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1 to 9 of 9 records

Total number of records: 9

Count of People and organisations

People and organisationsCount
Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton9
Gosse, Edmund4
[Unknown]3
Orme, Mrs1
Lockett (?), W.S.1

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: [unknown]

Letters: 1

Date(s): 19 Nov 1880

Location: BC Gen PAT. Inserted in his "Odes", privately printed.

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: Orme, Mrs

Letters: 1

Date(s): 1856

Location: BC MS Misc. Letters 1 Masson - Box 2

Note: With an autograph of Emily Patmore.

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: [unknown]

Letters: 1

Date(s): 10 Mar 1895

Location: BC Misc. letters 2

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: Lockett (?), W.S.

Letters: 1

Date(s): 19 Dec 1895

Location: BC Misc. letters2

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: Gosse, Edmund

Letters: 49

Date(s): 11 Jan 1881 - 9 Nov 1896

Location: BC Gosse correspondence

Note: Coventry Patmore published his first volume of poems in 1844, and later was an assistant in the printed book department of the British Museum. He formed intimate relations with Tennyson and Ruskin, and made the acquaintance of the pre-Raphaelite group, to whose organ, "The Germ", he contributed. Requests for theatre tickets and invitations for dinners and week-ends; "I live all my days in a wilderness of fair women, and long for some male chat". Frequent mention is made of favours and gifts received from Gosse. Many letters deal with the reactions of Patmore to the criticism of the literary world through various reviews and literary publications. "Your ... lectures must have been very much thrown away upon the Yankees who are not scholarly people". Mention is made of reviews and criticisms appearing in the "Athenaeum", "Saturday Spectator", "Guardian", "Fortnightly", "Standard", "Quarterly Review", "Saturday Review", "New Review", and "St James's". Mention is made of the first
appearance of certain of Sir Edmund Gosse's writings which were sent out to Patmore and in turn, of Patmore's writings sent to Gosse. There appear occasional compliments on Gosse's works and by inference it is to be seen that Gosse offered Patmore compliments in return. Contemporaries mentioned: Kegan Paul, Buxton Forman, Basil Champneys, Austin Dobson, J.D. Campbell. The last letters in the collection reveal Patmore's declining health and indicate the nature of his complaints. "I scarcely ever go to town now, as I can not travel alone".

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: Gosse, Edmund

Letters: 1

Date(s): 19 Apr 1881

Location: BC Gosse correspondence. Inserted in "Living English Poets", 1883

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: Gosse, Edmund

Letters: 1

Date(s): 5 Feb 1884

Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In GRAY MEMORIAL LETTERS

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: Gosse, Edmund

Letters: 1

Date(s): 5 Sep [c.1885?]

Location: BC Gosse correspondence

Note: In his "Angel in the House", 1887. (KEOWN).

Sender: Patmore, Coventry Kersey Dighton

Recipient: [unknown]

Letters: 1

Date(s): 11 Sep 1883

Location: BC Miscellaneous letters, q. In album "Autographs"

Note: Addressed "My dear Sir".