"Freaks of Fortune" is the fourth of the serial stories
published in "Our Boys and Girls." It was written in
response to a great number of calls for a sequel to "The Starry
Flag." The author was pleased to learn that Levi Fairfield had made so
pleasant an impression upon his young friends, and the gratifying reception
extended to him in the present story, as it appeared in the Magazine, was quite
as flattering to the writer as to Levi himself. When a good boy, like the hero
of "The Starry Flag," is regarded with so much kindly interest by our boys and
girls, it is convincing evidence that they have the capacity to appreciate noble
conduct, daring deeds, and a true life.
The author is not disposed to apologize for the "exciting" elementas some have
been pleased to denominate itof this and others of his stories. If goodness and
truth have been cast down, if vice and sin have been raised up, in the story, an
explanation would not, and ought not to, atone for the crime. The writer
degrades no saints, he canonizes no villains. He believes that his young friends
admire and love the youthful heroes of the story because they are good and true,
because they are noble and self-sacrificing, and because they are generous and
courageous, and not merely because they engage in stirring adventures. Exciting
the youthful mind in the right direction is one thing; exciting it in the wrong
direction is quite another thing.
Once more it becomes the writer's pleasant duty to acknowledge the kindness of
his young friends, as well as of very many parents and guardians, who have so
often and so freely expressed their approbation of his efforts to please his
readers. He has been continually cheered by their kind letters, and by their
constant favor, however manifested; and he cannot help wondering that one who
deserves so little should receive so much.
William T. Adams.
Harrison Square, Mass.,
July 27, 1868.