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    Preface

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    The history of the borders is filled with legends of the sufferings of
    isolated families, during the troubled scenes of colonial warfare.
    Those which we now offer to the reader, are distinctive in many of
    their leading facts, if not rigidly true in the details. The first
    alone is necessary to the legitimate objects of fiction.

    One of the misfortunes of a nation, is to hear little besides its own
    praises. Although the American revolution was probably as just an
    effort as was ever made by a people to resist the first inroads of
    oppression, the cause had its evil aspects, as well as all other human
    struggles. We have been so much accustomed to hear everything extolled,
    of late years, that could be dragged into the remotest connection with
    that great event, and the principles which led to it, that there is
    danger of overlooking truth, in a pseudo patriotism. Nothing is really
    patriotic, however, that is not strictly true and just; any more than
    it is paternal love to undermine the constitution of a child by an
    indiscriminate indulgence in pernicious diet. That there were
    demagogues in 1776, is as certain as that there are demagogues in 1843,
    and will probably continue to be demagogues as long as means for
    misleading the common mind shall exist.

    A great deal of undigested morality is uttered to the world, under the
    disguise of a pretended public virtue. In the eye of reason, the man
    who deliberately and voluntarily contracts civil engagements is more
    strictly bound to their fulfilment, than he whose whole obligations
    consist of an accident over which he had not the smallest control, that
    of birth; though the very reverse of this is usually maintained under
    the influence of popular prejudice. The reader will probably discover
    how we view this master, in the course of our narrative.

    Perhaps this story is obnoxious to the charge of a slight anachronism,
    in representing the activity of the Indians a year earlier than any
    were actually employed in the struggle of 1775. During the century of
    warfare that existed between the English and French colonies, the
    savage tribes were important agents in furthering the views of the
    respective belligerents. The war was on the frontiers, and these fierce
    savages were, in a measure, necessary to the management of hostilities
    that invaded their own villages and hunting-grounds. In 1775, the enemy

    came from the side of the Atlantic, and it was only after the struggle
    had acquired force, that the operations of the interior rendered the
    services of such allies desirable. In other respects, without
    pretending to refer to any real events, the incidents of this tale are
    believed to be sufficiently historical for all the legitimate purposes
    of fiction.

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