The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 579 pages of information about The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II.

The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 579 pages of information about The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II.

You see, Robert might go to stay till Mr. Edward Kenyon arrives—­if it were only till then.  I still hope and pray that our dearest friend may rally, to recover at least a tolerable degree of health.  He has certain good symptoms; and some of the bad ones, such as the wandering, &c., are constitutional with him under the least fever.  You may suppose what painful anxiety we are in about him.  Oh, he has been always so good to me—­so true, sympathising, and generous a friend!

I shall always have a peculiar feeling to that dear kind Miss Bayley for what she has been to him these latter months.

Now I can’t write any more just now.  Leighton has been cut up unmercifully by the critics, but bears on, Robert says, not without courage.  That you should say ‘his picture looked well’ was comfort in the general gloom, though even you don’t give anything yet that can be called an opinion.  Mrs. Sartoris will be much vexed by it all, I am sure.

May God bless you!  Write to me.  Robert’s love with that of

Your ever affectionate
BA.

Did you observe a portrait of Robert by Page?  Where have they hung it, and how does it strike you?

* * * * *

To Miss E.F.  Haworth

[Paris]:  3 Rue du Colisee:  Saturday, June 17, 1856 [postmark].

My dearest Fanny,—­I was just going to write to you to beg you to apply to Chapman for Robert’s book, when he came to stop me with the newspaper.  Thank you, my dearest Fanny, for having thought of me when you had so much weary thought; it was very touching to me that you should.  And I am vexed to have missed two days before I told you this—­the first by an accident, and the second (to-day) by its being a blank post-day; but you will know by your heart how deeply I have felt and feel for you.  May God bless you and love you!  If I were as He to comfort, you should be strong and calm at this moment.  But what are we to one another in this world?  How weak, how far, we all feel in moments like these.

Still, I should like to know that you had some friend near you, to hold your hand and look in your face and be silent, as those are silent who know and feel.  When you can write again, tell me how it is with you in this respect, and in others.

So sudden, so sudden!  Yet bereavements like these are always sudden to the soul, more or less.  All blows must needs be sudden.  May your health not suffer, dear Fanny.  We shall be in London in about a week after the 16th, for we are delayed through my not having finished my poem, which nobody will finish reading perhaps.  We go to Mr. Kenyon’s house in Devonshire Place, kindly offered to us for the summer.  Shall we find you, I wonder, in London?

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The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Volume II from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.