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Elderfield, Otterbourne, Winchester.
Aug 20th 1880

MS Yale University, Beinecke Library

Dear Sir

Herewith I send copied out for me by a friend, a story for your Christmas number.1 I hope you will not think it either too long or too much of a child’s story.

The whole description of the carol singing past and present is from actual nature here.  I have myself heard the verses about ‘Divers’ sung  The Wolf incident likewise happened in this neighbourhood but ended in the fierce dog being killed.  If you accept it, I should like to have a parcel of Christmas carols in due time, and a couple of copies of the Christmas number itself as part of the payment  I hope soon to send you a short story of an adventure connected with the camp at Aldershot which I heard of the other day2

yours truly

C M Yonge

 

30th  Your kind letter and the advertisements have just arrived.  Thank you for what you say.  I have had some remuneration voluntarily offered for some of my earlier books and both Mr Macmillan and Marcus Ward make arrangements in America which are considered in the remuneration they give me.  The  American history has been revised by an American clergyman.  I believe its publication in America will precede that in England.

 

1 This story was probably “Wolf” which in 1881 was published both separately and in the collection Lads and Lasses of Langley.

2 This is probably “Drumbledore Bill” which was also included in Lads and Lasses of Langley.
Cite this letter


The Letters of Charlotte Mary Yonge(1823-1901) edited by Charlotte Mitchell, Ellen Jordan and Helen Schinske.

URL to this Letter is: https://c21ch.newcastle.edu.au/yonge/19990/to-an-unknown-man-editor-of-an-american-journal

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