PatH, JoanK, and Gumtree,
Thanks for the "welcome back."
Yes, a lot of Burton's works were burned by his wife after his death. Much of her actions were motivated by religion. She was a fervent, preachy Catholic (a somewhat persecuted minority in Victorian England, despite laws otherwise), and she was never quite sure that he had rejected Islam, although he told her that he had. They say that if you walked through their house, her end was full of religious statuary, rosaries, and crucifixes. As you approached his quarters, the Christian imagery waned and crescent moons and arabesque mosaics began to dominate the walls.
She claimed that, after his death, he appeared to her three times and told her to burn his manuscripts.
Neville Shute. I remember his novel "On the Beach" had a profound impact on me in my teenage years. For a long time I thought that the expression "the world will end not with a bang, but with a whimper" that Shute used in that novel was his own words, but in later years, I learned that he was quoting T. S. Elliot.
Rich