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<title level="a" TEIform="title">Preface</title>
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<name reg="Fraser, William" date="1796-1854" place="UK" TEIform="name"> W. F.</name>
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<title level="m" type="main" TEIform="title">The Bijou; </title>
<title level="m" type="subordinate" TEIform="title">or Annual of Literature and the Arts</title>
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<name reg="Fraser, William" date="1796-1854" place="UK" TEIform="name">William Fraser</name>
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<pubPlace TEIform="pubPlace">London</pubPlace>
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<name reg="Pickering, William" date="1796-1854" place="UK" TEIform="name">William Pickering</name>
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<p TEIform="p">The few observations which are necessary to be prefixed to this volume, will
                    contain little more than acknowledgements to the distinguished literary
                    characters, and eminent artists whose respective productions adorn its pages; as
                    it is on those productions the Publisher rests his hopes that it will be deemed
                    entitled to an elevated station among the Annual publications, not of this
                    country only, but of Europe.  Far from wishing, however, to institute invidious
                    comparisons, he only assets for it an equal claim to the notice and patronage of
                    the public; for whether with respect to its graphic illustrations, or its
                    literary merits, he feels assured that it will not be found inferior to any,
                    even if it does not excel most, of its contemporaries.</p>
<p TEIform="p">To describe the Editor's obligations to this various friends in adequate terms
                    would require space infinitely beyond that to which a preface is necessarily
                    limited; but in briefly expressing his gratitude to the celebrated characters
                    who have cheerfully afforded him the assistance of their talents, he will not
                    only perform a grateful duty, but at the same time tacitly urge the pretensions
                    which he considers "THE BIJOU" to possess to public favor.</p>
<p TEIform="p">To sir Walter Scott the proprietors and himself are indebted for the interesting
                    letter explanatory of the picture of his family, with an engraving of which,
                    through the liberality of its possessor Sir Adam Ferguson, and the painter Mr.
                    Wilkie, they have been able to enrich the Work.  Nor is it too much to expect
                    that if every other recommendation were wanting, that plate, and still more the
                    description by which it is accompanied would prove irresistable attractions to
                    the world; for who can be indifferent to so pleasing a memorial of a writer to
                    whose merits England, Europe, nay, the whole civilized world, has offered its
                    homage and its praise.  Conspicuous as that letter is among the literary
                    beauties of these sheets,--and to it may be attributed an interest as unfading
                    as the reputation of its writer&#8212;almost all the popular authors of the day have
                    contributed one or more scintillations of their genius; and it is with feelings
                    of pride, admiration, and gratitude, that the Editor and Proprietors offer their
                    warmest acknowledgements to John Gibson Lockhart, Esq.,<note n="1" place="foot" resp="Bijou Editor, William Fraser" anchored="yes" TEIform="note">[Note to Preface:] A few stanzas of the
                        Ballad by Mr. Lockhart were printed in the &#8220;Janus&#8221; for 1826. It is so
                        considerably improved and enlarged, the translation being now complete, as
                        to assume a new character. [Bijou Editor, William Fraser.] <ref target="N1" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">BACK.</ref>
</note>
<anchor id="N1" TEIform="anchor"/>Mrs. Hemans, Sir Egerton Brydges, Bart.; Sir Thomas Elmsley
                    Croft, Bart.; the Rev. Blanco White; Barry Cornwall; <pb n="vii" TEIform="pb"/>L. E. L.; Miss Mitford; 
                    Mrs. Pickersgill; Miss Roberts; the writer of the &#8220;Diary of an Ennuyée;&#8221; R. P.
                    Gillies, Esq.;<note n="2" place="foot" resp="Bijou Editor, William Fraser" anchored="yes" TEIform="note">[Note
                        to Preface:] Mr. Gillies beautiful Poem called &#8220;The seventh Day,&#8221; is, for
                        want of space, reserved for the next volume. [Bijou Editor, William Fraser.]
