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The Sir Roger de Coverley Papers

Chapter 2: PREFACE BY THE GENERAL EDITOR
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About This Book

A linked series of essays sketches an affable country squire, his household, and the local society through gentle anecdotes, club-room conversations, and descriptive portraits. The pieces mix light satire with moral reflection, treating manners, hospitality, rural pastimes, visits to the city, and the interplay of tradition and change. Recurring scenes and characters provide continuity while individual papers vary between narrative incident and conversational commentary. The overall tone is urbane and affectionate, inviting readers to observe social customs and human foibles with humour and restraint.

PREFACE BY THE GENERAL EDITOR

This series of books aims, first, to give the English texts required for entrance to college in a form which shall make them clear, interesting, and helpful to those who are beginning the study of literature; and, second, to supply the knowledge which the student needs to pass the entrance examination. For these two reasons it is called The Gateway Series.

The poems, plays, essays, and stories in these small volumes are treated, first of all, as works of literature, which were written to be read and enjoyed, not to be parsed and scanned and pulled to pieces. A short life of the author is given, and a portrait, in order to help the student to know the real person who wrote the book. The introduction tells what it is about, and how it was written, and where the author got the idea, and what it means. The notes at the foot of the page are simply to give the sense of the hard words so that the student can read straight on without turning to a dictionary. The other notes, at the end of the book, explain difficulties and allusions and fine points.

The editors are chosen because of their thorough training and special fitness to deal with the books committed to them, and because they agree with this idea of what a Gateway Series ought to be. They express, in each case, their own views of the books which they edit. Simplicity, thoroughness, shortness, and clearness,—these, we hope, will be the marks of the series.

HENRY VAN DYKE.