[244] Wesleyan Methodist Magazine, October 1851. Protestant Magazine, September 1851.
[245] Gladstone to Lord Aberdeen, September 16, 1851.
[246] Mr. Gladstone in an undated draft letter to Castelcicala.
[247] The one point on which Lord Aberdeen had a right to complain was that Mr. Gladstone did not take his advice. As the point revives in Lord Stanmore's excellent life of his father, it may be worth while to reproduce two further passages from Mr. Gladstone's letter to Lord Aberdeen of July 7, 1851. Before publishing the second of the two Letters, he wrote to Lord Aberdeen: 'I ought perhaps to have asked your formal permission for the act of publication; but I thought that I distinctly inferred it from a recent conversation with you as to the mode of proceeding'—(Mr. Gladstone to Lord Aberdeen, July 7, 1851). Then he proceeds as to the new supplementary publication: 'If it be disagreeable to you in any manner to be the recipient of such sad communications, or if you think it better for any other reason, I would put the further matter into another form.' In answer to this, Lord Aberdeen seems not to have done any more to refuse leave to associate his name with the second Letter, than he had done to withdraw the assumed leave for the association of his name with the first.
[248] Ashley, Palmerston, ii. p. 179.
[249] August 7, 1851. Hansard, cxv. p. 1949.
[250] Fagan's Life of Panizzi, ii. pp. 102-3.
[251] On the share of Mr. Gladstone's Letters in leading indirectly to this decision, see the address of Baldacchini, Della Vita e de' Tempi di Carlo Poerio (1867), p. 58.
[252] Gleanings, iv. pp. 188, 195. Trans. of Farini, pref. p. ix.
[253] To Dr. Errera, author of A Life of Manin, Sept. 28, 1872. For Manin's account, see his Life, by Henri Martin, p. 377.