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OF THE

ROUND TABLE:

OR,

STORIES OF AUNT JANE AND HER FRIENDS.

BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE DIVERSIONS OF HOLLYCOT,'
"CLAN-ALBIN,"
," "ELIZABETH DE BRUCE," &c. &c.

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FIRST SERIES.

EDINBURGH :

PRINTED BY JOHN JOHNSTONE,

FOR OLIVER & BOYD, TWEEDDALE-COURT ;

AND SIMPKIN & MARSHALL, LONDON.

MDCCCXXXII.

195.

INTRODUCTION.

THIS little volume forms the first of a series intended chiefly for youthful readers. It has a slight degree of connexion with a preceding small workTHE DIVERSIONS OF HOLLYCOT, OR THE MOTHER'S ART OF THINKING. Each of the volumes is, however, complete in itself; and they are held together merely by unity of sentiment and design, and by some of the characters introduced into the first little book being further developed as actors or story-tellers at the ROUND TAble.

The Tales and Conversations which form the present volume, are intended for readers of a more advanced age than such as may find amusement and instruction in the Chapters of Hollycot. In some of the stories, to which, for want of any known English name, I affix the title, BIOGRAPHICAL TALES, in adapting the story to my purpose, a slight degree of license is taken with unimportant

facts, though not nearly to the extent allowed in the historical novel. In the Tale of THE THRES WESTMINSTER Boys, it is probable that the acquaintance I assume as existing between two of the school-fellows did not commence till a few years afterwards, when William and Edward were stadents in the Temple. In the Biographical Tale of The Two SCOTTISH WILLIAMS, which is to form part of the volume that appears next in the series, the history of the eminent individuals is strictly adhered to in every important point; and I would fall far short of my aim in conveying an impressive lesson, if the very letter as well as the spirit of the Tale were not in exact consonance with the truth, and if the young reader were not absolutely assured that they were living men, of whom he is told, and that such were their real sentiments, and such their actual doings throughout an illustrious career. It is needless to state how far some of the other Tales, which seem the least probable, are founded on fact. It will be better that they be found useful and interting.

<BURGH, November 1931.

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