BIB_ID
421423
Accession number
MA 1352.594
Creator
Dickens, Charles, 1812-1870.
Display Date
London, England, 1850 November 24.
Credit line
Purchased with the assistance of the Fellows, 1951.
Description
1 item (1 page) ; 17.8 x 11.3 cm + envelope
Notes
Written from "Devonshire Terrace."
Envelope with stamp and postmarks: "W. Brown Esquire / Westfield Lodge / Brighton."
The letter is part of a collection, MA 1352, which consists of letters from Charles Dickens to the Baroness, to her companion Hannah (Meredith) Brown, or the latter's husband, William Brown; with 70 letters written by others to Miss Coutts or to Dickens in his capacity as her unofficial almoner; and a few others. See the collection-level record for more information.
Envelope with stamp and postmarks: "W. Brown Esquire / Westfield Lodge / Brighton."
The letter is part of a collection, MA 1352, which consists of letters from Charles Dickens to the Baroness, to her companion Hannah (Meredith) Brown, or the latter's husband, William Brown; with 70 letters written by others to Miss Coutts or to Dickens in his capacity as her unofficial almoner; and a few others. See the collection-level record for more information.
Provenance
The letters formed part of the Burdett-Coutts sale (Sotheby, 17 May 1922); they were purchased for Oliver W. Barrett in whose collection they remained until it was sold by his son (Parke-Bernet, 31 October 1951).
Summary
Asking for assistance on a medical question: "No time must be lost in getting the unfortunate Brighton girl into some Hospital. Her condition is so horrible, that she is obliged to be kept apart ; the very odor from her sores, being unendurable as they say. What shall we do?"
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