Bartlett has added an extensive biography of Gerrard Cobb to the front of the volume and tipped in the handwritten sheet music that accompanies each page of the verse throughout the volume. Yours truly “Rudyard Kipling.” Here Kipling refers to his collaboration with Anglican composer Gerard Francis Cobb who set his popular poetry collection, Barrack Room Ballads, to music in 1892, including such well-known verses as “Danny Deever,” “Gunga Din,” and “Mandalay.” As Kipling indicates in his letter, Richard Edwards Bartlett later assisted the British Museum in cataloguing their copy of Cobb’s musical adaptation. I did not realize it was part of the responsibility of the Museum to catalogue all songs and I should be sorry to add to their labours by having the catalogue the hundred of settings of my verse. Bartlett Esq., Dear Sir, I am greatly obliged to you for your letter of May 6th in which you tell me what the British Museum authorities have done through your efforts, to catalogue Mr. On Kipling’s Bateman’s house letterhead, the letter is dated May 7th, 1912 and reads: R.E. From the library of Richard Edwards Bartlett with a typed letter addressed to him and signed by Rudyard Kipling tipped in. Octavo, bound in three quarter morocco over marbled boards. The English Library edition of perhaps Kipling’s most popular poetry collection.
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