In the years that followed, Butler wrote several works attacking contemporary scientific ideas, in particular Darwin’s theory of natural selection. In 1881 he began to write books on art and travel, the first of these being Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino. Around this time, he was also experimenting with musical composition and collaborated with Festing Jones on the oratorio entitled Narcissus. An interest in Homer led him to write lively translations of The Iliad and The Odyssey and he formed the theory that these two works were written by a woman. Butler’s partly autobiographical work The Way of All Flesh was the result of many years’ labor and appeared posthumously in 1903.
Introduction | 7 | (23) | |||
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Suggested Further Reading | 23 | (1) | |||
Note on the Text | 24 | (3) | |||
Preface to First Edition | 27 | (2) | |||
Preface to Second Edition | 29 | (4) | |||
Preface | 33 | (4) | |||
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37 | (224) | |||
Appendix: List of passages added by Butler to the text of the 1872 edition in 1901 | 261 | (2) | |||
Notes | 263 |
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