The family letters of Christina Georgina Rossetti, with some supplementary letters and appendices . to work which could not easily be mended. He choseto misconstrue this phrase, and represented Christina, in a state ofsenseless excitement, destroying household furniture with a hammer,bank-notes in a firegrate, &c. The caricature was preserved byChristina, and is still extant—now in the hands of my daughterOlivia Agresti.—The Henrietta here mentioned was HenriettaPolydore, daughter of our uncle; she was at this date aged sixteenor thereabouts, and was consumptive. She died in the United Statest


The family letters of Christina Georgina Rossetti, with some supplementary letters and appendices . to work which could not easily be mended. He choseto misconstrue this phrase, and represented Christina, in a state ofsenseless excitement, destroying household furniture with a hammer,bank-notes in a firegrate, &c. The caricature was preserved byChristina, and is still extant—now in the hands of my daughterOlivia Agresti.—The Henrietta here mentioned was HenriettaPolydore, daughter of our uncle; she was at this date aged sixteenor thereabouts, and was consumptive. She died in the United Statestowards the age of twenty-eight.—By Mac here and elsewhereChristina meant her publisher Alexander Macmillan, with whom shewas always on pleasant terms.] 8l HIGH ST., HASTINGS. [December 1864.] My dear Gabriel, Such is my attitude vis-a-vis of the historic record of myfinished work. The stolid equanimity of the elephant under the lossof his trunk is perhaps my favourite point: though Henrietta justlydirected my admiration to the rueful eye which the chip directs tothe old block (head).. i866—TO WILLIAM ROSSETTI 29 A Miss Smith has asked and obtained Macs leave to melodizeone of my things, I know not which. The other day a Rev. wrote begging my permission for him to reprint House toHome, in a collection he is preparing to promote a charitable object:after consulting Mac I consented. Jean Ingelow is in his list ofcontributors; and Dean Alford, not that I rate him very highpoetically. Uncle Henry and Henrietta join in love. To William Rossetti. [This letter is very roughly written in pencil. My recollectionconcerning it is not exact. Christina was somewhere away fromhome, but I think not far off nor for long. It is clear that she hadby this time, on grounds of religious faith, declined the offer ofmarriage made by Charles Bagot Cayley: also that I had writtenmaking some proposal which she thought liberal—I presume theproposal (which I certainly did make at some t


Size: 1347px × 1855px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookau, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookidfamilylettersofc00