Maitland published Pages from the Day-book of Bethia Hardacre in 1895, encouraged by Frederick Greenwood.
Nor is it, as might be assumed from the antiquated Christian name Bethia, a réchauffé of the too familiar, imaginary reminiscences of the Elizabethan period or the Civil Wars.
There are touches of deep pathos with a genial cynicism which is sensibly sharpened by its evident truth.
[11] Godfrey Frank Singer wrote that:in The Etchingham Letters (1899), we find a literary correspondence which... is a collaboration.
[3] In her will, she left £500 to the National Trust; £300 to the RSPCA; £300 to the Men of the Trees: £209 to Our Dumb Friends League; £200 to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds; and £200 to the Council for the Preservation of Rural England.