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Gleanings in Europe

Chapter 2: PREFACE.
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About This Book

A series of travel letters recounts journeys across France and other European locales, offering vivid descriptions of urban scenes, monuments, and river landscapes. Practical travel notes—routes, accommodations, and episodic inconveniences—are combined with close portraits of social manners, public ceremonies, and domestic arrangements. Comparative reflections recur, contrasting local institutions, languages, and servant customs with those known from home, while acknowledging that different observers perceive the same scenes differently. Commentary on art, architecture, and natural scenery frames personal anecdotes and critical impressions, presented as gleaned observations rather than systematic analysis.

PREFACE.

It may seem to be late in the day, to give an account of the more ordinary characteristics of Europe. But the mass of all nations can form their opinions of others through the medium of testimony only; and as no two travellers see precisely the same things, or, when seen, view them with precisely the same eyes, this is a species of writing, after all, that is not likely to pall, or cease to be useful. The changes, that are constantly going on every where, call for as constant repetitions of the descriptions; and although the pictures may not always be drawn and coloured equally well, so long as they are taken in good faith, they will not be without their value.

It is not a very difficult task to make what is commonly called an amusing book of travels. Any one who will tell, with a reasonable degree of graphic effect, what he has seen, will not fail to carry the reader with him; for the interest we all feel in personal adventure is, of itself, almost success. But it is much more difficult to give an honest and a discriminating summary of what one has seen. The mind so naturally turns to exceptions, that an observer has great need of self-distrust, of the powers of analysis, and, most of all, of a knowledge of the world, to be what the lawyers call a safe witness.

I have no excuse of haste, or of a want of time, to offer for the defects of these volumes. All I ask is that they may be viewed as no more than they profess to be. They are the gleanings of a harvest already gathered, thrown together in a desultory manner and, without the slightest, or at least a very small, pretension to any of those arithmetical and statistical accounts, that properly belong to works of a graver character. They contain the passing remarks of one who has certainly seen something of the world, whether it has been to his advantage or not, who had reasonably good opportunities to examine what he saw, and who is not conscious of being, in the slightest degree, influenced “by fear, favour, or the hope of reward.” His compte rendu must pass for what it is worth.