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per was greeted, before its appearance, by such favourable prognostics. _Your_ idea, Mr. Editor, was received with universal applause; and Mr. FREDERIK MULLER, by whom "DE NAVORSCHER" will be published, is not only a celebrated bookseller, but also one of our most learned _bookmen_. Ready to promote by every means in our power the friendly intercourse between your country and our fatherland, we desire of you to lay the following plan before the many readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES." 1. Every Query, which, promulgated by our English sister, would perhaps find a solution when meeting the eyes of _Dutch_ readers, will be TRANSLATED for them by her foreign brother. We promise to send you a version of the eventual answers. 2. Of Queries, divulged in "DE NAVORSCHER," and likely to be answered if translated for the British readers of "NOTES AND QUERIES," a _version_ will be presented by us to the sister-periodical. 3. The title of BOOKS OR ODD VOLUMES wanted to purchase, of which copies may exist in the Netherlands, will be duly inserted into "DE NAVORSCHER" when required. Mr. FREDERIK MULLER will direct his letters, containing particulars and lowest price, to the persons anxious for information. 4. All communications for "DE NAVORSCHER" must be addressed to Mr. D. NUTT, Bookseller, {82} No. 270. Strand; or, _carriage free_, to the "_Directors_ of the same," care of Mr. FREDERIK MULLER, "Heerengracht, near the Oude Spieglestraat, Amsterdam." With a fervent wish that in such a manner, two neighbourly nations, connected by religion, commerce, and literary pursuits, may be more and more united by the mail-bearing sea which divides them, we have the honour to remain, Mr. Editor, Your respectful servants, THE DIRECTORS OF "DE NAVORSCHER." Amsterdam, the 16th of December, 1850. When by the publication of "NOTES AND QUERIES" we laid down those telegraphic lines of literary communication which we hoped should one day find their way into every library and book-room in the United Kingdom, we little thought that, ere fifteen months had passed, we should be called upon, not to lay down a _sub_marine telegraph, but to establish a _super_marine communication with our brethren in the Low Countries. We do so most gladly, for we owe them much. From them it was that Caxton learned the art, but for which "NOTES AND QUERIES" would never have existed; and of which the unconstrained p
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