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Document number: 03703
Date: 06 Jul 1838
Dating: 1838?
Recipient: TALBOT William Henry Fox
Author: FEILDING Elisabeth Theresa, née Fox Strangways
Collection: British Library, London, Manuscripts - Fox Talbot Collection
Last updated: 1st September 2003

6th July

My Dear Henry

I am sorry Mary <1> has not answered you, but am not surprised, for it is her way & a very inconvenient way for her friends, particularly if you go by Steam’s from Bristol which like Time & Tide will wait for no Man. I have had Leighton here to look at your Palmarum, <2> and he says the binding will not come to more than eighteen Shillings, so I strongly advise you having them done, as the dust is already engrained on the Margins, & they are too good to be left to the tender mercies of a London housemaid & another damp winter, too many such have already passed over the heads of their poor Palm Trees. Let me know by return of post I shall go to day to inquire why the Marble man did not go down as promised. It seems the Weather has been much better with you, I am sorry the Foreigners should see it so bad here. Caroline & Ld V. <3> came back from Richmond last night. Bimbo <4> is left there. Dr Chambers is to determine to day when he is to go to Buxton. I found the enclosed receipt laying about after you were gone – you had better keep it


Notes:

1. Lady Mary Lucy Cole, née Strangways, first m. Talbot (1776–1855), WHFT’s aunt.

2. She probably means ‘palmarium’, that is, masterpiece.

3. Caroline Augusta Edgcumbe, née Feilding, Lady Mt Edgcumbe (1808–1881); WHFT’s half-sister, and Ernest Augustus Edgcumbe, Lord Valletort, 3rd Earl of Mt Edgcumbe (1797–1861), WHFT’s brother-in-law.

4. William Henry Edgcumbe, ‘Val’, 4th Earl Mt Edgcumbe (1832–1917), JP & Ld Steward of the Royal Household; WHFT’s nephew ‘Bimbo’.