I apologize heartily for my delay in replying to your kind note of last November enclosing the page of "poemets" 'old age echoes'2—which you were so good as to offer me at the price of £20—
My excuse is just that I have been very much away from London this winter & have run into arrears all round (if that be an excuse!)—& secondly my unwillingness to do the unwelcome & ungracious thing implied in my being unable to avail myself of the "Poemets."
I am so extremely sorry not to see my way to utilizing them for my Review & I accordingly3 return herewith the printed proof of them as you now request—
Yours very faithfully James Knowles4 loc.03209.002.jpg loc.03209.003.jpg loc.03209.004.jpg loc.03209.005.jpg loc.03209.006.jpgCorrespondent:
James Thomas Knowles
(1831–1908) was the editor of The Nineteenth
Century, a leading British monthly magazine, in which "Fancies at Navesink" was published on August 18, 1885. He was also an
architect and the founder of the Metaphysical Society, dedicated to discovering
common ground between science and religion.