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Aristocracy in America. From the sketch-book of a German nobleman. vol. 1 (of 2) cover

Aristocracy in America. From the sketch-book of a German nobleman. vol. 1 (of 2)

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A sequence of satirical sketches and travel observations that scrutinize the rise of social distinction within American society. Framed as the notes of a European nobleman and arranged by an editor, it records encounters with pretentious elites and fashionable circles, offering character studies, anecdotal scenes, and ironical reflection. The book contrasts civic republican institutions with emerging tastes for rank and ceremony, traces social foibles to inherited manners, and aims to expose vanity and self-interest as threats to public virtue. Its tone mixes didactic critique and humorous portraiture to urge reform of manners rather than institutions.

PREFACE.


I herewith submit to the British Public a work principally intended for the benefit of the American. Both people, however, are so intimately connected by the ties of friendship and consanguinity, and so many errors and faults of the Americans—as, indeed, most of their virtues—are so clearly and distinctly to be traced to their British origin, that the perusal of the following pages may, perhaps, be not altogether uninteresting to the readers of both countries.

As individuals may study their own character by carefully examining and observing that of their fellow-creatures,—for it is only in comparing ourselves with others that we become acquainted with ourselves,—so may a correct knowledge of one nation, and the tendencies of its institutions, enable another to form a proper estimate of itself, and to set a right value on its own laws and government.

Such is the object of the following publication; the Public must decide whether it has been attained.

THE EDITOR.

London, May 10th, 1839.