                            <ref target="N2" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">BACK</ref>
</note>
<anchor id="N2" TEIform="anchor"/>J. Montgomery, Esq.; the Rev. W. Lisle Bowles; the author of
                    &#8220;The Subaltern;&#8221; Delta; Horace Smith, Esq.; Charles Lamb, Esq.; the Ettrick
                    Shepherd; Allan Cunningham, Esq.; N. T. Carrington,Esq [<emph TEIform="emph">sic</emph>]; and
                    to the other contributors.</p>
<p TEIform="p">In expressing the Editor's thanks in a separate paragraph to S. T. Coleridge,
                    Esq.' It must not be supposed that his obligations are the less  important to
                    those whose names have just been mentioned; but where a favor has been conferred
                    in a peculiar manner, it at least demands that it should be peculiarly
                    acknowledged.  Mr. Coleridge, in the most liberal manner, permitted the Editor
                    to select what he pleased from all his unpublished MSS., and it will be seen
                    from the &#8220;Wanderings of Cain,&#8221; though unfinished, and the other pieces bearing
                    that Gentleman's name, that whenever he may favour the world with a perfect
                    collection of his writings he will adduce new and powerful claims upon its
                    respect.</p>
<p TEIform="p">In another, but no less important department of talent, the Proprietors have yet
                    to pay their debt of gratitude.  From the invaluable favours he has conferred
                    upon the work, the first among those claimants is he, who is the first in
                    professional reputation, in liberality, and in all which characterises a
                    Gentle-<pb n="viii" TEIform="pb"/>man, Sir Thomas Lawrence, the President of the Royal Academy, who has
                    bestowed on it three of his unrivalled productions; and which, it is needless to
                    say, are of themselves sufficient to place "THE BIJOU" in the
                    foremost rank of the embellished publications of Europe.</p>
<p TEIform="p">To H. W. Pickersgill, Esq. R. A. the Proprietors are deeply indebted for the
                    gratuitous use of his beautiful picture &#8220;The Oriental Love-Letter,&#8221; in the
                    Council Room of the Royal Academy; and which derives considerable interest from
                    the elegant illustration by which it is accompanied from the pen of his
                    accomplished wife.  To Mr. W. H. Worthington the Proprietors are grateful for
                    the loan of his painting "The Suitors Rejected."</p>
<p TEIform="p">In consequence of a resemblance between the principal incident in the Tale of
                    HALLORAN THE PEDLAR and the catastrophe described in a recent publication of
                    deserved popularity, both evidently referring to the same historical fact, it is
                    necessary, in order to prevent the suspicion of plagiarism, to state that the
                    Tale of Halloran was written, and in the hands of the publisher, long previously
                    to the appearance of the Novel where a similar circumstance is related.  Many
                    most valuable papers, nearly sufficient to form another volume, remain in the
                    Editor's possession; for the obvious reason of superabundance of matter, it was
                    impossible to insert them in the present work.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Amidst other literary curiosities, two will be found which derive their chief
                    attraction from the illustrious rank and eminent virtues of their authors: 
                    these are, a translation of the celebrated Epistle of Servius Sulpicius to M. T.
                    Cicero, by his present Majesty; and of Cicero's Epistle to Servius Sulpicius, by
                    the lamented Duke of York, both written as exercises at a very early age.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The selection of Graphic Illustrations was made by Mr. Robert Balmanno, Secretary
                    of the Artists' Fund, and the Publisher.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Whether THE BIJOU be worthy of its name, and how far the proprietors have
                    redeemed the claim pledged in their prospectus, must be left to the public to
                    determine.  It has been their unceasing endeavour to concentrate specimens of
                    the varied talent, both in literature and art, for which this country is
                    renowned; to allow the powers of the pencil, and the connotations of the mind,
                    mutually to relieve and and adorn each other, where</p>
<p TEIform="p">And as no trouble has been considered too laborious, no expense too great to
                    accomplish this object, they submit the result of their exertions with
                    confidence unalloyed by presumption, but not unmixed with hope.</p>
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