In her book Relations and Complications, Gladys Brooke tells the story of Edward Burne-Jones, who along with Algernon Swinburne, visited her future husband, Bertram (The Tuan Muda), aged nineteen, at his sick-bed in London: These visits of Swinburne during the Tuan Muda’s illness were interspersed by those of Sir Edward Burne-Jones. He came frequently in the afternoon, after his walks or when he had returned from the city, and on several occasions he drew pictures to distract my future husband. Some of these I am reproducing: they will have a durable interest, for they have never seen the light of publicity. ... he drew one morning a dream which he had experienced the preceding night of a ghost: he depicted himself in bed and at the same time inscribed his attitude to the unwelcome vision. The sketches will throw a light on Sir Edward’s personal character; as he executed each drawing at my husband's bedside he would recount at length the story of its inspiration. These stories my husband used often to repeat to me, looking over again the drawings which he counts among his greatest treasures. (Gladys Brooke, H. H. The Dayang Muda of Sarawak, Relations and Complications, The Bodley Head, London, page 98).