Download Free Autograph Letter Signed From John Howard Payne New York To Roden Esq Office Of The Morning Herald London Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Autograph Letter Signed From John Howard Payne New York To Roden Esq Office Of The Morning Herald London and write the review.

Recipient is likely Thomas Roden, cashier of the Morning herald. Payne asks the recipient's help in helping his friend and countryman Mr. Hackett, presumably James Henry Hackett.
Payne wishes to know whether the Sub-Committee has come to a decision on a matter he laid before them on April 29.
Payne hopes Moore, with his influence with the Drury Lane Committee, will support his proposition to play Frederick (in Lovers' vows), Lothair (in Adelgitha) and Hamlet within a fortnight of the reopening of the theatre. Written from 4 Southampton St., Covent Garden. Accompanied by engraved portrait of Payne and a facsimile of an autograph poem by Payne "To Mrs. Morris, with a blank album."
Payne indicates that he took the liberty of giving Charles Kemble a letter of introduction to Brevoort and of soliciting Brevoort's "kind offices in his favour" through Mr. Irving. The letter opens with a line from Richard III: "From Tamworth thither is but one day's march." Integral address leaf addressed to Henry Brevoort, Esqr. care Ogden, Richards & Selden, Liverpool.
Copies in Payne's own hand of letters written by him during the years 1804-1839. [Vol.I], containing letters from Feb. 1, 1804 - Feb. 20, 1818, is a folio calf-bound volume, with index. Later letters are in quarto copy books.
In referring to his upcoming trip to England, quotes, albeit imprecisely, from Richard II: "that happy breed of men, that little world / that precious stone set in a silver sea."
Trusts that Ingram "will do [his] best for me in the matter of the new poems." Payne does not want his poems reviewed by a clique who write reviews in spite. The letter likely refers to New poems, 1880.
Acknowledging a copy of Some letters of William Ernest Henley.
Wishes Winter would keep his promise and send the Winter data for his sketch in the Sunday times.