INTRODUCTION xv my leaving it on the Monday. If you could make it convenient to grant me an audience on either of the days 1 have mentioned, viz., on Saturday, or Sunday, the Ist or 2nd of June, you would very much oblige me, and it will be a further favor if you will have a note lying for me at Mrs. President Blair's, or at my Agent, Mr. Macbean's, 11 Charlotte Square, stating the precise time when you can most conveniently receive me, that I may not be so unfortunate as to call on you unseasonably. With the highest respect, and with very great regard, 1 have the honor to be, dear sir, very truly yours, THOS. DICK LAUDER: To this Sir Walter replied (My DEAR StR,-I am sorry you could for a moment think that in printing rather than publishing Lord Fountainhall's Notes or rather Mr. Milne's, for that honest gentleman had taken the superfluous trouble to rite the whole book anew, I meant to interfere with your valuable and extensive projected work. I mentioned in the advertisement that y ou were engaged in writing the life of Lord Fountainhall, and therefore decUned saying any- thing on the subject, and 1 must add that I always conceived it was his life you meant to publish and not his works. I am very happy you entertain the latter intention, for a great deal of historical matter exists in the manuscript copy of the collection of decisions which has been omitted by the publishers, whose object was only to collect the law reports and who appear in the latter volume entirely to have disregarded all other information. There is also somewhere in the Advocates' Library, but now mis- laid, a very curious letter of Lord Fountainhall on the Revolution, and so very many other remains of his that 1 would fain hope y our work will suffer nothing by my anticipation, whieh I assure you would never have taken place had I conceived those Notes fell within your plan. The fact was that the letter on the Revolution was mislaid and the little l~Ia(nuscript~ having disappeared also, though it was afterwards recovered, it seemed to me worth while to have it put in a printed shape for the sake of preservation, and as only one hundred copies w ere printed, I hope it will rather excite than gratify curiosity on the subject of Lord Fountainhall. 1 expected to see y ou before 1 should have thought of publishing the Letter on the Revolution, and hoped to whet your almost blunted purpose about doing that and some other things yourself. 1 think a selection from the Decisions just on the contrary principle which was naturnlly enough adopted by the former publishers,