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| | Estrangement and Connection: |
 | | What Kadish did not realize is that Hardinge went down twice: in February 1874, under a cloud of disapproval, to stay until November, and in June 1876, after becoming seriously ill. At the time of his second departure, his father, who had played a very important role in the events of 1874, was dead. |
 | | Another is, "Were letters handed to Jowett?" From Toynbee we learn that Jowett and Nettleship were not told everything the friends of Hardinge knew, much less given letters, and that Toynbee supervised Hardinge's burning of letters that could be used against him in a court of law, letters like the one Milner saw. |
 | | However, it is possible as Lesley Higgins suggested at the Pater Conference, that R. Nettleship, who might have been privy to all the information Jowett had, might have told his older brother Henry Nettleship, who might have told Pater, who might have told Gosse. |
| www.uncg.edu /eng/elt/pater/chap2.html (6199 words) |
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