
(1866)To JOHN FORSTERIn acknowledgment of the services which he has rendered to the cause of literature by his "Life of Goldsmith;" and in affectionate remembrance of a friendship which is associated with some of the happiest years of my life.Readers in general--on whose friendly reception experience has	given me some reason to rely--will, I venture to hope, appreciate	whatever merit there may be in this story without any prefatory	pleading for it on my part. They will, I think, see that it has	not been hastily meditated or idly wrought out. They will judge	it accordingly, and I ask no more.		Readers in particular will, I have some reason to suppose, be	here and there disturbed, perhaps even offended, by finding that	"Armadale" oversteps, in more than one direction, the narrow	limits within which they are disposed to restrict the development	of modern fiction--if they can.		Nothing that I could say to these persons here would help me with	them as Time will help me if my work lasts. I am not afraid of my	design being permanently misunderstood, provided the execution	has done it any sort of justice. Estimated by the clap-trap	morality of the present day, this may be a very daring book.	Judged by the Christian morality which is of all time, it is only	a book that is daring enough to speak the truth.		LONDON, April, 1866.