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Flute and Violin, and Other Kentucky Tales and Romances cover

Flute and Violin, and Other Kentucky Tales and Romances

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A collection of short tales set in rural Kentucky, blending lyrical regional description with intimate vignettes of love, loss, and conscience. The stories portray provincial life through finely observed characters and moments—family ties, social manners, private regrets and small-scale romances—often framed by music, memory, and moral reflection. Language leans toward evocative, ornamental prose, mixing tenderness, irony, and melancholy to illuminate local customs and human longing, moving between comic sketches and poignant meditations on reputation, devotion, and vanished ways of life.

PREFACE.

The opening tale of this collection is taken from Harper's Monthly; the others, from the Century Magazine. By leave of these periodicals they are now published, and of the kindness thus shown the author makes grateful acknowledgment.

While the tales and sketches have been appearing, the authorship of them has now and then been charged to Mr. James Lane Allen, of Chicago, Illinois—pardonably to his discomfiture.

A sense of fitness forbade that the author should send along with each, as it came out, a claim that it was not another's; but he now gladly asks that the responsibility of all his work be placed where it solely belongs.