to the majority of this great circle of readers and students
the
name Bulfinch in itself has no significance.