Sackville St <1>
Novr 25. 1823
My Dear Mr Feilding
I received today your letter of the 13th, at which time you had not been able to find a house; I hope you have succeeded however before now. I am going tomorrow morning to the London Docks about my box of books, but neither Richard <2> nor myself can do anything about yours, as we do not understand your wishes - I shall ask Ld Auckland <3> when I see him what he thinks the most desirable course - I gave Caroline's drawings to her aunt <4> who was delighted with them, as you would be to see the great improvement in her looks since last year - I never saw her in better spirits, she walked about the room leaning on her crutch, without any pain & speaks confidently of getting quite well. All this she attributes to the belladonna. <5> - I have called on Ld Winchilsea and George: <6> and they on me; but we have not seen each other.
Novr 26th
I have been to Bingham Richards & Co, <7> in the Old Jewry - I shall have to pay the duties on my books the second time, no redress to be had: even on English books there is 3d per lb., because you are censé <8> to have received so much as drawback on exporting them: which no one does or I believe can get. You had better send orders to have your box cleared; as it is paying warehouse rent, tho' that is trifling - You will do best to pay the duties, and not think of abandoning the articles; as you will perceive that the chief duties are on the books & porcelain; which have a real value, and that those on the fancy things are trifling
I annex the list of your box, from Bingham & Co
£ | s | d | |
49 lb unbound books - at £5 per Cwt - | 2. | 3. | 9 |
96 lb bound do - at £6. 10. 0- | 5. | 11. | 6 |
1 painting under 2 feet - | 3. | 8 | |
69 pieces porcelain, for which a value is required - Supposed value £6. duty is 75 pr Cent | 4. | 10 | |
15. | 13. | 3 |
179 lb manufactured Marble, [illegible deletion] - | 0. | 4. | 10 |
15 lb Bronzes - | 0. | 2. | 9 |
5 Maps - | 0. | 2. | 6 |
217 plain prints at 1 penny - | 0. | 18. | 1 |
34 coloured drawing at 2 pence - | 0. | 5. | 8 |
863 sulphur impressions valued at £3. 10. - 5 pr Cent - | 0. | 3. | 6 |
13 glass do, valued 13s, at 80 pr Cent - | 0. | 9. | 0 |
2. | 6. | 4 |
My booksellers at Paris, Treuttel & Würz had orders to send the Bibl. Universelle <9> to Genoa -
The discoveries of Champollion le jeune and Dr Young <10> in hieroglyphics are most brilliant, and indisputably certain - Formerly they were considered as pictures of things sublime & mysterious, nobody supposed what is the truth, namely that they are letters of the Egyptian alphabet (at least on many occasions) Behold a specimen with its meaning, rendered letter for letter
L is a lion, T a hand, R a mouth - The Egyptian names of these things begin with the letters L, T, R respectively So that we see the reason of the choice - and it is conjectured the other letters may be similarly the initial letters of the various objects that represent them -
This is the character the Egyptians used on solemn occasions & public monuments - Their running hand used in private life is quite different, & has also been decyphered by Champollion & Young, here is a specimen
Young has translated whole manuscripts - They relate to the sale of lands, & of certain moieties <11> of the offerings made to mummies about the year 140 before Christ.
Monsieur
Monsieur Feilding
Gentilhomme Anglais
Gênes
Italie
Notes:
1. 31 Sackville Street, London residence of the Feildings, often used as a London base by WHFT.
2. Richard, a servant.
3. George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland (1784-1849), Governor General of India.
4. Caroline Augusta Edgcumbe, née Feilding, Lady Mt Edgcumbe (1808-1881); WHFT's half-sister. Her aunt was Matilda Feilding (1775-1849), the sister of her father, Charles Feilding.
5. Tall bushy herb, highly poisonous but cultivated as a drug for its medicinal alkaloids, used in sedatives, stimulants, and antispasmodics.
6. George Finch, 9th Earl of Winchilsea (1752-1826) and George Finch (1794-1870), JP & MP.
7. Bingham Richards & Company, London.
8. Supposed.
9. Bibliotheque Universelle. [See Doc. No: 01109].
10. Jean-François Champollion (1790-1832), historian and linguist who founded scientific Egyptology and played a major role in the deciphering of Egyptian hieroglyphics. His elder brother, Jacques-Joseph Champollion-Figeac, a French librarian and paleographer was also a notable figure. Dr Thomas Young (1773-1829), English physicist and also an Egyptologist who, along with Champollion, helped decipher the Rosetta Stone.
11. Divisions or share.