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Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 1804-1864

"Passages from the English Notebooks, Volume 2."

" What a bitter word this would
have been if he had known me to be a romance-writer! "No, I never shall
be inspired to write romances!" I answered, as if such an idea had never
occurred to me. I sat down, however. This study quite satisfied me,
being planned on principles of common-sense, and made to work in, and
without any fantastic adaptation of old forms to modern uses.
Next to the study is the library, an apartment of respectable size, and
containing as many books as it can hold, all protected by wire-work. I
did not observe what or whose works were here; but the attendant showed
us one whole compartment full of volumes having reference to ghosts,
witchcraft, and the supernatural generally. It is remarkable that Scott
should have felt interested in such subjects, being such a worldly and
earthly man as he was; but then, indeed, almost all forms of popular
superstition do clothe the ethereal with earthly attributes, and so make
it grossly perceptible.
The library, like the study, suited me well,--merely the fashion of the
apartment, I mean,--and I doubt not it contains as many curious volumes
as are anywhere to be met with within a similar space.


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