The Story of the House of Cassell
Sketch." In 1864 he published the first volume of "English Writers," an account of the writers before Chaucer, with an introductory sketch of the Four Periods of English Literature. This was presently divided into half-volumes, and followed, in 1867, by a third half-volume, which brought the story down to the invention of printing. As at this time large annual additions to the knowledge of our early literature were being made, Morley decided to suspend his magnum opus until the results should become available, and it was not until 1887 that he returned to his task, having, as he characteristically says, learnt in the twenty intervening years of study that he knew "less and less." The new work was so laid out as not to exceed twenty volumes, since "no labourer plans in his afternoon for a long day's work before nightfall." His hope was that, issued in crown octavo half-yearly volumes of about 350 pages each, the work would go on steadily to its close, but the end of his active and fruitful life came when he was engaged upon the eleventh volume. Just a fortnight before his death he had written to Mr. Hutchings, who had editorial charge of the work, a letter whimsically describing his state of health and his hopes for the future of his task:
"Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight.
"1st May, 1894.
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