When I visited Iona in 1917 I tried to obtain a modest handbook which should give a concise and comprehensive account of the island: its history and significance in the pro gress of our Western civilization; its antiquities of the Celtic and mediaeval periods; and, not least, its folk-lore, which gives life and colour to almost every nook and cranny in the little island. But although all this ground had been covered admirably, and with much detail notably in Trenholme's Story of Iona, to which, and to Macmillan and Brydall's Iona: Its History and Antiquities, I am indebted for much infor mation regarding the antiquities and topography of the island — a small handbook at a popular price was lacking. I have tried here to com pile the book I vainly sought, and trust it will meet the need which many others have felt.
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