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Nos hæc novimus esse nihil.-MART. Ep. x, 2.

FALL RIVER:

WILLIAM CANFIELD & COMPANY.

MDCCCXXXVIII.

AL752.8.15

HARVARD

COLLEGE

OCT 1916

LIBRARY

Entered according to Act of Congress of the United States of America, by

WILLIAM CANFIELD & COMPANY,

In the Clerk's office of the District of Massachusetts.

PATRIOT PRESS,

FALL RIVER.

ΤΟ

THOMAS ANDROS, A. M.,

LATE MINISTER TO THE CONGREGATIONAL SOCIETY,

BERKLEY, MASS.

THE endearing relation of parent and child has its foundation in the very nature of human existence. Art can neither increase, nor fashion diminish it. All mankind are entitled to our respect: a parent to our highest gratitude-our warmest regards. The guardian of my infancy; the conductor of my childhood, and the adviser of my riper years has unequaled claims to my affection.

To the Parent and the Patriot, as a slight, but unaffected testimony of regard, gratitude and affection, these pages are humbly inscribed by his son, THE AUTHOR.

PREFACE.

THE author of the following pages is not, perhaps, the first who has been dragged before the public against his own will. It is often the misfortune of those least desirous of being known beyond the circle of their immediate associates, to find some kind friends ready to kick them into notoriety, without duly considering the consequences of an act, which, while it affects themselves but remotely, not unfrequently does an irreparable injury to the unfortunate objects of their solicitude. Whether such a fate awaits the author, in the present instance, remains to be seen.

Several weeks ago it was announced by the publishers, Messrs. Canfield, & Co., that a volume of my poetical effusions, scattered through the columns of the periodical press, would be collected and given to the public in the course of the present year. To this I could only offer a respectful remonstrance, since such of my productions as had been printed, became, by that act, public property, and were at the service of any who might be unwise enough to hazard their re-publication in a form more permanent and expensive. The die, however, was cast; the publishers were not to be driven from their determination, and it became necessary on my part, that the whole selection, originally hastily written, should be reexamined and corrected before again claiming a portion of public attention. In the execution of this task, if occasionally I have found something to approve, I have certainly found much to condemn; and instead of always seeking to amend, I have not unfrequently indulged in the bolder process of free expunction. This course necessarily

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