A young soldier goes to Scotland to shoot birds and falls unwisely in love.
Laurence William Lockhart (1831-1882), was an army officer (he was present at the siege of Sebastopol) and newspaper correspondent (he was nearly executed during the Franco-Prussian War) as well as the author of three novels, of which this is the second. Despite a slow start, and aside from a couple of overdrawn caricatures, it has vivid characters and an excellent plot.
“Just as we are usually better pleased by a painter who gives us a faithful view of some place well known to us . . . than by one who represents wonderful scenes with which we are not familiar, so is it with the story-teller: and thus a novel like the present, the incidents of which involve what is more or less the only form wherein romance presents itself in the lives of ordinary people, pleases far more than the productions of the criminal school, which appeal to the experiences of (fortunately) a very limited portion of the public.” Athenaeum, November 18, 1871
“Next to the masterpieces that are apparently things of the past, we like the clever novel that grows on one”; Lockhart “shows power in the numberless little touches that lighten love scenes and descriptions; in slight liftings of the corner of the veil that hides the future from us; in felicitous ways of putting things.” Saturday Review, January 20, 1872
“Fair to See is so pleasant a novel to read that one does not care to ask too curiously whether it is written according to the rules of art.” Spectator, March 23, 1872
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v.1 https://archive.org/details/fairtoseenovel01lock