THACKERAY
(William Makepeace, 1811-1863, Novelist)
Fine Autograph Letter Signed in his upright hand to 'My dear Mr TITE'
(Sir William, 1798-1873, Architect, President of the Royal Institute of British Architects, MP) telling him that he has "no new lecture, and do not like to read the old printed ones for if I begin I shall have 100 letters from Societies all over the country to answer, to refuse, to make angry ...", 1 side 8vo., Palace Green, Kensington headed paper, 22nd June
Item Date:
1863
Stock No:
40387
£575
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THACKERAY
(Anne Isabella, 1837-1919, from 1877 Lady Ritchie, Novelist, daughter of William Makepeace Thackeray)
Autograph Letter Signed to 'Dear Miss Frere',
telling her that they "duly came home from Hampshire late on Saturday and found your kind little note. We are starting again almost immediately. Thank you so much, we should have liked it immensely ...", 1 side 8vo., no place, no date
Item Date:
0
Stock No:
40946
£65
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THACKERAY
(William Makepeace, 1811-1863, Novelist)
Fine signature and inscription with a couple of words from the end of an Autograph letter Signed
"shown her Believe me always yours faithfully", 4" x 1½", laid down on a larger sheet, no place, no date
Item Date:
0
Stock No:
41354
£225
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“W. M. THACKER AY WOULD BE HAPPY TO BE YOUR BACKER!”
THACKERAY
(William Makepeace, 1811-1863, Novelist)
Pair of Autograph Letters Signed in his upright hand to George Augustus SALA
(1828-1896, Journalist & Writer), the first, signed ‘W. M. Thackeray’ saying that “Mr Langley has just brought me the Critic (which I never see or hear of except from him) and which says how you are going to edit the Temple Bar Magazine, and how I have said Hogarth was ‘dull verbiage’. Who writes these lies? I mean that lie in the last sentence. Hogarth was not dull, or the deuce is in it. I have always spoken of it as liking it heartily. I thought of Temple Bar for a frontispiece for our own Magazine, and wish prosperity to your’s. There are people enough in London to crowd Temple Bar and Corn Hill too, and my belief in our success helps another. May your head long be on the top of the Temple Bar Mag!...”, 1 side 8vo., 36 Onslow Square, 27th September with the year put in in another hand as 1860, the second letter is signed with initials asks “Where is that note I wrote just now directed to Upton Court near Slough. To say that W. M. Thacker Ay would be happy to be your backer? The note has disappeared under the heap of papers & will turn up 2 months hence or perhaps has gone to the post already. The purport of it you see. A wet blanket is always good hydropathic practice. If we are killed, we are killed. I was, at the Traveller next door and survived the dose. I only had one pill but the man gave it expressly because I was a deed literary fellow...”, 1 side 8vo., no place, dated in another hand March
Item Date:
1862
Stock No:
43596
£1475
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THACKERAY USES BOTH HIS SLOPING AND UPRIGHT HAND IN ONE LETTER
THACKERAY
(William Makepeace, 1811-1863, Novelist)
Fine Autograph Letter Signed in full, in his sloping hand to “My dear Dean” with his address in his upright hand,
saying that “you and Mrs Trench are very kind to think of the girls and their father. We shall all be very happy to come to you on Tuesday...”, 1 side 8vo., 36 Onslow Sq., S.W., 3rd February
Item Date:
1858
Stock No:
43595
£325
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