29
March 1891, Camp Palamow, Mss Eur C258/10 to mother.
Dr
King is off to Tenasserim in Burma to inspect the tin mines there
6
May 1891, Calcutta, Mss Eur C258/10
Dr
King back from Burma and looking very well. I met one of my colleagues ,
Mr Oldham, on my way down from Daltonganj. He has just come in from Baluchistan where he has been
looking for oil. He tells me his
mother Is living in Shrewsbury, where his sister is one of the nurses at the infirmary. I would be very glad if sister
Grace would call on them some day when she goes for her music lesson. Their address is 'Windsor House'. It is somewhere near St Mary's.
Sept
19 1890 Charing Cross Hotel, Tel
No 3574 Mss Eur C258/11 Tom proposes
to Anna
My
Dear Miss Handy (The High School,
Swansea)
I wish to ask you a question which I am
afraid will come upon you rather suddenly, and for which I would like to
prepare the way in some manner, only that I do not see exactly how I am to do
so. The questions is, Will you be
my wife? It is perhaps rather an
unorthodox way of putting such a serious question, but what can I do. If I had, say a month, or even a week,
in which you might have come to be, let us say, interested in me, to prepare
you for it, and then whispered the question in your ear, under the moon, it
might have been more in accordance with the fitness of things , and maybe I
might have been more likely to obtain a favourable answer. etc
Her
reply Mss Eur C258/11
Dear
Mr. La Touche,
I
got your letter from Charing Cross.
It was as you thought, I should be extremely surprised. It all seems to me very strange,
considering the extreme shortness of our acquintance. The honour that you have done me has touched me very deeply,
but how do you know that you have not made a mistake? I think it will please you best if I should speak
plainly as ever I can. It is not very easy but I shall do my best.
First of all I liked you, of
course. You were so good to tell
me about Edith and then you are a friend of hers There is not anyone that I
care abou in that way, but how could I tell that I should ever care for you
more than as a friend and I should think it highly improbable that you on
further acquaintance would change your mind I hope you do not mind me speaking so plainly. It is surely the best thing to do.
Thank you very much for the great
honour that you do me,
Believe
me, very sincerely, Yours, Anna Handy
21
Dec 1891, Daltonganj, C258/11
Pen
and ink drawing of ridge tent enclosed with letter.
Oct
6 1891 in England Mss Eur C258/10
---
newly married and packing ready to sail to India.
5
Nov 1891, Calcutta, Mss Eur C258/10
Dr
& Mrs King have given us a very nice breakfast affair with two egg cups ,
butter cooler, toast rack combined as a wedding present. {a drawing of it on the page] We are going to dine with them tomorrow
evening. Mr
Oldham gave us a dinner on Friday at the Bengal Club. Not a big affair as only the Kings and Mr Holland who is
also in the survey were there. Nancy wore her white silk wedding dress and
looked very well.
28
Nov 1891 Mss Eur C258/10
The
La Touche's journey to central provinces encounters trouble in the ladies
waiting room with men visiting in the night. He goes in and stays to chaperone her, and the station
inspector wants to throw him out. etc Letter to Polly describes the voyage out
"the
first three days were very bad , as soon as we got past the scilly Islands
there was a heavy sea and the ship rolled horribly day and night. Nancy hardly left he berth all the time
though she was not very ill, and had a fairly good appetite most of the time,
and I was not much better. It was
not till we got past Cape St Vincent that the weather became realy fine but
since then it has been splendid every day, and the sea quite smooth except
yesterday when there was a swell which made the ship pitch a bit , and Nancy
felt rather queer at times, but she managed to show up at every meal. We passed Gibralter early on Thursday ,
and had a very fine view of Malta about 11 o'clock yesterdaay morning - but as
it was Sunday and the ship carries plenty of coal to take her on to Port Said
the captain did not waster time by going into the haqrbor, so we could not post
letters. We have been doing over
300 miles a day since Thursday last - 327 one day - so are getting on very well
and hope to be in Port Said on Wednesday.
11
Nov 1891, Calcutta, Mss Eur
C258/10
Here
we are safe in Calcutta after our long voyage , which was indeed not so long
for we were only 27 days at sea and came near to making the quickest run on
record. After Suez we had very
good weather until we were within 100 miles of the mouth of Hooghly and fell in
with a cyclone. We had to turn
round then and go back for some distance to keep away from the center of
it. It was grand sight to see the
waves breaking over the bows of the vessel. preparations to go to Jabbalpore and the Nerbadda
river for a month to examine the coal field there. "Dr King says it is a very pretty place,"
Details
of the geology to his father and mention of a tiger hunt in three letters.
2
Feb 1892, Dehra Ismael Khan, Mss Eur C258/11 to his mother
Describes
how he was " ordered to Quetta
to fix a site for an oil boring, just getting to the Indus before the bridge of
boats was pulled down before the beginning of the rainy season. I had a hot day's journey to Moultan
where I met Dr. King, on Friday morning we went together and had two days, one
of them very hot and a night on the train before we rached Quetta. There we stayed Sunday week and saw the
great man of the District, Sir James Browne who has succeeded Sir R.
Sandeman. On Monday we started
back staying a day at a place called the Chappar rift, a wonderful narrow gorge
through the hills, where we chose the place where the oil boring was to be
made,
Kulu
17 Feb 1892, to Lahore 11 May and Dharmsala
20
April 1892, Bakkar, C258/60
a
flooded bridge
21
April 1892, Mooltan, C258/60 to Nancy in Dera Ismail Khan
Subur
forgot the tin of army rations.
22
April 1892, Ruk Junction, C258/60
I
am writing under difficulties for Dr. King is sitting in a long arm chair forgainst
me and talking away about what he intends to do when he goes on leave, We have
had a great day's conversation
entirely but first I must tell you
what we are likely to do. Dr King does not know whether we shall have to go to
Quetta or not, but we will probably get a telegram at Sibi which will settle
that.
23
April 1892, Quetta, C258/60
Its
cooler here. Choosing the site for
oil boring on Monday
24
April 1892, Quetta, C258/60
…
met William King looking fresh and
"full of spirits as a
boy". He is certainly a wonderful man to be able to take such a journey after his
length of service and be so fresh at the end of it. That day was a very hot one in the train and we consumed a
fair quantity of liquor. Each
train carries a man with ice and soda water which is a great convenience. At Ruk where we had to wait a couple of
hours and change from the Karachi to the Quetta train after crossing the Indus
on a wonderful bridge. We met some people, a Mr McMahon and his wife, who had
just come from home and were on their way to Quetta. He turned out to be the son of General McMahon who is a well
known geologist and did a great deal of work for the geological Survey before
he retired, but his son seemed to have very hazy ideas on the subject, and
hardly knew the difference between archaelogy and geology, also mixed up
chemistry and petrology etc etc. His wife seemed to be very pleasant and nice looking (that is, you
understand, comparatively. My wife
is the only really nice-looking woman I know). However we had some talk together, and he turned out to be
the Comm. of Apozam and to have come down through the Dhana with Sandeman and Oldham. The latter he did not seem to think much of. He says that he hardly took the trouble
to look at the oil and he riled Dr. King considerably by calling Oldham an
"expert".
He
describes artesian wells … The water rushes up from a pipe about 4
ins in diameter and throws itself 3 or 4 feet into the air malking quite a pretty fountain. Then we went
to look at some natural artesian springs outside the station, which Mr. Oldham thinks were made a long time ago by some now
forgotten race of civilized people. Dr. King and I came to the conclusion that they are springs
and have been formed naturally