Page images
PDF
EPUB
[graphic][merged small]

THE JOURNAL INTIME

OF

HENRI-FRÉDÉRIC AMIEL

TRANSLATED

WITH AN INTRODUCTION AND NOTES

BY

MRS. HUMPHRY WARD

Author of "The History of David Grieve," etc.

WITH PORTRAITS

TWO VOLUMES IN ONE

New York

THE MACMILLAN COMPANY

LONDON: MACMILLAN & Co., LTD.

1913

All rights reserved

[blocks in formation]

First edition (2 Vols. Globe 8vo) 1885. Second
edition (1 Vol. Crown 8vo) 1888. Reprinted 1889;
January and October, 1890; March and Septem-
ber, 1891, 1892; January and April, 1893; Janu-
ary, August, 1894; August, 1895; March, 1896;
October, 1897; March, 1899; July, 1900; October,
1901; June, 1903; March, 1905; May, 1907; July,

1909.

New edition, in one volume, September, 1906.

Norwood Press

J. S. Cushing Co. - Berwick & Smith Co.
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.

PREFACE TO THE SECOND

EDITION.

N this second edition of the English

Iansition of Amiel's Journal Intime,

I have inserted a good many new passages, taken from the last French edition (Cinquième édition, revue et augmentée). But I have not translated all the fresh material to be found in that edition, nor have I omitted certain sections of the Journal I which in these two recent volumes have been omitted by their French editors. It would be of no interest to give my reasons for these variations at length. They depend upon certain differences between the English and the French public, which are more readily felt than explained. Some of the passages which I have left untranslated seemed to me to overweight the introspective side of the Journal, already so fullto overweight it, at any rate, for English readers. Others which I have retained,

39X41 1

though they often relate to local names and books, more or less unfamiliar to the general public, yet seemed to me valuable as supplying some of that surrounding detail, that setting, which helps one to understand a life. Besides, we English are in many ways more akin to Protestant and Puritan Geneva than the French readers to whom the original Journal primarily addresses itself, and some of the entries I have kept have probably, by the nature of things, more savour for us than for them.

M. A. W.

« PreviousContinue »