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English
Fonthill Media Ltd
26 October 2017
Volume Nine begins with the death of the diarist's wife, Margaret, after a marriage of almost 42 years. Margaret's health had always been delicate and she finally declined and died of dropsy-what today might be referred to as an edema due to congestive heart failure. Margaret had never been a lively or outgoing person, but it had been a marriage of money and the Backhouse resources restored the Witts family's fortune and provided the foundation to the substantial estate that Francis Witts left to his son Edward when he, the diarist, also died four years later. Francis Witts was lonely and reflective in his final years. His own health was not good and he predicted, correctly that it was the heart. On 4 May 1854 he put his thoughts to his diary: 'But, in truth, the continued, if not increased, difficulty of breathing, makes me satisfied that there is some serious mischief near or about the heart: it may be organic; and the end may come at no distant period: may I be then found not ill-prepared; resigned, patient, and penitent as the clouds gather around me!' In between the periods of indifferent health he roused himself to visit old friends and relations and he made several visits to London, especially at the time of the Great Exhibition in 1851. Francis Witts longed for visits from Edward, Sophy and his grandsons, and the sadness he felt at not getting enough of their time is painfully clear in these last years. At last he found a curate to aid him in his clerical duties, but it was all too late. In the presence of his curate at lunch on 18 August 1854 the ultimate mischief occurred. The previous day he had written the final words in his diary: 'Received from C. J. Geldard a present of two brace of Moor game.' He did not live to enjoy them, and his diaries extending 56 years came to close.

By:  
Edited by:  
Imprint:   Fonthill Media Ltd
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Volume:   v.9
Dimensions:   Height: 248mm,  Width: 172mm,  Spine: 47mm
Weight:   1.710kg
ISBN:   9781781556238
ISBN 10:   1781556237
Series:   The Complete Diary of a Cotswold Parson
Pages:   640
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Francis Witts (1783-1854) was born in Cheltenham, the son of Edward Witts, a woollen cloth merchant, and Agnes Witts, nee Travell. The family was of the gentry and on Agnes's side there were pretensions of association to the nobility. In 1793 Edward's business failed. The cause is unknown, but it seems likely that he had over-extended himself buying cloth which he could not sell to his usual channels on the Continent due to the Revolutionary Wars. In consequence, the family was much reduced in wealth. Through an advantageous marriage and an inheritance from a childless uncle, Francis built on these new foundations to leave a substantial fortune. Following the diary keeping habits of his mother, Francis Witts maintained a diary from 1798 to 1854, although unfortunately there are substantial gaps. He was a leading local cleric in Gloucestershire, a magistrate and the chairman of the local union workhouse. He was also extremely well connected and all of these facets result in an informative window into early Victorian squirarchy.Alan Sutton FSA (b. 1949) has been a publisher since 1974 and his name is well known in history and local history circles. His first substantial success was in 1978 with the short edited version of these diaries under the title 'The Diary of a Cotswold Parson'; the editorial work of the eminent architectural historian David Cecil Wynter Verey. In 1981 it was decided that publishing the complete diaries would be a welcome contribution to Gloucestershire history, but in failing to find anyone rash enough to take on the task, the job fell to Alan. Volume 1 was eventually published in 2008, twenty-seven years after commencement, and this volume, the final volume of text now follows nine years later. Volume 10, the mammoth biographical index will follow very shortly.

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