CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis | ||
NEW YORK, November, 1895.
[DEAR MOTHER: — ]
The china cups have arrived all right and are a beautiful addition to my collection and to my room, in which Daphne still holds first place.
What do you think Sir Henry sent me? The medal and his little black pipe in a green velvet box about as big as two bricks laid side by side with a heavy glass top with bevelled edges and the medal and pipe lying on a white satin bed, bound down with silver — and a large gold plate with the inscription "To Richard Harding Davis with the warmest greetings from Gregory
Yvette has offered to teach me French, so I guess I won't go to Somerset's wedding, unless O — — scares me out of the country. I got my $2,000 check and have paid all my debts. They were not a third as much as I thought they were, so that's all right.
Do come over mother, as soon as you can and we will meet at Jersey City, and have a nice lunch and a good talk. Give my bestest love to Dad and Nora. How would she like Yvette for a sister-in-law? John Hare has sent me seats for to night — He is very nice — I have begun the story of the." Servants' Ball" and got well into it.
Lots and lots of love.
DICK.
The following letter was written to me at Florence. The novel referred to was "Soldiers of Fortune," which eventually proved the most successful book, commercially, my brother ever wrote. Mrs. Hicks, to whom Richard frequently refers, is the well-known English actress Ellaline Terriss, the wife of Seymour Hicks. Somerset is Somers Somerset, the son of Lady Henry Somerset, and the Frohman referred to is Daniel Frohman, who was the manager of the old Lyceum Theatre.
Early in November, William R. Hearst asked my brother to write a description of the Yale-Princeton football game for The Journal. Richard did not want to write the "story" and by way of a polite refusal said he could not undertake it for less than $500.00. Greatly to his surprise Hearst promptly accepted the offer. At the time, I imagine this was by far the largest sum ever paid a writer for reporting a single event.
CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA Adventures and Letters of Richard Harding Davis | ||