"That is a good book which is opened with expectation, and closed with delight and profit"
About this Quote
Alcott draws a bright, almost moral line through the mess of literary taste: a good book must deliver on a reader's hope, then send them away changed. The phrasing is deceptively plain. "Opened with expectation" admits that reading begins as a wager, not a duty. You pick up a book because you anticipate something: pleasure, insight, a spark. Alcott validates that hunger instead of scolding it, which matters coming from a 19th-century educator often associated with reform and discipline.
The second half tightens the standard. "Closed with delight and profit" pairs the sensual with the utilitarian, refusing to choose between them. Delight is immediate, bodily, even a little suspicious in puritan-inflected New England. Profit is the Victorian word for what we now call value: a return on attention. Put together, they make a thesis about education that doubles as a critique of schooling. If the classroom turns books into chores, it kills expectation; if it treats reading as mere entertainment, it loses profit. Alcott wants both, and he wants them sequentially: hook the heart, then justify the time.
The subtext is a defense of the reader as an active partner. A book isn't "good" because it carries the right moral freight or sits on the right shelf; it's good because it creates a lived experience with residue. In an era of common-school debates and transcendentalist optimism about self-culture, Alcott is arguing that real learning feels like desire fulfilled, not obedience performed.
The second half tightens the standard. "Closed with delight and profit" pairs the sensual with the utilitarian, refusing to choose between them. Delight is immediate, bodily, even a little suspicious in puritan-inflected New England. Profit is the Victorian word for what we now call value: a return on attention. Put together, they make a thesis about education that doubles as a critique of schooling. If the classroom turns books into chores, it kills expectation; if it treats reading as mere entertainment, it loses profit. Alcott wants both, and he wants them sequentially: hook the heart, then justify the time.
The subtext is a defense of the reader as an active partner. A book isn't "good" because it carries the right moral freight or sits on the right shelf; it's good because it creates a lived experience with residue. In an era of common-school debates and transcendentalist optimism about self-culture, Alcott is arguing that real learning feels like desire fulfilled, not obedience performed.
Quote Details
| Topic | Book |
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