Capitolo 5
Preface
[December, 1904.]
Of the old Elizabethans play or poem contains the lines:--
. . . Who reads me, when I am ashes,
It is my child in wishes. . . . . . . . .
The relationship, between reader and writer of child and it produces,
you/he/she has existed in the duration of Regina Elizabeth, but it is very too near to be
true for ours. The maximum one that any writer could hope for his/her readers
now it is that they should consent to consider him nephews, and
also then he would only be waited for a more civil refusal from
the most greater part of them. Indeed, if he had come to a certain age, he would have
it observed that nephews, as a social class they didn't read to everybody anymore, and
what a recorded family example of a nephew is only that
reads his/her uncle. The exception extends rather to sustain the rule,
from when it needed of a Macaulay to produce, and two volumes to record him/it.
The meter doesn't finally, allow him/it. One cannot say: "Who law
me, when I am ashes, it is my nephew in wishes."
The same objections don't apply to the word "nephew." The change
it restores the verse, and, to a very great degree, the fact. Nephews
you/he/she has been known to read in the first youth, and in of the cases you/he/she can have
reads their uncles. Also, the relationship is convenient and easy,
able to be anything or nothing to the wish of both party,,
as a Moslem or Polynesian or American marriage. Anybody valid
objection can be proposed to this choice in the verse. Nephew did him/it
both!
The following lines, are written then for nephews, or for those that
you/he/she is prepared, for those, to be nephews in wish. For convenience of
you travel to France, where hotels are, in places of out-of-the-way
sometimes wanting in the space as the luxury, his/her nieces will count
as one only. As many more can come as likes, but a niece is enough
for his/her uncle to speak to, and a niece is very more probable than two
to listen. A niece is also more probable than two to bring a kodak
and he/she takes interest in him, from when she doesn't have anything other, except her