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nsurpassable。
All through the book there are points which I have noted for the highest praise; the three white fingers on Ustane’s hair; the dream about the skeletons; the meeting of the Living and the Dead; the Statue of Truth — these are only a few of the really marvellous things that the book contains。 I was a great admirer and; as you know; a warm weler of “King Solomon’s Mines;” but I confess that exceedingly picturesque and ingenious book did not prepare me for “She”; and I do not know what to say; of hope or fear; about any future book of adventure of yours。 I don’t know what is to be imagined beyond the death of Ayesha。
Accept again my thanks for the gift of your book; which I put among my treasures; and now the expression of my sincere and cordial admiration。
Yours most truly;
Edmund Gosse。
P。S。 — May I say; without impertinence; I think the style strikes me as a vast improvement upon that of “K。S。M。”?
To turn to something humorous — I find the following in the handwriting of the late Rev。 W。 J。 Loftie; headed “SHE” in large letters。
Are you acquainted with the story of the lady who wrote poetry? She had begun an epic —
“Man was made innocent and good; but he” —
when a visitor called。 She left the paper on the table: the visitor came in; waited a little and departed。 When she returned she found the couplet pleted:
“Man was made innocent and good; but he —
Would doubtless have continued s