Page:The Life and Correspondence of Major-General Sir Isaac Brock - 1847.djvu/7

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

INTRODUCTION

TO THE SECOND EDITION.

��THE first edition of this Memoir was compiled in a very few weeks, amid other avocations, and while attending the sick bed of my father, who died shortly before its completion ; and owing to this want of preparation, as well as to the difficulty of obtaining materials after the lapse of so many years, and at so great a distance from the scene of Sir Isaac Brock s principal labours, I candidly confess that it did not satisfy my own mind. But its publication having happily drawn forth much valuable matter, which in a few years would otherwise have been lost, it will be seen, from a very cursory perusal of this volume, that it is a great improvement on its predecessor, as several errors, topographical and others, arising from the cause just mentioned, have been corrected many additional letters from Sir Isaac Brock are introduced, while a few others to him of little interest are omitted and some new and graphic anecdotes and incidents are interwoven in the course of the narrative.* Part of the new matter may, however, appear to the general reader as uninteresting and superfluous ; but, conceiving that every detail, relat ing to the progress of a colony from its infant state, possesses a local and statistical value, I have thought such data worthy of being preserved. To Colonel

  • The additional matter in this volume amounts to about one-third

of the first edition.

�� �