Page:A protest against the extension of railways in the Lake District - Somervell (1876).djvu/9

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PREFACE.


The evidence collected in the following pages, in support of their pleading, is so complete; and the summary of his cause given with so temperate mastery by Mr. Somervell, that I find nothing to add in circumstance, and little to reinforce in argument. And I have less heart to the writing even of what brief preface so good work might by its author's courtesy be permitted to receive from me, occupied as I so long have been, in efforts tending in the same direction, because, on that very account, I am far less interested than my friend in this local and limited resistance to the elsewhere fatally victorious current of modern folly, cruelty, and ruin. When the frenzy of avarice is daily drowning our sailors, suffocating our miners, poisoning our children, and blasting the cultivable surface of England into a treeless waste of ashes,[1]—what does it really matter whether

  1. See,—the illustration being coincidently given as I correct this page for press—the description of the horrible service, and history of the fatal explosion of Dynamite, on the once lovely estates of the Duke of Hamilton, in the 'Hamilton Advertiser' of 10th and 17th June.