Sophie Dupré - Military or Naval

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HAMLEY-38873-1.jpg
HAMLEY (Lieutenant General Sir Edward Bruce, 1824-1893, Soldier and Writer. M.P.)

Long Autograph Letter Signed to "My dear STORY" (William Wetmore, 1819-1895, American Sculptor, Art Critic, Poet and Editor) saying that he has to "go to Ericksen ... Your drama is very agreeable and entertaining to read, and runs very smoothly. It is quite of the style of those that were so successful at the P. of Wales's. What I am uncertain about is whether there is sufficient incident to maintain the interest of the audience. All that happens to the principal characters is the exchange of lovers - and I am not sure how far it will please, to see a young lady made twice happy by different men in the short space of three acts. However, this is a point of which I shd think you might implicitly take Bancroft's opinion - why not forward the piece to him? The chief incident at present is the exposure of the secondary personage, the Count. In order that the audience should rejoice at it, it wd be necessary that he should do something more deserving of chastisement than anything he previously does. As it is, it comes as a surprise anda does not carry the idea of retribution because he has passed ... for what he pretends to be - Couldn't you set him about some villainy affecting some of the principal characters - I think the present framework seems well adapted to admit of stronger action ... and is, indeed, of itself a very pretty story ....", 4 sides 8vo.,Athenaeum Club headed paper, 10th August no year

Item Date:  1860
Stock No:  38873      £225

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HAMLEY-38874-1.jpg THE BALKANS IN 1881
HAMLEY (Lieutenant General Sir Edward Bruce, 1824-1893, Soldier and Writer. M.P.)

Very long Autograph Letter Signed to "My dear STORY" (William Wetmore, 1819-1895, American Sculptor, Art Critic, Poet and Editor) saying that he thinks the "last communication which passed between our respective firms was a letter I posted to Madame le Conte at Naples when I lighted there for a moment on my way to Constantinople in '78. The excursion I made with my colleagues that year along the Balkans was perhaps the most agreeable I ever took part in - weather splendid, scenery grand, with the picturesque accompaniments of daily encampments, Russian cavalry as escor, and waggon trains drawn by oxen or buffaloes and driven by Bulgarian peasants, for our baggage. Early in June our way lay through fields of roses, then being gathered for the distilleries of otto, which we saw at work in every valley - next we entered a region of vineyards - and finally as we approached the Black Sea we traversed vast forests - and all the time the Balkan range, generally green to the summits, rose close by ... as we cross and recrossed it in our visits to the passes which formed the important parts of the frontier ... notwithstanding that our national interests were often conflicting, we formed a very harmonious party - we being the representative of the Seven Powers that signed the Treaty of Berlin ... Last March I was unexpectedly called upon by Lord Salisbury to take the place of our Commissioner on the Armenian frontier - the Commission having come to a deadlock the preceding year & never having left Constantinople. This time I had only two colleagues, a Russian General and a Turkish Colonel - and I only took two officers with me from England - when all preliminaries were settled at Constantinople, we started for Trebigond. The most picturesque Turkish town I have seen, less squashed and ruinous than usual, spotted all over with foliage, and full of bits for an artist. The old Byzantine walls remain, on the sides of the two deep glens which define the ancient citadel, and across their mouth the old harbour is still traceable, large enough for an ancient navy ... All round were high mountains ..." he continues describing his trip, the scenery "All this part of Asia Minor is dreary, partly because there are absolutely no trees - everywhere brown mountains ... we (the English party) kept on eastward thro' Kars (with Ararat, a dome of snow,long visible on our right) to ... the Capital of the Caucasus ... thence by rail to Pate on the Black Sea where we embarked and coasted along ... The change of Government here was in some respects unlucky for me - I was sent out to see that the Turk got fairplay - and Lord Salisbury would have been much better pleased with the results than the present ministry could be expected to be - I was at Constantinople when Mr Goschen arrived ..." he then talks about his circumstances back home and says he was "dining lately with Martin, now Sir Theodore, he was loud in praise of a certain poem which had lately appeared in Blackwood. I told him I knew the gent wot wrote it, and cordially agreed with him - he pronounced it 'better than Browning ...'", he asks "what is doing in the Studio - and what was the fortune of the Hebrew monarch who was when I saw him, a creature of clay, tho' with a spirit which promised well for immortality in marble ...", he ends with "regards to Mrs Story, Madame Peruzzi and the youths ...", 12 sides 8vo., Palace Chambers, Ryder Street headed paper, 9th January

Item Date:  1881
Stock No:  38874      £475

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HANCOCK (Charles, b. 1766, C.B., Captain R.N.)

Autograph Letter in the third person to Messrs Adderley & Bax, asking them to transcribe the wills of J.E. Liebenrood, (d. 1812), of Prospect Hill, Reading, and the most recent will of his widow Lucy (d. 1829 in Middlesex), Hancock's sister, 1 side 8vo., 3 St. Albans Place, Charles Street, Waterloo Place, 9th April

Item Date:  1831
Stock No:  51805      £75

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HANHAM (J., d. 1861, from 1850 Captain, from 1856 Adjutant, 11th Depot Battalion)

Signature taken from a letter, n.p., n.d., c.

Item Date:  1860
Stock No:  52076      £75

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HANWAY (Jonas, 1712-1786, Traveller & Philanthropist)

2nd part of a Navy Treasury document signed while Commissioner of the Victualling Office, acknowledging receipt of the sum of £103.16.11, 1 side oblong 4to., London Victualling Office, 27th May

Item Date:  1778
Stock No:  1065      £30

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