Skip to main content.

Unaddressed Letters

“I had a friend who loved me;” but he has gone, and the “great gulf” is between us. After his death, I received a packet of manuscript with these few words:—“What I have written may appeal to you because of our friendship, and because, when you come to read them, you will seek to grasp, in these apparent confidences, an inner meaning that to the end will elude you. If you think others, not the many but the few, might find here any answer to their unuttered questionings, any fellowship of sympathy in those experiences which are the milestones of our lives, then use the letters as you will, but without my name. I shall have gone, and the knowledge of my name would make no one either wiser or happier.” The writer was, by trade, a diplomatist; by inclination, a sportsman with literary and artistic tastes; by force of circumstances he was a student of many characters, and in some sense a cynic. He was also a traveler—not a great traveler, but he knew a good deal of Europe, a little of America, much of India and the further East. He spent some time in this neighborhood, and was much interested in the country and its people. There is an Eastern atmosphere about many of the letters, and he made no secret of the fact that he was fascinated by the glamour of the lands of sunshine. He died very suddenly by misadventure, and, even to me, his packet of letters came rather as a revelation. - Summary by Frank Athelstane Swettenham (7 hr 10 min)

Chapters

PREFACE

THE HILL OF SOLITUDE

OF WORSHIP

WEST AND EAST

A CLEVER MONGOOSE

A BLUE DAY

OF LOVE, IN FICTION

THE JINGLING COIN

A STRANGE SUNSET

OF LETTER-WRITING

AT A FUNERAL

OF CHANGE AND DECAY

DAUGHTERS AND DESPOTISM

HER FIANCÉ

BY THE SEA

AN ILLUMINATION

OF DEATH, IN FICTION

A HAND AT ÉCARTÉ

THE GENTLE ART OF VEERING WITH THE WIND

A REJOINDER

OF IMPORTUNITY

OF COINCIDENCES

OF A COUNTRY-HOUSE CUSTOM

A MERE LIE

TIGERS AND CROCODILES

A ROSE AND A MOTH

A LOVE-PHILTRE

MOONSTRUCK

THE “DEVI”

THE DEATH-CHAIN

SCANDAL AND BANGLES

THE REPREHENSIBLE HABIT OF MAKING COMPARISONS

A CHALLENGE

IN EXILE

OF LOVE—NOT IN FICTION

OF OBSESSION

OF PARADISE LOST

“TO MARY, IN HEAVEN”