Literature Archive

Register
Login

Authors
Works
Reading Lists

Forums
Members
Book Auctions

Bookmark
Add Del.icio.us Bookmark!
Add Furl Bookmark!
Add Spurl Bookmark!


The Great Taboo

Grant Allen
 

Preface

Chapter I. >

I desire to express my profound indebtedness, for the central mythological idea embodied in this tale, to Mr. J.G.  Frazer’s admirable and epoch-making work, “The Golden Bough,” whose main contention I have endeavored incidentally to popularize in my present story.  I wish also to express my obligations in other ways to Mr. Andrew Lang’s “Myth, Ritual, and Religion,” Mr. H.O.  Forbes’s “Naturalist’s Wanderings,” and Mr. Julian Thomas’s “Cannibals and Convicts.”  If I have omitted to mention any other author to whom I may have owed incidental hints, it will be some consolation to me to reflect that I shall at least have afforded an opportunity for legitimate sport to the amateurs of the new and popular British pastime of badger-baiting or plagiary-hunting.  It may also save critics some moments’ search if I say at once that, after careful consideration, I have been unable to discover any moral whatsoever in this humble narrative.  I venture to believe that in so enlightened an age the majority of my readers will never miss it.

G.A.

The NOOK, DORKING, October, 1890.

 

Preface

Chapter I. >

Ruby on Rails