excerpt from 'Letter from Lady Granville to her sister, Lady G. Morpeth, October 1821' pp. 216 (83 words)
excerpt from 'Letter from Lady Granville to her sister, Lady G. Morpeth, October 1821' pp. 216 (83 words)
part of | Letter from Lady Granville to her sister, Lady G. Morpeth, October 1821 |
---|---|
original language | |
in pages | 216 |
type | |
encoded value |
The Cannings made themselves very agreeable. […] The girl charms us all with being the reverse of what she looks. She is remarkably frank and open in her manner, without the slightest pretension, all good-humour and readiness to please. Her beauty is not to be denied, but it has singularly little charm, I think. She is clever, and though less brilliant than I expected, she is not pert or overpowering. She has a magnificent voice, and she and Nugent sing morn, noon, and night. |
appears in search results as | excerpt from 'Letter from Lady Granville to her sister, Lady G. Morpeth, October 1821' pp. 216 (83 words) |
reported in source | |
---|---|
documented in |