________________________________________________
			      
			 _ TO
 MY ANCIENT PLAYMATES IN APPIAN
 WAY CAMBRIDGE THIS LIKELY
 STORY IS DEDICATED FOR REASONS
 BEST KNOWN TO THEMSELVES
 
 When Betsinda held the Rose
 And the Ring decked Giglio's finger
 Thackeray! 'twas sport to linger
 With thy wise, gay-hearted prose.
 Books were merry, goodness knows!
 When Betsinda held the Rose.
 Who but foggy drudglings doze
 While Rob Gilpin toasts thy witches,
 While the Ghost waylays thy breeches,
 Ingoldsby? Such tales as those
 Exorcised our peevish woes
 When Betsinda held the Rose.
 Realism, thou specious pose!
 Haply it is good we met thee;
 But, passed by, we'll scarce regret thee;
 For we love the light that glows
 Where Queen Fancy's pageant goes,
 And Betsinda holds the Rose.
 Shall we dare it? Then let's close
 Doors to-night on things statistic,
 Seek the hearth in circle mystic,
 Till the conjured fire-light shows
 Where Youth's bubbling Fountain flows,
 And Betsinda holds the Rose.
 
 PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION
We two--the author and his illustrator--did not know what we had done until the newspapers told us. But the press has explained it in the following poised and consistent criticism:
 "Too many suggestions of profanity."
 --_Congregationalist_, Boston, 8 Dec. '92.
 "It ought to be the delight of the nursery."
 --_National Tribune_, Washington, 22 Dec. '92.
 "Grotesque and horrible."
 --_Zion's Herald_, Boston, 21 Dec. '92.
 "Some excellent moral lessons."
 --_Citizen_, Brooklyn, 27 Nov. '92.
 "If it has any lesson to teach, we have been unable to find it."
 --_Independent_, New York, 10 Nov. '92.
 "The story is a familiar one."
 --_Detroit Free Press_, 28 Nov. '92.
 "Refreshingly novel."
 --_Cincinnati Commercial Gazette_, 17 Dec. '92.
 "It is a burlesque."
 --_Atlantic Monthly_, Dec. '92.
 "All those who love lessons drawn from life will enjoy this
 book."
 --_Christian Advocate_, Cincinnati, 2 Nov. '92.
 "The style of this production is difficult to define."
 --_Court Journal_, London, 26 Nov. '92.
 "One wonders why writer and artist should put so much
 labor on a production which seems to have so little reason
 for existence."
 --_Herald and Presbyterian_, Cincinnati.
Now the public knows exactly what sort of book this is, and we cannot be held responsible. _ 
                 
               Read next: Chapter 1. How Sir Godfrey came to lose his Temper
               
               Table of content of Dragon of Wantley
               
		 
               
               GO TO TOP OF SCREEN
               
               Post your review
Your review will be placed after the table of content of this book