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BIOGRAPHICAL AND CRITICAL

ESSAYS.

REPRINTED FROM REVIEWS,

WITH ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.

A NEW SERIES.

BY A. HAYWARD,

HAYWARD, ESQ., Q.C.

IN TWO VOLUMES.

VOL. II.

LONDON:

LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.

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ESSAYS.

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VARIETIES OF HISTORY AND ART.

(FROM THE EDINBURGH REVIEW, OCTOBER 1866.)

Causeries d'un Curieux: Variétés d'Histoire et d'Art;
Tirées d'un Cabinet d'Autographes et de Dessins. Par
F. Feuillet de Conches. Tomes Premier et Second, 1862;
Tome Troisième, 1864: Paris.

6

THE title of this book is untranslatable. There is no English equivalent for causerie, which is something less formal, continuous, and pretentious than 'conversation,' something more intellectual, refined, and cultivated than talk.' An earnest preoccupied man may converse : an over-excited or coarse-minded man may talk; but neither the one nor the other can causer in the precise French acceptation of the word. Boswell says, Though his (Johnson's) usual phrase for conversation was "talk," yet he made a distinction; for when he once told me that he dined the day before at a friend's house, with "a very pretty company," and I asked him if there was good conversation, he answered, No, sir, we had 'talk' but no conversation; there was nothing discussed.", On another occasion, however, when he said there had been good talk,' Boswell rejoined, 'Yes, sir, you tossed and gored several persons.' Positiveness, loudness, love of argument and eagerness for display, are fatal to causerie; which we take to consist in the easy, careless, unforced flow of

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