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    Introduction

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    Page 1 of 66
    ADVERTISEMENT TO THE FIRST EDITION

    When the Editor of the following volumes published, about two years
    since, the work called the "Antiquary," he announced that he was, for the
    last time, intruding upon the public in his present capacity. He might
    shelter himself under the plea that every anonymous writer is, like the
    celebrated Junius, only a phantom, and that therefore, although an
    apparition, of a more benign, as well as much meaner description, he
    cannot be bound to plead to a charge of inconsistency. A better apology
    may be found in the imitating the confession of honest Benedict, that,
    when he said he would die a bachelor, he did not think he should live to
    be married. The best of all would be, if, as has eminently happened in
    the case of some distinguished contemporaries, the merit of the work
    should, in the reader's estimation, form an excuse for the Author's
    breach of promise. Without presuming to hope that this may prove the
    case, it is only further necessary to mention, that his resolution, like
    that of Benedict, fell a sacrifice, to temptation at least, if not to
    stratagem.

    It is now about six months since the Author, through the medium of his
    respectable Publishers, received a parcel of Papers, containing the
    Outlines of this narrative, with a permission, or rather with a request,
    couched in highly flattering terms, that they might be given to the
    Public, with such alterations as should be found suitable.*

    * As it maybe necessary, in the present Edition(1829), to speak upon the
    square, the Author thinks it proper to own, that the communication
    alluded to is entirely imaginary.

    These were of course so numerous, that, besides the suppression of names,
    and of incidents approaching too much to reality, the work may in a great
    measure be, said to be new written. Several anachronisms have probably
    crept in during the course of these changes; and the mottoes for the
    Chapters have been selected without any reference to the supposed date of
    the incidents. For these, of course, the Editor is responsible. Some
    others occurred in the original materials, but they are of little
    consequence. In point of minute accuracy, it may be stated, that the
    bridge over the Forth, or rather the Avondhu (or Black River), near the
    hamlet of Aberfoil, had not an existence thirty years ago. It does not,
    however, become the Editor to be the first to point out these errors; and

    he takes this public opportunity to thank the unknown and nameless
    correspondent, to whom the reader will owe the principal share of any
    amusement which he may derive from the following pages.

    1st December 1817.

    INTRODUCTION---(1829)

    When the author projected this further encroachment on the patience of an
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