DEDICATION
To Baron Von Hammer-Purgstall, Member
of the Aulic Council, Author
of the History of the Ottoman Empire.
Dear Baron,—You have taken
so warm an interest in my long, vast “History
of French Manners in the Nineteenth Century,”
you have given me so much encouragement to persevere
with my work, that you have given me a right to
associate your name with some portion of it.
Are you not one of the most important representatives
of conscientious, studious Germany? Will not
your approval win for me the approval of others,
and protect this attempt of mine? So proud am
I to have gained your good opinion, that I have striven
to deserve it by continuing my labors with the unflagging
courage characteristic of your methods of study,
and of that exhaustive research among documents
without which you could never have given your monumental
work to the world of letters. Your sympathy with
such labor as you yourself have bestowed upon the
most brilliant civilization of the East, has often
sustained my ardor through nights of toil given
to the details of our modern civilization. And
will not you, whose naive kindliness can only be compared
with that of our own La Fontaine, be glad to know
of this?
May this token of my respect for
you and your work find you at
Dobling, dear Baron, and put you and yours in mind
of one of your
most sincere admirers and friends.
DE BALZAC.
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