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PALGRAVE'S GOLDEN TREASURY

OF SONGS AND LYRICS

BOOK THIRD

Palgrave's Golden Treasury

of Songs and Lyrics

Book Third

(Eighteenth Century)

Edited with Notes

By

J. H. Fowler, M.A.

Assistant Master at Clifton College

London

Macmillan and Co., Limited

New York: The Macmillan Company

1903

All rights reserved

9

HARVARD

COLLEGE

NOV 18 1904

LIBRARY.

Shapleigh fund

First Edition, February, 1903.
Reprinted November, 1903.

GLASGOW: PRINTED AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS BY

ROBERT MACLEHOSE AND CO.

EDITOR'S PREFACE

FROM the beginnings of civilisation the poets have been the best of educators; and the need for the kind of education which poetry alone can give does not grow less as knowledge advances and the claims of other studies threaten more and more to absorb attention. No apology is required, therefore, for turning to school use the best collection that has been made, or is likely to be made, of the English and Scottish lyric poetry of the eighteenth century.

Some defence, however, may be looked for from the commentator who has the presumption to seem to stand between the poets and their reader. Perhaps he would be thought to quibble if he met the charge with a denial of the fact, and urged that, in literal truth, he comes in these pages after the poets and not before them. Such is, indeed, the place he wishes to occupy: to be read after the poems, and in no case until the poem commented upon has been read with care and intelligence.

If this defence be insufficient, he can only repeat what he has said already in the similar edition of Book Fourth; that he does, here in his Preface, honestly 66 warn the student that the text is the one thing of importance,

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