Page:Marie Corelli - the writer and the woman (IA mariecorelliwrit00coat).pdf/60

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represented by a further letter dispatched to her in February, 1886: "I shall be perfectly ready to give full consideration to anything which proceeds from your pen, all the more readily, too, because I see you love wholesome thought, and will not lend yourself to corrupt and debase the English mind. . . . I have no greater pleasure than to bring to light a bright writer like yourself. After all, the Brightness must be in the author, and so the sole praise is to her."

After his first visit to Miss Corelli, in July of that year, Mr. Bentley wrote as follows: "The afternoon remains with me as a pleasant memory. I am so glad to have seen you. I little expected to see so young a person as the authoress of works involving in their creation faculties which at your age are mostly not sufficiently developed for such works."

Miss Corelli was allowed to retain her copyright, a fact which, though regarded by her as of slight import at the time, has since proved of some pecuniary advantage, seeing that the "Romance" is now in its twentieth edition.

The wise old publisher saw nothing attractive, explanatory, or salable in such a name as "Lifted Up," so a new title was asked for. Scott once said there was nothing in a name, and certainly it did not matter what such a magician as he was, called a