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All About Our World

Father and Son [Autobiography]
Edmund Gosse

Page 2 of 395

narrative, in all its parts, and so far as the punctilious
attention of the writer has been able to keep it so, is
scrupulously true.  If it were not true, in this strict sense, to
publish it would be to trifle with all those who may be induced
to read it.  It is offered to them as a document, as a record of
educational and religious conditions which, having passed away,
will never return.  In this respect, as the diagnosis of a dying
Puritanism, it is hoped that the narrative will not be altogether
without significance. 

It offers, too, in a subsidiary sense, a study of the development
of moral and intellectual ideas during the progress of infancy.
These have been closely and conscientiously noted, and may have
some value in consequence of the unusual conditions in which they
were produced.  The author has observed that those who have
written about the facts of their own childhood have usually
delayed to note them down until age has dimmed their
recollections.  Perhaps an even more common fault in such
autobiographies is that they are sentimental, and are falsified
by self-admiration and self-pity.  The writer of these

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