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RANDOM LETTERS
From time to time Buchanan’s letters turn up on ebay and other sites. They tend to be single sheets - brief notes with incomplete dates and no clue given as to the source - although the most infuriating examples are those where the signature alone is offered for sale, ripped from the bottom of the letter. This page is reserved for these randomly acquired letters. Where possible I have added additional information after the transcript. Since I’m working off the photos supplied by ebay, etc., it’s sometimes difficult to make out every word - my ‘best guesses’ are in italics and when I am completely at a loss there is a ? . |
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To J. Campbell Clark - 1st September 1871. Soroba Lodge My dear Sir, I regret that I did not see you to-day when you called. Shall you be staying over Sunday? and if so, will you take lunch with us at 2½ p.m. on that day? I should be very glad also to see Mr Macdonnell if you can persuade him to accompany you. Yours faithfully Robert Buchanan. J. Campbell Clark Esq. |
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To George Canninge - 8th December [1880]. 5 Larkhall Rise Dear Sir – Can you play at a Gaiety matinée on Dec. 22, in a new play of mine? If so, please send a line by bearer stating lowest terms, & let me know where I can telegraph to you in the morning. We commence rehearsing at Gaiety at two to-morrow. Truly yours G. Canninge Esq. [This letter to George Canninge, the actor, is almost certainly regarding Buchanan’s production of his play, The Nine Days’ Queen, which was premiered at a matinée at the Gaiety Theatre on December 22nd, 1880. There is a review of the performance (with Harriett Jay in the role of Lady Jane Grey) on the Theatre Reviews page.] |
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To Letty Lind - 26th April [1890] 3 Guildford Place Dear Miss Lind, I am afraid I cant exceed £2, as our cost is very heavy — but I will promise to make an increase if the piece is a success — which I expect. Yours in haste Miss Letty Lind. [This is presumably connected to Miss Letty Lind’s appearance in The Bride of Love, reviewed in the Penny Illustrated Paper on 31st May, 1890: |
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To William Heinemann - [1891] 25 Maresfield Gardens Dear Heineman, Only just got your letter on returning to Town. Quote from Marlowe by all means. Instead of Shakespere, on title-page—”Come, live with me, & be my Love”—I used the Shakespere version as being the most familiar. Yours truly W. Heineman Esq. [Buchanan’s novel, Come Live with Me and Be My Love was published by William Heinemann in 1891.] |
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To Mr. Madge - 8th January 1893 TELEPHONE No ? MERKLAND, Dear Mr Madge, Accept from me as a New Year’s gift a copy of my Wandering Jew, pubd this day, & believe me Yours truly ? ? Madge Esq. [The picture is rather small and although the text of the letter is fairly clear, the recipient’s name is not. But it does look like ‘Madge’ to me and the managing director of The People newspaper at this time was a Mr. Madge, so it could be Buchanan’s attempt to drum up some publicity. I can’t make out the telephone number either, which is a pity.] |
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To Mr. Baldwin (New York) - 22nd October [?] 11a Park Road Dear Sir – The poem to which you drew my attention is certainly not mine, tho’ it is quite bad enough to have come even from the pen of Yours truly – Baldwin Esq. |
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To Theophilus Marzials - 3rd January [?] 36 Craven Street My Dear Sir, Of course my letter was misdated, & I can't think how the mistake occurred. Thanks for your kind reply. I will endeavour to call upon you some time before one o'clock to-morrow, but pray dont remain at home on that account — if you have other arrangements — I will take my chance. Truly yours Theo. Marzials Esq. [Further information about Theophilus Marzials (1850-1920) and a copy of his poem, ‘A Tragedy’, is available at FirstScience.com.] |
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To William Davenport Adams - 18th February [?] 51 Upper Glo’ster Place Dear Sir, Use the poems by all means; I am honoured by your wish to do so. In great haste W. Davenport Adams Esq. [This letter is on the Historical Autographs site. A search for William Davenport Adams (1851-1904) led to Princeton University Library which has a collection of similar letters to Adams and the following information: The collection “Consists of 71 letters from several well-known British authors and poets addressed to William Davenport Adams and to his wife. They are mainly responses to requests made by Adams to grant him permission to either publish some of their works or to quote them in his various dictionaries of English literature and authors. Some of the prominent correspondents names include Aubrey De Vere, Francis Hastings Doyle, Emily Faithfull, Norman Gale, Joseph Hatton, Lucas Malet, William Hurrell Mallock, Charles Marriott, Robert Bright Marston, Gerald Massey, Sir Lewis Morris, Sir Walter Alexander Raleigh, Sir George Otto Trevelyan, William Watson, and William Aldis Wright.” “William Davenport Adams was a British journalist and author, son of William Henry Davenport Adams. He was an editor of provincial papers, and a dramatic critic from 1878 to 1904. He compiled an unfinished Dictionary of the Drama (1904) and other literary works, such as Dictionary of English Literature: Being a Comprehensive Guide to English Authors and Their Works, With Poet and Player: Essays on Literature and the Stage, and Latter Day Lyrics: Being Poems of Sentiment and Reflection by Living Writers.” ]
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DESCRIPTIONS OF OTHER LETTERS The following are descriptions of letters from various sites - autograph dealers, abebooks.com etc. Without seeing scans of the letters one has to take the descriptions at face value and assume that the attribution to Robert Williams Buchanan is correct.
