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ing of the day when the theatre opened, surrounded by shavings and carpenters, and (of course) with that inevitable hammer going; and I told Fechter, "That is the very best piece of womanly tenderness I have ever seen on the stage, and you'll find that no audience can miss it." It is a comfort to add that it was instantly seized upon, and is much talked of.

Stanfield was very ill for some months, then suddenly picked up, and is really rosy and jovial again. Going to see him when he was very despondent, I told him the story of Fechter's piece (then in rehearsal) with appropriate action; fighting a duel with the washing-stand, defying the bedstead, and saving the life of the sofa-cushion. This so kindled his old theatrical ardour, that I think he turned the corner on the spot.

With love to Mrs. Macready and Katie, and (be still, my heart!) Benvenuta, and the exiled Johnny (not too attentive at school, I hope ?), and the personally unknown young Parr, Ever, my dearest Macready, your most affectionate.

CCCCLXVII. MISS POWER

OFFICE OF "ALL THE YEAR ROUND,"
Thursday, February 26, 1863.

MY DEAR MARGUERITE, — I think I have found a first-rate title for your book, with an early and a delightful association in most people's minds, and a strong suggestion of Oriental pictures:

66 ARABIAN DAYS AND NIGHTS."

I have sent it to Low's. If they have the wit to see it, do you in your first chapter touch that string, so as to bring a fanciful explanation in aid of the title, and sound it afterwards, now and again, when you come to anything where Haroun al Raschid, and the Grand Vizier, and Mesrour, the chief of the guard, and any of that wonderful dramatis personæ are vividly brought to mind.

Ever affectionately.

CCCCLXVIII. CHARLES KNIGHT

OFFICE OF "ALL THE YEAR ROUND,"
Wednesday, March 4, 1863.

MY DEAR CHARLES KNIGHT,

At a quarter to seven on Monday, the 16th, a stately form will be descried breathing

birthday cordialities and affectionate amenities, as it descends the broken and gently dipping ground by which the level country of the Clifton Road is attained. A practised eye will be able to discern two humble figures in attendance, which from their flowing crinolines may, without exposing the prophet to the imputation of rashness, be predicted to be women. Though certes their importance, absorbed and as it were swallowed up in the illustrious bearing and determined purpose of the maturer stranger, will not enthrall the gaze that wanders over the forest of San Giovanni as the night gathers in.

Ever affectionately,

G. P. R. JAMES.

CCCCLXIX. MRS. LEHMANN

OFFICE OF 66 ALL THE YEAR Round,"

No. 26, WELLINGTON STREET, STRAND, LONDON, W. C.,
Tuesday, March 10, 1863.

DEAR MRS. LEHMANN, Two stalls for to-morrow's reading were sent to you by post before I heard from you this morning. Two will always come to you while you remain at Gummidge, and I hope I need not say that if you want more, none could be better bestowed in my sight.

Pray tell Lehmann, when you next write to him, that I find I owe him a mint of money for the delightful Swedish sleighbells. They are the wonder, awe, and admiration of the whole country-side, and I never go out without them.

Let us make an exchange of child stories. I heard of a little fellow the other day whose mamma had been telling him that a French governess was coming over to him from Paris, and had been expatiating on the blessings and advantages of having foreign tongues. After leaning his plump little cheek against the window glass in a dreary little way for some minutes, he looked round and inquired in a general way, and not as if it had any special application, whether she did n't think "that the Tower of Babel was a great mistake altogether?" Ever faithfully yours.

CCCCLXX. MRS. MAJOR 1

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OFFICE OF " ALL THE YEAR Round," 26, WELLINGTON STREET, STRAND, Thursday, March 12, 1863.

MY DEAR MARY, I am quite concerned to hear that you and your party (including your brother Willie) paid for seats at my reading last night. You must promise me never to do so any more. My old affections and attachments are not so lightly cherished or so easily forgotten as that I can bear the thought of you and yours coming to hear me like so many strangers. It will at all times delight me if you will send a little note to me, or to Georgina, or to Mary, saying when you feel inclined to come, and how many stalls you want. You may always be certain, even on the fullest nights, of room being made for you. And I shall always be interested and pleased by knowing that you are present.

Mind! You are to be exceedingly penitent for last night's offence, and to make me a promise that it shall never be repeated. On which condition accept my noble forgiveness. With kind regard to Mr. Major, my dear Mary,

Affectionately yours.

