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       Samuel Butler

      Alps and Sanctuaries of Piedmont and the Canton Ticino

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066224370

       Introduction

       Author’s Preface to First Edition

       Chapter I Introduction

       Chapter II Faido

       Chapter III Primadengo, Calpiognia, Dalpe, Cornone, and Prato

       Chapter IV Rossura, Calonico

       Chapter V Calonico (continued) and Giornico

       Chapter VI Piora

       Chapter VII S. Michele and the Monte Pirchiriano

       Chapter VIII S. Michele (continued)

       Chapter IX The North Italian Priesthood

       Chapter X S. Ambrogio and Neighbourhood

       Chapter XI Lanzo

       Chapter XII Considerations on the Decline of Italian Art

       Chapter XIII Viù, Fucine, and S. Ignazio

       Chapter XIV Sanctuary of Oropa

       Chapter XV Oropa (continued)

       Chapter XVI Graglia

       Chapter XVII Soazza and the Valley of Mesocco

       Chapter XVIII Mesocco, S. Bernardino, and S. Maria in Calanca

       Chapter XIX The Mendrisiotto

       Chapter XX Sanctuary on Monte Bisbino

       Chapter XXI A Day at the Cantine

       Chapter XXII Sacro Monte, Varese

       Chapter XXIII Angera and Arona

       Chapter XXIV Locarno

       Chapter XXV Fusio

       Chapter XXVI Fusio Revisited

       Appendix A Wednesbury Cocking (See p. 55)

       Appendix B Reforms Instituted at S. Michele in the year 1478 (See p. 105)

       Index

       Table of Contents

      The publication of a new and revised edition of “Alps and Sanctuaries” at a much reduced price and in a handier and more portable form than the original will, I hope, draw general attention to a book which has been undeservedly neglected. “Alps and Sanctuaries” has hitherto been the Cinderella of the Butler family. While her sisters, both elder and younger, have been steadily winning their way to high places at the feast, she has sat unrecognised and unhonoured in the ashes. For this, of course, the high price of the book, which was originally issued at a guinea, was largely responsible, as well as its unmanageable size and cumbrousness. But Time has revenges in his wallet for books as well as for men, and I cannot but believe that a new life is in store for one of the wisest, wittiest and tenderest of Butler’s books.

      “Alps and Sanctuaries” originally appeared at a time (1881) when the circle of Butler’s readers had shrunk to very narrow dimensions. “Erewhon” (1872) had astonished and delighted the literary world, but “The Fair Haven” (1873) had alienated the sympathies of the orthodox, and “Life and Habit” (1877) and its successors “Evolution, Old and New” (1879) and “Unconscious Memory” (1880) had made him powerful and relentless enemies in the field of science. In 1881 Butler was, as he often termed himself, a literary pariah, and “Alps and Sanctuaries” was received for the most part with contemptuous silence or undisguised hostility. Now that Butler is a recognised classic, his twentieth-century readers may care to be reminded of the reception that was accorded to this—one of the most genial and least polemical of his works. Very few papers reviewed it at all, and in only four or five cases was it honoured with a notice more than a few lines long.

      Strange as it may seem, Butler’s best friends were the Roman Catholics. The Weekly Register praised “Alps and Sanctuaries” almost unreservedly, and The Tablet became positively lyrical over it. The fact is that about this time Butler was dallying with visions of a rapprochement between the Church of Rome and the “advanced wing of the Broad Church party,” to which he always declared that he belonged. In the second edition of “Evolution, Old and New,” which was published in 1882, there is a remarkable chapter, entitled “Rome and Pantheism,” in which Butler holds out an olive branch to the Vatican, and suggests that if Rome would make certain concessions with regard to the miraculous element of Christianity she might win the adherence of liberal-minded men, who are equally disgusted by the pretensions of scientists and the dissensions of Protestants.

      “Alps and Sanctuaries” contains nothing like a definite eirenicon, but it is pervaded by a genuine if somewhat vague sympathy for Roman institutions, which, emphasised as it is by some outspoken criticism of Protestantism, will serve to explain the welcome that it

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