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Lissan House,
Cookstown, Co. Tyrone
26th November, 1928
Dear Mr Hake:
Yours of the 22nd received late on Saturday, was both a great
surprise and pleasure to me to see my long lost portrait of Charles
Algeron Swinbourne executed on the 10th of January 1900. I would
like to know, if you can tell me, how Sir Edmund Gosse became
possessed of it. I never sold the picture, but lost possession
of it by inadvertance, and have endeavoured to trace it for 26
years. It recalls a most important day that I spent at Watts
Dunton's house lunching with him and Swinbourne. I am glad to
see it is in excellent preservation and you are doubtless aware
as no assignment of copyright, or Deed of Sale was ever made,
the copyright is still mine.
I shall be pleased to know
if it had been acquired, or left to the National Portrait Gallery.
Following the request made
in yours of the 15th inst. all the drawings and Pastels beside
one Oil Picture were most carefully packed up and forwarded to
you carriage forward. The conté drawings are not nearly
so important, in my opinion, as the Pastels and perhaps the Henniker
Heaton MP, as penny postage is so much in the public eye at the
present time, & he it was who originally carried it in the
House of Commons.
I am glad to get all these
Portraits away, and much prefer not to send them in batches,
as it has taken me so much time preparing and cleaning some of
them - they have got on my nerves. I should be glad to know if
your Trustees, have come to any decision about the Portrait of
Francis Thompson, as when they have decided to select any of
those just sent, I would ask you the favour of forwarding later
on to a Company in Bond Street, the Portraits which they do not
require.
Believe me,
Yours faithfully,
R Ponsonby Staples.
P.S. I wish to reconsider
any Prices I may had marked on a Previous List, when I know what
Portraits your Trustees may desire to buy.
To:
H.M. Hake, Esq.
Director National Portrait Gallery,
LONDON
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