"Thanking him [in 1831] for his kindnesses to Mendelssohn and for performing his music, apologizing for not keeping his promise regarding a tenor duet and writing out a canon for two violas, saying he likes Rome but not especially the Italians, expressing regret that since he arrived in Italy he found \"neither a good theatre, nor an orchestra, nor even a single clever professor,\" saying he never imagined a country \"where there could be so little musical sense or interest in it\" as there is in Italy, mentioning Klingemann, Neate, Horsley, Kemble, and Cartwright; and [in 1839] introducing \"my very particular friend Mr. [Ferdinand] David, who visits England for the first time.\""@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Florence, 26 June 1831, and Leipzig, 1 March 1839, to Sir George Smart in London"@en . "1831 06 26." . . "1839 03 01." . . . .