Excerpt from The North American Review, Vol. 19 Now, though there are not many men capable of origin ating these comprehensive, self inspecting surveys and esti mates, yet, after they are made, there are large numbers who can read them with enjoyment and profit.' It is no small thing to direct a man's attention to himself; yet this is effect ed by the very Sight of a book on the mind. The soul for a moment swells before it with the consciousness of its untried and indefinite powers. The contents of most libraries lead one away from one's self. But take such a work as Cogan on the Passions, - though it is rather a dull book, and the author was not equal to his task, which abler hands might have wrought into a treatise almost unequalled in interest and utility, - we think that any common man, who reads this book, will become wiser, better, greater, and happier, and will particularly be convinced that every one cannot be 'his own intellectual philosopher. Passion, habit, prejudice, wild imagination, unprofitable reverie, wrong directions, and mis taken objects Of thought, all which, by stealing encroachments or violent incursions, may be fast wearing away the charac ter, are liable to be arrested in their progress even by a prosing treatise, which shall subject them to a cool analysis, and make the mind familiar with comprehensive descriptions and classifications of them.
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