READING FOR WARTIME
HOW AND WHAT TO CHOOSE. “One of my recent house-physi-cians came to see me yesterday, resplendent in new naval uniform,” writes a doctor in the “Lancet.” “He finds himself with a good deal of time on his hands, and he asked me to give him a list of books ‘for serious reading, and appropriate to the times. “Knowing something of his mind, I felt that he would like to brood on the answer to the question, ‘How do we stand no win relation to the broad sweep of history?’ So here is my list: “ ‘A History of Europe,’ by H. A. L. Fisher—to give a sense of proportion. “ ‘The Making of Europe,’ 400 to 1000 A.D.,’ by Christopher Dawson—a history of another dark age, when the foundations of Europe Were laid in fear and weakness and suffering. “ ‘Reflections on the End of an Era,’ by Reinhold Niebuhr; and two small books by Nicholas ‘The End of Our Time’ and ‘The Fate of Man in the Modern World’—all three with a steadying big grasp of the signs of the times. “ ‘Les Grands Cimetieres sous la Lune,’ by Georges Bemanos—the reflections of a wise, catholic mind on the Spanish tragedy and its wider background. “And finally, the Books of Isaiah and Jeremiah this is very ancient history, but it is the nature of history to be constantly repeating itself. And a story of long ago has the advantage over our present experience in that it has been told to the end and its prophetic principles have been tested by the final issue. Written in times of intense historical crisis, they are the flower of an unconquerable faith."
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Bibliographic details
Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 60, Issue 4232, 17 January 1940, Page 8
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278READING FOR WARTIME Te Awamutu Courier, Volume 60, Issue 4232, 17 January 1940, Page 8
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