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Call Number:
MSS 53
Creator:
Woolner, Thomas, 1825-1892
Title(s):
Thomas Woolner letter to Marian Lewis
Date:
1876 February 20
Classification:
Archives and Manuscripts
Part of Collection:
Box 1, folder 18
Provenance:
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Fund
Conditions Governing Access:
The materials are open for research.
Conditions Governing Use:
The collection is the physical property of the Yale Center for British Art. Literary rights, including copyright, belong to the authors or their legal heirs and assigns. For further information, consult the Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts.
Scope and Content:
"Feb: 20 '76. My dear Mrs Lewis, I ought to have answered your letter before, but of late every evening I have had has been so closely engaged that I have not been my own master but rather the unwilling slave of that unpitying Demon brute - Circumstance. Tho wet a great deal, the weather has been so mild these last few days I hope it has dealt kindly with my well-beloved Patriarch. I was by no means pleased to have your confirmation of what I had heard of him. I am glad you think it does him good to have a chat on the way this queer world wags, and I will run down any Sunday you tell me I may see him without hurting him: my duties of the heavy sort are not yet begun at the R.A. and when they are they will not affect my Sunday, as I rarely work on that quiet restful day. What a joke about a bust of S.C. Hall! - doubtless I have during my life done many things a highly developed - or rather a human creature living in a highly developed civilization ought not to have done; - but I can lay my hand upon my faithful bosom and say "Thank that Destiny, hitherto my guide, I have never yet descended into such a puddle of inanity as to exercise my craft upon the features of Mr Pecksniff!" So pray ask your Husband not on my account to swell the vanity or the pockets of this contemptible sneak.- The R.A. business was very simple last Tuesday - it was decided by a majority of 2 to 1 that a first installment of Associates be elected soon as possible with the vote and all other advantages the present ones enjoy. To my mind this is disastrous because it will stop anything like a large movement towards justice for 25 years or longer, but as it appears to serve the purpose of ambition, and as ambition has a large majority to pedestalize him upwards I suppose the most philosophical thing is to smile at the gregariousness of mankind.- Ever truly yours, T. Woolner." S.C. Hall was the editor of The Art Journal and was renowned for his sanctimonious personality. He was widely considered the basis for Charles Dickens's character, Mr. Pecksniff.
Additional Notes:
With blind-embossed letterhead: 29, Welbeck Street. W.
Physical Description:
1 folded sheet (4 pages) : autograph letter, signed ; 18 x 23 cm, folded to 18 x 12 cm
Genre:
Correspondence and Exhibitions
Subject Terms:
Antiquities
Art
Orientalism
Painters
Painting
Photography
Prices
Sculptors
Sculpture
Associated Places:
Egypt
France
Great Britain
Hayes (Bromley, London, England)
Paris
Associated People/Groups:
Hall, S. C. (Samuel Carter), 1800-1889
Lewis, John Frederick, 1804-1876
Lewis, Marian, approximately 1826-1906
Royal Academy of Arts (Great Britain)
Woolner, Thomas, 1825-1892
Finding Aid Title:
Thomas Woolner Letters to John Frederick Lewis
Archival Object:
https://archives.yale.edu/repositories/3/archival_objects/2629910
Metadata Cloud URL:
https://metadata-api.library.yale.edu/metadatacloud/api/aspace/repositories/3/archival_objects/2629910?mediaType=json&include-notes=1&include-all-subjects=1