Our Little Dutch
Cousin

By
Blanche McManus
Author of "Our Little English Cousin," "Our Little
French Cousin," "Our Little Scotch Cousin," etc.
Illustrated by
The Author


Boston
L. C. Page & Company
Publishers

Copyright, 1906
By L. C. Page & Company
(INCORPORATED)
All rights reserved
THE LITTLE COUSIN SERIES
(Trade Mark)
Fifth Impression, July, 1909


Preface

Our little Dutch cousins have much in common with little American cousins, not so much perhaps with respect to present-day institutions and manners and customs, as with the survivals and traditions of other days, when the Dutch played so important a part in the founding of the new America.

It was from Holland, too, from the little port of Delfshaven, that the Pilgrim Fathers first set sail for the New World, and by this fact alone Holland and America are bound together by another very strong link, though this time it was of English forging.

No European country, save England, has the interest for the American reader or traveller that has "the little land of dikes and windmills," and there are many young Americans already familiar with the ways of their cousins from over the seas from the very fact that so many of them come to Holland to visit its fine picture-galleries, its famous and historic buildings, its tulip-gardens, and its picturesque streets and canals, which make it a paradise for artists.