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Total number of records: 29
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Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): n.d.
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. Inserted in "Living English Poets", 1883
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 61
Date(s): 14 Sep 1867 - 7 Apr 1907
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In vol. A.C. SWINBURNE'S LETTERS TO SIR EDMUND GOSSE, 1867-1907. GOSSE, MSS, D-2, SWI
Note: Typewritten copies.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 30 Oct [1874]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence
Note: Inserted in his "Lord Soulis", 1909. Gen, SWINBURNE. Has been reading Rossetti's edition of Blake, will be pleased for Gosse to write something about him and all the more obliged if he can read it first, complains about the proofs of his "Chapman" - will "drive me mad or blind or both".
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 4
Date(s): 5 Feb 1875 - 12 Jan 1898
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In vol. A.C.SWINBURNE, 1875-1898, GOSSE, MSS, D-2, SWI
Note: With transcripts and a note about Hebert Mason, nephew of Watts-Dunton on the back of a letter from Gosse to Swinburne. "Songs of Two Nations"; bankruptcy of E.C. Steadman, thanks for specimen of paody, "a private, or malignant"; (1898) congratulations to Meredith.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 18 Oct 1876
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In POETICAL PAMPHLETS A.C. SWINBURNE, BC MS 19c Swinburne
Note: Inserted in his "Ode to Mazzini", 1909. About a "precious relic" and his own health.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 29 Oct [1876]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence
Note: Inserted in his "Autobiographical notes", 1920. Gen., SWINBURNE. Robert Davidson the author of "A New Trick to Cheat the Devil", (1639). Marzial's musical setting of four pieces by Swinburne. Article on Congreve for Encyclopaedia.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 4 Apr [1877]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In PROSE PAMPHLETS. A.C. SWINBURNE., LONDON 1909-1910, BC MS 19c Swinburne
Note: Inserted in his "The Saviour of Society", 1909. Draws Gosse's attention to a sestina written by him some years before and claims to have invented the rhyming sestina in English and French, thinks this might be worth noting in the paper Gosse is writing on the naturalizing of foreign metres into English.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 13 Jun [1877]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In LETTERS TO VARIOUS CORRESPONDENTS ... 1910-1912, BC MS 19c Swinburne
Note: Inserted in his "Letters to Sir Edward Lytton-Bulwer", 1913. Informing Gosse that he has seen Chatto who welcomed the idea of the Dictionary of English Drama, and offering him a share in the enterprise.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): [17 Sep 1877]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence
Note: Inserted in his "Gathered Songs", 1887. Gen., SWINBURNE. Congratulating Gosse on the birth of a daughter.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 21 Sep [1877]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence
Note: Inserted in his "Felicien Cossu", 1915. Gen., SWINBURNE. Congratulating Gosse on the birth of his daughter; literary criticism.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 29 Sep [1877]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence
Note: Inserted in his "Ernest Clouet", 1916. Gen., SWINBURNE. Thanking Gosse for a letter.
Sender: Swinburne, Algernon Charles
Recipient: Gosse, Edmund
Letters: 1
Date(s): 9 Oct [1877]
Location: BC Gosse correspondence. In BORDER BALLADS, BC MS 19c Swinburne
Note: Inserted in his "Burd Margaret", 1909. Suggests that the new "Biog. Dram." should be confined to England alone, and proposes various contributors for other countries; personal matters; has been trying to read Mrs Centlivre and finds her very dull and monotous; recently acquired "two noble windfalls of dramatic bibliophily" one of which has Charles I's autograph.