y and faithfully yours.
"Daddy" Knowles.
[Sidenote: Mrs. Gaskell.]
DEVONSHIRE TERRACE, _January 31st, 1850._
MY DEAR MRS. GASKELL,
You may perhaps have seen an announcement in the papers of my intention
to start a new cheap weekly journal of general literature.
I do not know what your literary vows of temperance or abstinence may
be, but as I do honestly know that there is no living English writer
whose aid I would desire to enlist in preference to the authoress of
"Mary Barton" (a book that most profoundly affected and impressed me), I
venture to ask you whether you can give me any hope that you will write
a short tale, or any number of tales, for the projected pages.
No writer's name will be used, neither my own nor any other; every paper
will be published without any signature, and all will seem to express
the general mind and purpose of the journal, which is the raising up of
those that are down, and the general improvement of our social
condition. I should set a value on your help which your modesty can
hardly imagine; and I am perfectly sure that the least result of your
reflection or observation in respect of the life around you, would
attract attention and do good.
Of course I regard your time as valuable, and consider it so when I ask
you if you could devote any of it to this purpose.
If you could and would prefer to speak to me on the subject, I should be
very glad indeed to come to Manchester for a few hours and explain
anything you might wish to know. My unaffected and great admiration of
your book makes me very earnest in all relating to you. Forgive my
troubling you for this reason, and believe me ever,
Faithfully yours.
P.S.--Mrs. Dickens and her sister send their love.
[Sidenote: Rev. James White.]
DEVONSHIRE TERRACE, _Tuesday, Feb. 5th, 1850._
MY DEAR WHITE,
I have been going to write to you for a long time, but have always had
in my mind that you might come here with Lotty any day. As Lotty has
come without you, however (witness a tremendous rampaging and ravaging
now going on upstairs!), I despatch this note to say that I suppose you
have seen the announcement of "the" new weekly thing, and that if you
would ever write anything for it, you would please me better than I can
tell you. We hope to do some solid good, and we mean to be as cheery and
pleasant as w
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