73 Eaton Terrace, S. W. - Would like to have the first edition of FitzGerald's Omar Khayyám, no. 426 in Quaritch's new catalogue, if it is still available. Wished he could have been at Boulge on Saturday [for the planting at FitzGerald's grave of the rose grown from a hip from that at Omar Khayyám's tomb].
21 Parliament Street, London, S. W.
Relates to the Clothworkers' Company.
(Dated Saturday. Probably written about the same time as O.13.1, No. 111.)
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Saturday
My Dear Sir!
The picture of my children 5 or 6 years ago, {1} but very like still, I sent, this morning; for you & Mrs T. to see. You can return it on monday; when I will beg you to lend Sophy another body-colour drawing, & Mary Anne another of Mortimer’s, w[hic]h I think Mrs T. was good enough to say she c[oul]d borrow. The bearer brings Mrs T.’s two, & their copies. Sophy has purposely made hers lighter, as I thought yours was too Penseroso; I being fond of the pleasant saddle honest Dryden mentions in his dedication of Virgil, “w[hic]h will be sure to amble, when {2} the world is upon the hardest trot”. Give me gay sunshine; or moonlight, w[hic]h does not add to the gloominess of scenes always gloomy enough.
Dont† forget, if we ever get a good day, to give Sophy a lesson in botany, at Downes’s garden, some morning; as {3} I expect she understands a little. When she leaves Yarmouth (in a fortnight or so, I imagine) she will, I am sure, be happy if Mrs T. can charge her with any commissions in Town. Tomorrow ev[enin]g I mean to come & sit with you.
Ever most truly y[ou]rs
H. Croft
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Letters missing from words abbreviated by superscript letters have been supplied in square brackets.
{1} Presumably the painting of his three daughters as cherubim, attributed to Lemuel Francis Abbott, now in the possession of the National Trust.
{2} This word, which is at the beginning of a line, is preceded by opening inverted commas.
{3} This word resembles ‘or’ more closely, but ‘as’ makes more sense.
† Sic.
(Undated. Postmarked 1 or 4 Feb. 1802. The date ‘Feb. 4—1802’ has been added at the head in pencil.)
Signature indistinct.
(At the head is written, ‘From Webb, miscalled the Philanthropist, really a madman.’
(Transcript by Turner. At the head is written, ‘The original of this letter is among Autographs, Series B’.)
Farm School, Redhill, Surrey. - Originally enclosing copy of a resolution passed by the Committee of the Philanthropic Society on 18 Aug. [now HOUG/AA/2/No. 114].
19 Carleton Road, Tufnell Park, N. - Was introduced to Quaritch by William Simpson at the last Omar Khayyám Club dinner. Has had reports from Thiselton Dyer about the condition of the rose-tree at Kew, grown from the hip sent by Simpson [from the one at Omar Khayyám's tomb]. It is a 'weakling in this climate, but by skilful grafting' a plant has been secured which Clodd 'long ago suggested should be placed on FitzGerald's grave at Boulge'.
Asks if Quaritch could come to see this done on Sunday 7th October; offers to host him until Monday morning at Aldeburgh.
(Dated 29 Feb. 1815.)
(Undated, but probably written about the same time as O.13.1, No. 111.)
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Transcript
My Dear Sir!
A thousand thanks for your & Mrs T.’s kind civilities about my daughters! It was my intention to have call’d & said we w[oul]d not give the trouble of coming to dinner; but, as Mr Gurney said it was arrang’d, I acquisce’d, & bagg’d him to say we w[oul]d have that pleasure.
And, now, my Dear Sir, whose friendship it gives me so much happiness to have made here, let me beg of you & Mrs Turner to serve me in another respect. You know how well I take correction as a poet, & you shall see I will bear it as well as a father. I beg you both, of whom I think so highly, to tell me what you think of my daughters; & what I can seek to alter. They have been the whole object of my life, both before I went abroad & since. As I have no son, & my first wife’s property & my own (which, on the falling-in of ground-rents in London, must shortly be above three thousand a year) must, on my death, go among my three daughters, equally, by settlement, or to their children or the survivors; I have spar’d no expense, to qualify them for the situations they have a right to, in this odd world.
But {1} my great object has been to keep all three (of course, the eldest, principally) from being coxcombs—to give them that good sense, w[hic]h is worth every thing—& to qualify them to be a comfort to a father, &, at a proper time, to a husband. Not being able to leave this place (but I hope, now, that all will soon be settled by Lady Croft & her friends), & their mother in law being employ’d about my affairs, I made them come hither; & I own that I am nearly satisfied, considering the eldest was only 18 last august. {2} But I shall long, much, to know Mrs T.’s & your real sentiments. Both of you, as parents yourselves & now looking forward about your own children, will excuse a parent’s anxiety about his; especially, when there is not any thing I would not do to prove to Mrs T. & you how truly I am,
My Dear Sir!
your most oblig’d & affect[iona]te friend
H. Croft
P.S. | May I beg you to send me those printed papers tomorrow morning, with Mrs T.’s real opinion? My daughters know nothing about that.
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Letters missing from words abbreviated by superscript letters have been supplied in square brackets.
{1} Written as a catch-word at the foot of a page and repeated at the beginning of the next.
{2} Sophia Croft was born on 18 August 1781.