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<h1>Mr. MUNCHAUSEN</h1>
<p><span id="author">by JOHN KENDRICK BANGS</span></p>
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<h2>EDITOR’S APOLOGY<br/> <em>and</em><br/> DEDICATION</h2>
<p class="first_paragraph"><span class="first_word">In</span> order that there may be no misunderstanding
as to the why and the wherefore of this collection
of tales it appears to me to be desirable that I
should at the outset state my reasons for acting as
the medium between the spirit of the late Baron
Munchausen and the reading public. In common
with a large number of other great men in history
Baron Munchausen has suffered because he is not
understood. I have observed with wondering surprise
the steady and constant growth of the idea
that Baron Munchausen was not a man of truth;
that his statements of fact were untrustworthy, and
that as a realist he had no standing whatsoever.
Just how this misconception of the man’s character
has arisen it would be difficult to say. Surely in
his published writings he shows that same lofty resolve
to be true to life as he has seen it that characterises
the work of some of the high Apostles of
Realism, who are writing of the things that will
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="pageviii" title="viii"> </SPAN>teach future generations how we of to-day ordered
our goings-on. The note of veracity in Baron Munchausen’s
early literary venturings rings as clear
and as true certainly as the similar note in the
charming studies of Manx Realism that have come
to us of late years from the pen of Mr. Corridor
Walkingstick, of Gloomster Abbey and London. We
all remember the glow of satisfaction with which we
read Mr. Walkingstick’s great story of the love of
the clergyman, John Stress, for the charming little
heroine, Glory Partridge. Here was something at
last that rang true. The picture was painted in the
boldest of colours, and, regardless of consequences
to himself, Mr. Walkingstick dared to be real when
he might have given rein to his imagination. Mr.
Walkingstick was, thereupon, lifted up by popular
favour to the level of an apostle—nay, he even admitted
the soft impeachment—and now as a moral
teacher he is without a rival in the world of literature.
Yet the same age that accepts this man as a
moral teacher, rejects Baron Munchausen, who, in
different manner perhaps, presented to the world
as true and life-like a picture of the conditions of
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="pageix" title="ix"> </SPAN>his day as that given to us by Mr. Walkingstick in
his deservedly popular romance, “Episcopalians I
have Met.” Of course, I do not claim that Baron
Munchausen’s stories in bulk or in specified instances,
have the literary vigour that is so marked
a quality of the latter-day writer, but the point I
do wish to urge is that to accept the one as a veracious
chronicler of his time and to reject the other
as one who indulges his pen in all sorts of grotesque
vagaries, without proper regard for the facts, is a
great injustice to the man of other times. The question
arises, <em>why</em> is this? How has this wrong upon
the worthy realist of the eighteenth century been
perpetrated? Is it an intentional or an unwitting
wrong? I prefer to believe that it is based upon
ignorance of the Baron’s true quality, due to the
fact that his works are rarely to be found within
the reach of the public: in some cases, because of
the failure of librarians to comprehend his real motives,
his narratives are excluded from Public and
Sunday-School libraries; and because of their extreme
age, they are not easily again brought into
vogue. I have, therefore, accepted the office of intermediary
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="pagex" title="x"> </SPAN>between the Baron and the readers of
the present day, in order that his later work, which,
while it shows to a marked degree the decadence of
his literary powers, may yet serve to demonstrate
to the readers of my own time how favourably he
compares with some of the literary idols of to-day,
in the simple matter of fidelity to fact. If these
stories which follow shall serve to rehabilitate
Baron Munchausen as a lover and practitioner of
the arts of Truth, I shall not have made the sacrifice
of my time in vain. If they fail of this purpose
I shall still have the satisfaction of knowing that I
have tried to render a service to an honest and defenceless
man.</p>
<p>Meanwhile I dedicate this volume, with sentiments
of the highest regard, to that other great
realist<br/>
<span class="dedication">MR. CORRIDOR WALKINGSTICK<br/>
<em>of</em><br/>
GLOOMSTER ABBEY</span></p>
<p class="signature">J. K. B.</p>
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