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Excerpt from The Fawn of Spring-Vale, Vol. 1 of 3: The Clarionet, and Other Tales
I know it may, and probably will, be Objected to me, that the plan of the tale is borrowed from Wordsworth. In justice to myself, however, I am bound to say that the Clarionet was within a few pages of its conclusion when the matter was pointed out to me and I need scarcely inform my readers, that I felt the moment in which I disco~ vered myself thinking in a manner analogous to that great man to be one of the proudest and hap piest-of my life.
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