Excerpt from The Dawn of the Xixth Century in England, Vol. 1: A Social Sketch of the Times
That Sir Walter Scott, when he called his novel "Waverley; or, 'Tis Sixty Years Since," thought that the time had come, when the generation, then living, should be presented with a page of history, which would bring to their remembrance the manners and customs of their grandfathers, must be my excuse for this book.
For, never, in the world's history, has there been such a change in things social, as since the commencement of the Nineteenth Century; it has been a quiet revolution - a good exemplar of which may be found in the Frontispiece, which is a type of things past, never to be recalled.
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