Elizabeth Barrett to Mary Russell Mitford, 23 September 1841:
'Mr Horne set me Martinuzzi to read, a day or two ago [...] Martinuzzzi is in a course of
performance still [...] After the fatal first night, sundry corrections & reformations were made
in the tragedy [...] The tragedy has fine things in it, but not very frequently & always broken
into chips [...] Mr Horne lent me the play -- & now I have to stutter out the truth to him in all
courtesy.'
Unknown
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: Elizabeth Barrett
Elizabeth Barrett to Mary Russell Mitford, 13 October 1841:
'I have not heard from Mr Horne since he wrote to me of Martinuzzi .. A friend of mine, Mrs
Orme (who lived with us once as my governess & my sisters',) promised to procure for me
from Dr Stone [friend of Horne's] a copy of Martinuzzi which he had marked the margin of,
with "great laughter", "peals of laughter", as the spectators laughed where they ought to have
cried [...] It was a transcript of the impressions of the first night.'
Century: 1800-1849 Reader/Listener/Group: Dr Tom Stone Print: Book
'The farm [a family property] in Lincolnshire consumed a vast deal of our time all through [...]
1853 [...] Grote worked at intervals even at the farm [...] the operations of husbandry were not
without a certain "bucolic" attraction for him; the rather as he studied Stephens's "Book of the
Farm" with regularity, even taking interest in the theory of cultivation, involving as it did a touch
of [italics]science[end italics].'
Century: 1850-1899 Reader/Listener/Group: George Grote Print: Book