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HOUG/B/M/7/111 · Parte · 2 Mar. 1874
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Trieste. - Condolences on the death of Lady Houghton; they were both very shocked to read the news in the paper. Richard 'has no courage to write' so she has undertaken to do so. Looks back over their long friendship: the help offered to them by the Houghtons when they were 'in trouble', especially to Isobel herself early in their marriage when Richard was in Africa and she was 'lonely and miserable'.

HOUG/B/N/2 · Unidad documental compuesta · [n.d.]
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Verses in several hands. Authors are not given, but are as follows:

Milnes: The Complaint of Glenquoich [On headed notepaper for Invergarry, N.B.],

Landor: Foesulian Idyl [sic: actually Fæsulan Idyl]; To Tacaea; The Maid's Lament; 'When Helen first saw wrinkles in her face' [Wrinkles]; 'Say ye, that years roll on & ne'er return?' [To the Comtesse de Molande, about to marry the Duc de Luxembourg]; Friends; On Southey's Death; You Smiled, You Spoke, and I Believed; An aged man, who loved to doze away; There are who say...; Why, why repine?; Children playing in a Church yard; 'A! what awaits the sceptered race..' [Rose Aylmer]; For a Gravestone in Spain; Ye who have toiled; Cleone to Aspasia; The Death of Artemidora; The Death of Paris and Œnone; Corinna to Tanagra; Iphigeneia and Agamemnon; Enallos and Cymodameia [largely on headed notepaper for Wynnstay, Rhuabon].

Unknown: Fryston - 'August 1859' added to the title in Richard Monckton Milnes' hand. First lines 'Long sunny days once spent; - t'was a year of the sunniest summer/ Days, leaving each as it passed, a trail all golden behind it...'. The identity of some figures referred to in the poem is noted beside it: Sir Charles MacCarthy '...ob. Aug. 1864]; Edward Waterton 'mistaken for his father the great Naturalist'; 'Capt. Richard Burton'.

HOUG/D/F/2/3/4 · Unidad documental simple · 25 Dec. [1850s]
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

Arlington Court, Barnstaple. - Looking forward to seeing the 'interesting things' Milnes hints at; rarely meets with anything exciting these days; regrets dispersing books and sundries on his marriage; those presented to [Sir Richard] Burton must be lost, 'being probably in the possession of the Priests of Meccah, & he poor fellow is I fear in the region from whence no one returns'; did Milnes hear a tale of his being assassinated. Wishes Milnes had had the Duke of York's copy of Fanny Hill; it was secretly given to Hodgson by Sir Henry ('Kangaroo') Cooke when the Duke ordered it destroyed; Hodgson when tired of the story rashly gave it to 'a very great man no now more' who had been shown it by a 'female Bonaparte' lover of Hodgson's. Current pursuit of clergyman's wife; her apparent innocence is at odds with her accounts of sexual activity at school and current practices with friends, some witnessed by Hodgson; she seems to prefer rôle of observer rather than participant; she once requested a condom to show a female friend, which Hodgson passed to her during prayers; it was from a packet sent by Hankey and its size amused them. Mrs Collett continues her business; the hermaphrodite's outfits; she wields a whip and prefers to be treated as a woman. Postscript: asks if Milnes has read the 'perfectly bawdy' Mademoiselle de Maupin [by Gautier], which the Parisian ladies rave about; a young woman recommended it.

HOUG/38/42 · Unidad documental simple · [later than 8 Jun. 1882]
Parte de Papers of Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton

2 Rue Lafitte. - Her grief at the death of Frederick Hankey - Houghton will understand more than anyone, except for her 'dear old friend [Studholme] Hodgson who has known [her] from a child almost'. People keep talking to her about money; she wants little, as she wrote to [Frederick's cousin] Thomson, and they will 'never hear recriminations' from her. Frederick was buried, with the help of money from friends 'not according to his religious principles but with every respect due to the family, friends and his memory'.

Asks Houghton to visit her when he comes to Paris, and to give her love to the Burtons. Adds postscript: has written to [Adolphe] Labitte and hopes he has done what Houghton wished.

MSPB/75 · Unidad documental simple · 12 Aug. [after 1856]
Parte de Manuscripts in Printed Books

On embossed notepaper of East India United Service Club. - Has 'found the original copy [of the omitted appendix 4, two pages of which appear in this book in print form, the rest in manuscript by an unknown hand], also a slip from Longman's'. Milnes can now judge if he thinks it interesting, as Burton does. Will return from Germany in about a month and get Milnes' opinion on reprinting it.