CCCCLXXI. W. C. MACREADY

GAD'S HILL PLACE, HIGHAM BY ROCHEster, Kent,
Thursday, March 31, 1863.

MY DEAREST MACREADY, -I mean to go on reading into June. For the sake of the finer effects (in "Copperfield" principally), I have changed from St. James's Hall to the Hanover Square Room. The latter is quite a wonderful room for sound, and so easy that the least inflection will tell anywhere in the place exactly as it leaves your lips; but I miss my dear old shilling galleries-six or eight hundred strong-with a certain roaring sea of response in them, that you have stood upon the beach of many and many a time.

The summer, I hope and trust, will quicken the pace at which you grow stronger again. I am but in dull spirits myself just now, or I should remonstrate with you on your slowness.

1 Formerly Miss Talfourd.

Having two little boys sent home from school "to see the illuminations on the marriage-night, I chartered an enormous van, at a cost of five pounds, and we started in majesty from the office in London, fourteen strong. We crossed Waterloo Bridge with the happy design of beginning the sight at London Bridge, and working our way through the City to Regent Street. In a bye-street in the Borough, over against a dead wall and under a railway bridge, we were blocked for four hours. We were obliged to walk home at last, having seen nothing whatThe wretched van turned up in the course of the next morning; and the best of it was that at Rochester here they illuminated the fine old castle, and really made a very splendid and picturesque thing (so my neighbours tell me).

ever.

With love to Mrs. Macready and Katie,

Ever, my dearest Macready, your most affectionate.

CCCCLXXII. WILKIE COLLINS

GAD'S HILL PLACE, HIGHAM BY ROCHESTER, Kent,
Wednesday, April 22, 1863.

Ah, poor Egg! I knew what you would think and feel about it. When we saw him in Paris on his way out I was struck by his extreme nervousness, and derived from it an uneasy foreboding of his state. What a large piece of a good many years he seems to have taken with him! How often have I thought, since the news of his death came, of his putting his part in the saucepan (with the cover on) when we rehearsed "The Lighthouse;" of his falling out of the hammock when we rehearsed "The Frozen Deep; " of his learning Italian numbers when he ate the garlic in the carriage; of the thousands (I was going to say) of dark mornings when I apostrophised him as 66 Kernel; of his losing my invaluable knife in that beastly stage-coach; of his posting up that mysterious book1 every night! I hardly know why, but I have always associated that volume most with Venice. In my memory of the dear gentle little fellow, he will be (as since those days he always has been) eternally posting up that book at the large table in the middle of our Venice sitting-room, incidentally asking the name of an hotel three weeks back! And his pretty house is to be laid waste and sold. If there

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1 His travelling journal.

be a sale on the

spot I shall try to buy something in loving remembrance of him, good dear little fellow. Think what a great "Frozen Deep" lay close under those boards we acted on! My brother Alfred, Luard, Arthur, Albert, Austin, Egg. Even among the audience, Prince Albert and poor Stone! "I heard the " I forget what it was I used to say come up from the great deep; and it rings in my ears now, like a sort of mad prophecy.

66

However, this won't do. We must close up the ranks and march on.

CCCCLXXIII. REV. W. BROOKFIELD

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GAD'S HILL, May 17, 1863. MY DEAR BROOKFIELD, -It occurs to me that you may perhaps know, or know of, a kind of man that I want to discover.

One of my boys (the youngest) now is at Wimbledon School. He is a docile, amiable boy of fair abilities, but sensitive and shy. And he writes me so very earnestly that he feels the school to be confusingly large for him, and he is sure he could do better with some gentleman who gave his own personal attention to the education of half a dozen or a dozen boys, as to impress me with the belief that I ought to heed his conviction. Has any such phenomenon as a good and reliable man in this wise ever come in your way? Forgive my troubling you, and believe me, Cordially yours.

CCCCLXXIV. THE SAME

GAD'S HILL PLace, Higham by Rochester, KENT, May 24, 1863. MY DEAR BROOKFIELD, I am most truly obliged to you. for your kind and ready help.

When I am in town next week, I will call upon the Bishop of Natal, more to thank him than with the hope of profiting by that gentleman of whom he writes, as the limitation to "little boys seems to stop the way. I want to find some one with whom this particular boy could remain; if there were a mutual interest and liking, that would be a great point gained.

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Why did the kings in the fairy tales want children? I suppose in the weakness of the royal intellect.

1 Mr. Brookfield will be remembered as Thackeray's correspondent.

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