Lists 6 letters from Robert Buchanan: 1. ALS, one page, 8vo, 11a Park Road, Regents Park N.W., April 30, n.y. To the American actor, Lawrence Barrett: "I hope to have the pleasure of bringing you the M.S. of Doctor Dee very speedily. As the scrip is somewhat rought, perhaps you would permit me to read it to you, but that must bee according to your wish & leisure. I hope you are thinking seriously of Hamlet.'' Verso of integral leaf slightly torn (removed from an album); slightly soiled, but in very good condition. This letter probably dates from the spring of 1884 when Barrett took over the management of the Lyceum Theatre in London, during its owner, Henry Irving's first visit to the United States. DAB notes that although Barrett's "engagement there was productive of no financial success, he was received cordially in professional and artistic circles, and was the recipient of many social attentions, including a banquet given in his honor.'' Item # 6187 $125.00. 2. ALS, one page, 8vo, Etretat, Seine Inferenie, France, 19 January 1866. To W.C. Bennett, writing: "Your volume reached me in a roundabout way, but I have been unable to thank you for your kindness. I have read a portion of the poems, & with much pleasure, & I thank you heartily.....'' A little worn, but in good condition. W.C. Bennett is William Cox Bennett, a minor poet who published several volumes of verse [see NCBEL III, 507-8]. Item # 4160 $125.00. 3. ALS, 2pp, 8vo, Grove Cottage, Haverstock Grove, 9 February 1864. To J.A. Langford, the Birmingham antiquary and journalist: "Pray do not put yourself to any inconvenience concerning the Lecture. I have by no means decided to read in Birmingham, tho' I thought such a contingency was possible.'' Buchanan says that he won't be able to do anything until next winter, and thanks Langford for his recent book of poems ("I shall read them leisurely.''). A little soiled and worn; traces of paper tape on verso, but in good condition. In 1864, as in 1859, Langford published a volume of commemorative poems on Shakespeare. Item # 2255 $135.00. 4. ALS, 2pp, small 4to, St. Germains, 88 South Side, Clapham Park, 11 December, n.y. To Alfred E. Knight, Esq., thanking him for his kind letter of support, and writing: "Pray, pray, don't fancy that I pose as a badly used & misunderstood person. A man cannot take the losing side in most questions . . . nor can he criticize men & things honestly without paying the piper. . . . I get as good as I give, and if I am boycotted (which is true enough) what does it matter?. . . . As to the financial question, that's different. I have always warned young men . . . as I was warned many years ago by dear old Barry Cornwall. If I had started out with the most modest independence . . . from other sources than literature, all my life would have been different. . . . I have had to part with my work for a beggar's wage. On the other hand, I have been both careless & extravagent, & much of my worry has been of my own making. . . ." Small staple or pin hole at upper left; some light foxing and soiling (mostly stains from prior mounting); else good. Item # 17724 $350.00. 5. ALS (with an additionally initialled post script), 2 1/4pp, 8vo, 17 Cavendish Place, W., 25 May, n.y. To Evelyn Ballantyne, apparently in defense of literary criticism attributed to Buchanan: "I am very sorry if I have been unjust to Mr. James, though I cannot honestly say that I feel myself to have been so. . . . I do not . . . feel so bitterly towards [Mr. Moore] as you do, for he has amused me very much. . . . Whether or not I am a successful writer, is really of no consequence to any one but myself, -- and 'success' is a word which needs definition. . . . If it means 'to be praised and belauded,' I am the . . . failure of my generation. If it means to make those who hate me listen to me, & perhaps be a little afraid of me, I have been being successful. . . . I have some Irish blood in my veins, & rather like a shindy . . . for the love of the thing, but as for hating any one, even the man who hits me on the head from behind, why, that's beyond me!" Lightly foxed and soiled; starting at folds; good. Item # 17896 $225.00. 6. ALS, one page, 8vo, on pale blue mourning paper, Belle Hill, Bexhill[?], 16 April 1866. To the Dalziel Brothers, accepting their terms for "the set of poems illustrated by Pinwell. . . . I reserve the right of incorporating the poems in my collected works, but not within three years. Will you kindly let me know how many more photographs there will be. . . ." Rather foxed, with a red, crested six pence postal stamp embossed at top; else good. Annotated in red in beneath the return address: "Wayside Posies [date crossed through]." Item # 17903 $175.00. * Lists a third edition of Saint Abe and His Seven Wives (1872): “Tipped in is an ALS from Buchanan to Hepworth Dixon, 2pp. "Belle Hill, Bexhill near Hasting, Aug. 9th, " asking him to review a new edition of "Undertones" requesting "could you give it a line or two? or quote some of the new matter—say verses 19-20-21-22 of the Prologue". $137.35. * Autograph Letter Signed to P.W. Bunting, sending him a book, 1 page 8vo on black-edged stationery, Cavendish Square, 10 Dec no year. [No: 3174] £32. * Abebooks also lists the following: Autograph Letter Signed to “J. Maclehose”, publisher.
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