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PREFACE.
David Crockett certainly was not a model man. But he was a representative
man. He was conspicuously one of a very numerous class, still existing, and
which has heretofore exerted a very powerful influence over this republic. As
such, his wild and wondrous life is worthy of the study of every patriot. Of
this class, their modes of life and habits of thought, the majority of our
citizens know as little as they do of the manners and customs of the Comanche
Indians.
No man can make his name known to the forty millions of this great and busy
republic who has not something very remarkable in his character or his career.
But there is probably not an adult American, in all these widespread States, who
has not heard of David Crockett. His life is a veritable romance, with the
additional charm of unquestionable truth. It opens to the reader scenes in the
lives of the lowly, and a state of semi-civilization, of which but few of them
can have the faintest idea.
It has not been my object, in this narrative, to defend Colonel Crockett or to
condemn him, but to present his peculiar character exactly as it was. I have
therefore been constrained to insert some things which I would gladly have
omitted.
JOHN S. C. ABBOTT.
FAIR HAVEN, CONN.
Chapter 1
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