Crewe Hall, Crewe. - [written in third person]. Pictures should be kept until Mrs Milnes comes to town; would like proof of new print of Archdeacon Hare framed in gold.
embossed notepaper for Dunrobin Castle, Sutherland. - Lord Chesham looked after Amy well; two other young ladies had to sleep in their ball dresses in the gentlemen's dressing room at the hotel as their maid had hidden their room keys too well; visited Bishops; [Edens?] hope to be of assistance to Annabella Milnes; row in the train over reserved carriage for Dunrobin; encountered Miss [Catherine M.] Marsh there - Houghton moved to tears by her account of death of a wild man he knew as a boy, or perhaps it was gout. Lady John Scott is now singing and Lord Delamere talking to Miss Marsh like Hedley Vicars; the chief financial adviser of the Khedive, a young French officer 'late at Metz', and the engineer Sir Henry (?) Jones are also here; discusses other guests.
Contains note by Hon. Amicia Milnes.
Breakfasts: 1859-1862
Dinners: 1860-1862
25 Rue Olivier. - Godfrey Bland died this morning around eleven, 'almost without a struggle'. The scene was 'most painful... his poor wife adored him - & all his servants loved him so much'. They discussed his affairs before his death: Godfrey made a will a year ago before the marriage, leaving all to his wife except two hundred pounds to George and the same to Frederick, and something to his servants; he intended to alter it but had no strength left, and has told his wife he trusts her to give George twenty five thousand francs instead of five thousand. She will have a residue of about six or seven hundred a year, which will leave her very comfortable.
Godfrey will be buried as he wished at Père Lachaise, probably on Friday.
Will do all he can to help the 'poor widow'; such scenes as the ones this morning, '& the one at Bawtry - (how is A[nnabel?] poor little girl) - painful tho' they are - tend to make one a wiser and better man'
Cox gives his address as 33 Percy Street. Note and stamp of receipt at the bottom.
26 North Audley Street, Grosvenor Square. Addressed to Lady Houghton in London.
For ten pairs of gloves of different colours (including three pairs of 'Long White Paris Gloves', £2 1 s 6d.
Stamp of receipt at bottom, dated 11 Dec. 1874.
Addressed to Lady Houghton at Fryston Hall.
'To Account Rendered'. £2 1 s. 6d.
Stamp of receipt at bottom, dated 8 May 1874., 'With Paul & Louis' best thanks...'
'To a German Friend: on his leaving Sorrento where he was a distinguished Member of a Club'
'Galileo's Tower, Florence'
'Sonnet, To Home - Naples'
'Sonnet' (Wrong'd and ill-fated poet! thou art pas't...)
'Stanzas' (Few, few are they unto whose eyes the wan...)
'Vesuvius'
'Vesuvius - Sonnets 1-IV'
Fragment of letter describes illness [of one of Annabella Milnes' daughters?].
Note of dates covered on front of volume.
Possibly including letters to Annabella Hungerford Milnes.
Possibly including letters to Annabella Hungerford Milnes.
221: With signature of Marie Studholmina Laetitia Rattazzi.
222: Letter from Childers to Annabella Milnes.