Eugene Aram - 1891 Author:Edward Bulwer Lytton Lytton Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: PREFACE THE EDITION OF 1831. Since, dear Header, I last addressed thee, in Paih, Clifford, nearly two years have elapsed, and somewhat more than four years... more » since, in Pelham, our familiarity first began. The Tale which I now submit to thee differs equally from the last as from the first of those works; for, of the two evils, perhaps it is even better to disappoint thee in a new style, than to weary thee with an old. With the facts on which the tale of Eugene Aeam is founded, I have exercised the common and fair license of writers of fiction: it is chiefly the more homely parts of the raal story that have been altered; and for what I have added, and what omitted, I have the sanction of all established authorities, who have taken greater liberties with characters yet more recent, and far more protected by historical recollections. The book was, for the most part, written in the early part of the year, when the interest which the task created in the Author was undivided by other subjects of excitement, and he had leisure enough not ouly to chapter{Section 4X ft EF ACE TO THE EDITION OP 1831. oe nescio quid meditans nugarum, but also to be totus in illis! I originally intended to adapt the story of Eugene Aram to the Stage. That design was abandoned when more than half completed ; but I wished to impart to this Romance something of the nature of Tragedy, — something of the more transferable of its qualities. Enough of this : it is not the Author's wishes, but the Author's books that the world will judge him by. Perhaps, then (with this I conclude), in the dull monotony of public affairs, and in these long winter evenings, when we gather round the fire, prepared for the gossip's tale, willing to indulge the fear, and to believe the legend, perhaps, dear Header, thou raaye...« less