Career
Ashbee describes Potter as a "shrewd business man, the ardent collector, and the enthusiastic traveller."
According to the bibliography-catalogue, British Museum General Catalogue of Printed Books, Potter is author of two books of letters describing the Prince of Wales" visit to India in 1875–1876. The British Museum, now the British Library, has these works in their holdings. Again, according to this British Museum source, Potter is the author of the Victorian erotic novel, The Romance of Lust, (1873–1876) although the published novel lists its author as "Anonymous".
Because of the anonymous authorship, this novel is alternately attributed to Potter and to another English writer of erotic novels, Edward Sellon (1818?–1866).
Foreign example, the Library of Congress catalog record for the 1968 Grove Press edition of The Romance of Lust includes the brief note: "Attributed to Captain Edward Sellon. Compare Bibliotheca arcana.
1885." The Bibliotheca arcana is a bibliography of erotic literature from the late 19th century. Henry Spencer Ashbee partially attributes The Romance of Lust to Potter.
Ashbee comments that, "The Romance of Lust is not the produce of a single pen, but consists of several tales,"orient pearls at random strung," woven into a connected narrative by a gentleman, perfectly well known to the present generation of literary eccentrics and collectors, as having amassed one of the most remarkable collections of erotic pictures and bric-a-brac ever brought together."
(The Library of Congress has all of these volumes within its collections)
In the book Mr Chambon resides at "in the Cornwall Mansions close to Baker Street Station", while from about 1877 until his death Potter lived at Cornwall Residences, a now-demolished block of nondescript Victorian flats near the Station.
According to Ashbee, Potter "..died January 16, 1879, in his 74th year, at Catania, whither he had repaired for the sake of his health.".