George Eliot; a Critical Study of Her Life, Writings & Philosophy by George Willis Cooke
page 108 of 513 (21%)
page 108 of 513 (21%)
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One of the last things he did at his desk was to despatch a manuscript of
mine to the publishers. The book (not a story and not bulky) is to appear near the end of May, and as it contains some words I wanted to say about the Jews, I will order a copy to be sent to you. I hope that your labors have gone on uninterruptedly for the benefit of others, in spite of public troubles. The aspect of affairs with us is grevious--industry languishing, and the best part of our nation indignant at our having been betrayed into an unjustifiable war (in South Africa). I have been occupied in editing my husband's MSS., so far as they are left in sufficient completeness to be prepared for publication without the obtrusion of another mind instead of his. A brief volume on _The Study of Psychology_ will appear immediately, and a further volume of psychological studies will follow in the autumn. But his work was cut short while he still thought of it as the happy occupation of far-stretching months. Once more let me thank you for remembering me in my sorrow, and believe me Yours with high regard, M.E. LEWES. Writing to a friend soon after Lewes's death, who had also lost her husband, she said,-- There is but one refuge--the having much to do. Nothing can make the burden to be patiently borne, except the gradual adaptation of your soul to the new conditions. The much to do she partly found in editing the uncompleted _Problems of Life and Mind_, and in establishing a studentship for original |
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