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Total number of records: 2

Count of People and organisations

People and organisationsCount
Baring, Evelyn, 1st Earl of Cromer2
Gosse, Edmund1
Bathurst, Lilias Margaret Frances, Countess Bathurst (Nee Borthwick)1

Sender: Baring, Evelyn, 1st Earl of Cromer

Recipient: Bathurst, Lilias Margaret Frances, Countess Bathurst (nee Borthwick)

Letters: 2

Date(s): 8 Feb 1910 - 16 Jul 1910

Location: MS Dep 1990/1/2652, 2653

Sender: Baring, Evelyn, 1st Earl of Cromer

Recipient: Gosse, Edmund

Letters: 50

Date(s): 29 Jul 1909 - 6 Jun 1916

Location: BC Gosse correspondence

Note: On translating Greek poetry; address of book-seller; another book-seller; declining an invitation; accepting an invitation; Banbury's Bill on Dogs; requesting the signature of Gosse; books for a Classical Library; correct title of a book; new books to buy; apropos of Faguet; discussion of points in his new book; on Gosse's "17th Century Studies"; who was the author of the "Life of Peterborough"; thanks for the information; concerning a crisis in the House of Lords; about Queen Alexandra's letter; Cromer's niece has written to Russia; thanks for a new book; request to bring his wife with him to a meeting; meeting against the parliamentary vote to women; accompanying letter; French works on classical subjects; and others; concerning a line of Dante; more books; copy of Suidas; congratulations on a recent honour; more books to buy; a copy of Ennius, and Bury's "History of the Eastern Roman Empire; "Concordance of Dante" as distinguished from a concordance of the "Commedia"; a new book he has
bought; finally has gotten the Dante concordance he requires; concerning book-plates; Gosse's new book; notes on De Vogue's book; and untraced quotation; Gosse settles the point; prose vs poetry; lines from Martial; enclosing an imitation of Wordsworth; more news about the quotation; enclosing a limerick; accepting an invitation to lunch; concerning a Lady Dorothy; a Japanese translation for the House of Lords Library; invitation to lunch; expecting him; enclosing a paper; articles in "The Spectator"; discussion of Germany and France; two lines to be identified; Gosse's criticism of mis-statements in Strachey's "Eminent Victorians"; many thanks for a letter on a subject of mutual interest; regrets over refusing a luncheon invitation.