![]() ![]() This is the introduction of the public to some parts of the fortress at present closed to them. One important object the Author would fain hope his labours may achieve. How far this design has been accomplished-what interest has been given to particular buildings-and what mouldering walls have been informed with life-is now to be determined:-unless, indeed, it may be considered determined by the numbers who have visited the different buildings, as they have been successively depicted by pen and pencil, during the periodical appearance of the work. ![]() IT HAS BEEN, FOR YEARS, the cherished wish of the writer of the following pages, to make the Tower of London-the proudest monument of antiquity, considered with reference to its historical associations, which this country or any other possesses,-the groundwork of a Romance and it was no slight satisfaction to him, that circumstances, at length, enabled him to carry into effect his favourite project, in conjunction with the inimitable Artist, whose designs accompany the work.ĭesirous of exhibiting the Tower in its triple light of a palace, a prison, and a fortress, the Author has shaped his story with reference to that end and he has also endeavoured to contrive such a series of incidents as should naturally introduce every relic of the old pile,-its towers, chapels, halls, chambers, gateways, arches, and drawbridges-so that no part of it should remain un-illustrated. ![]()
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