| Declares that it is impossible that HS 'should have named anything which would interest [him] more than the Byron.' Refers to one of the poems - the Ode to Napoleon - which, he claims is 'exceedingly characteristic of Cowell' and a pleasant reminder of the close friendship that united the Cowell, HS and himself. States that his has not been in the habit of keeping letters from anyone, but that he has kept, as a bookmark, 'a very tattered letter of Henry's of 1896', and claims that his last two of May and July 1900, he has kept 'as priceless possessions.' Adds that it is also possible that he may find one or two letters written to him at important occasions of his life, as his wife has kept a great many of them. Undertakes to send all that he has. |