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Letter from William Coningham to Richard Monckton Milnes
HOUG/D/C/3/4/3 · Item · [1849]
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Re the Froude affair, Coningham cannot give as much as Milnes suggests because Froude is wilfully pursuing the wrong course: 'He requires a practical belief to live by - the Germans can only fling him headlong into materialism, the slough of despond of feeble minds, or intoxicate him with an unpractical mysticism...'

Letter from William Coningham to Richard Monckton Milnes
HOUG/D/C/3/4/4 · Item · [1849]
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Brighton. - Is not selling his pictures for the benefit of Froude but because of losses in the West Indies caused by Government folly. £15 or £20 is a large sum to find, and Froude is not a personal friend. Details of Coningham's wife's health. Sending Froude to Germany would be the ruin of him; he would be better working for the press or going to America.

Letter from William Coningham to Richard Monckton Milnes
HOUG/E/M/13/51 · Item · 13 [?] Nov. 1843 [postmark]
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

The National Gallery appointment is in the gift of Milnes' 'despotic master, 'orange' Peel, & could you soften his obdurate heart, [Morris] Moore would be pretty sure of the post; Milnes will perceive Moore's suitability if he calls; 'Mere picture dealing sagacity does not go far, & public taste needs direction, & has already too many purveyors to its pampered & gross appetite'.