18 MARCH 1911, Page 15

AN ADVENTURE.

[TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR."]

Snt,—I have read with interest the contributed article headed "An Adventure," in your issue of March 11th, but it contains one inconsistency which appears to have escaped the writer's notice. Towards the end of the article it is stated that the ladies who met with the adventure explained it by supposing that they had "entered into the working of the Queen's memory," but towards the beginning it had been stated that a lady whom one of the two ladies saw was "the Queen herself." I submit that in no recollection of any scene does the person recollecting ever see herself. This, therefore, disposes of the theory that the ladies who saw Mario Antoinette at the Trianon in 1901 did so through entering into the Queen's memory.—I am, Sir, &c.,

G. D