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Notebooks

Title
Notebooks, 1789-1797.
Physical Description
4 v. ; 15 cm.
Language
English
Notes
The original letters, from which these excerpts are transcribed, have apparently not survived.
Notebooks are numbered on the front covers and dated on the inside front covers.
Vol. 1 includes a sketch of a tree.
Binding: cardboard covers.
Associated material: Anne Seymour Damer Collection (LWL MSS 48), Lewis Walpole Library.
In English.
Provenance
Purchased from Christie's (Waller sale, lot 10), December 1947.
Access and use
This material is available for research.
Biographical / Historical Note
Anne Seymour (Conway) Damer (1749-1828), sculptor and author, was born on 8 November 1749, the only child of Field-Marshal Hon. Henry Seymour Conway (1719-1795), and his wife, Caroline Bruce, Lady Ailesbury (1721-1803), the daughter of John, fourth duke of Argyll. In 1767 she married John Damer, the son of Lord Milton, later the 1st Earl of Dorchester. They separated after seven years, and he died by suicide in 1776. Her artistic career developed during her widowhood, though the development of her youthful interest in sculpture is credited to her father's secretary, David Hume, and to the encouragement of Horace Walpole, who was her guardian during her parent's frequent trips abroad; in 1789, Walpole introduced Damer to Mary Berry (1763-1852), with whom she developed a passionate and lasting friendship. At his death, Walpole bequeathed her Strawberry Hill as his executor and residuary legatee. Damer exhibited 32 works at the Royal Academy and produced keystone sculptures for the bridge at Henley-on-Thames, a 10-foot statue of Apollo, now destroyed, for the frontage of Drury Lane theatre, and two bas-reliefs for the Boydell Shakespeare Gallery. Damer also wrote one published novel, Belmour (1801).
Summary
Manuscript, in a single hand, of a collection of excerpts of letters, in four volumes, from Mary Berry to Damer, transcribed and edited by Damer. The notes refer primarily to their passionate friendship and confidence in each other; their ill health, both mental and physical; and introspective commentary upon the reasons for their melancholy moods. Few of the entries are dated, and mutual acquaintances are left unnamed or else mentioned by initials only. Berry describes their friendship as having "become such a part of myself, or rather of something much dearer than myself, that I can neither live without it, nor dissatisfied with it, nor with the idea of ever being deprived of it." In Vol. 2, she mentions she has waited all day for her correspondent to visit her, having hoped that each carriage passing by will stop at her door. Elsewhere, she complains that her friend is leaving for Tours without her and of feeling "continual pains in my head, restless nights & miserable feels of weakness & langour." Other excerpts address Berry's thoughts on William Fawkener, Damer's suitor; Damer's persecution by the press; a crisis in their friendship at the end of July 1794 resulting in Berry's desire to distance herself from Damer socially, and then her decision to weather out the public attacks on their relationship; and Berry's secret courtship by General Charles O'Hara and its disintegration.
Other formats
Available on microfilm from The Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University ; D182 1-2.
Available as pdfs from The Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University.
Format
Archives or Manuscripts
Added to Catalog
March 11, 2008
Contents
vol. 1. 1792
vol. 2. 1792-1793
vol. 3. 1793-1795
vol. 4. 1795-1797.
References
Anne Seymour Damer, Notebooks. The Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University.
Cite as
Anne Seymour Damer, Notebooks. The Lewis Walpole Library, Yale University.
Genre/Form
Diaries - England - 18th century.
Also listed under
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