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THE "LABYRINTH OF THE WORLD"

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volume to give even a slight account of the 142 works ^ of Komensk^. Such a book would hardly have much The enormous total includes prayergeneral interest. books, lists of regulations for the Unity, mere schoolbooks, sermons, works on natural history that long since have become valueless, and so on. These lists, however, which include only books that are still in existence, do not comprise the entire fruits of the literary activity of " Several " pansophic works that are enuKomensk;^. merated in a table of contents, to which I have already referred, are no longer in existence, and were probably destroyed when the town of Lissa was burnt down. While at Fulneck, Komensk^ was already busy writing works on grammar as well as a Bohemian translation of the Psalms. The melancholy events of the year 1621, when he lost his wife and his home at Fulneck and began his many wanderings, inspired him to write several religious books, all bearing witness to the deep depression of the author. Such works are the Help for the Soul, The Impregnable Castle, which is the Name of the Lord, The Dismal Complaint of a Christian, The Centre of All these writings are in BoheSecurity, and others. mian, as also is the far better known Labyrinth, which Komensk^ wrote at Brandeis-on-the-Adler shortly after his arrival there, and dedicated to his patron, Lord Charles of Zerotin. The Labyrinth of the World, perhaps one of the best allegorical narratives that has ever been written, professes the same pessimism, combined with a fervent belief in the revelations of the Christian faith, ' According to Dr. Kvacsala's calculation. Dr. Zoubek only enumerates 137 The difference is caused by the uncertainty whether certain re-written books. books, sometimes republished in a different name, should be counted twice. Mr. Keatinge's book contains a list of 127 books of Komensk^.

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