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Archival description
Add. MS c/101/81 · Item · 21 Aug. 1900
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

Refers to the reports that his father [Sir George Otto Trevelyan] has received from Arthur Sidgwick about Henry Sidgwick's condition; 'that all hope has been given up.' Asks her to convey to Henry, if the opportunity arises, his sentiments about the high value he places on Henry's friendship. Adds that she should not trouble herself if she cannot pass on this message, as he is certain that Henry knows it already.

Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist
Letters from G. M. Trevelyan
Add. MS c/201/58-70 · Item · 1910-1945
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

12 letters to:
Anna Maria Philips: 1 May 1912
[Lewis] Melville of the Titmarsh Club: 1 Sept. 1910, 15 Feb. 1912, n.d., 18 Feb. 1913, 22 Mar. 1916
[Samuel J.?] Looker: 16 Jan. 1922, 9 Oct. 1923
Reginald Leslie Hine: 9, 12 Nov. 1926, 29 Mar. 1932
Mr Lewis: 2 Nov. 1945
and a fragment with Trevelyan's signature and a newspaper clipping portrait

Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist
O./18.1 · Item · 1781-1928
Part of Manuscripts in Wren Class O

Note by George Macaulay Trevelyan on back flyleaf: 'The other end of this volume is the Commonplace Book of Charles James Fox. This end I have used for letters from (and to) Thomas Babington Macaulay. G. M. Trevelyan, Dec. 1928'. Most of the letters are labelled in Trevelyan's hand, adding details such as publication in George Otto Trevelyan's Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay. There are also a few letters from and to G. O. Trevelyan.

Macaulay, Thomas Babington (1800-1859), 1st Baron Macaulay, historian, essayist, and poet
Add. MS c/95/169 · Item · 19 Aug. 1899
Part of Additional Manuscripts c

Writes that Sidgwick's letter gave him great encouragement and pleasure. Reports that he is in 'a cold fit' about his book [England in the Age of Wycliffe], which he refers to as 'a second-rate' history book. Declares how much he values the opinions of Sidgwick and others. Agrees with Sidgwick 'about the faulty construction of the first part', and that the story of the Peasant's Rising 'could have followed straight after the last paragraph of Chap III'. Paragraph crossed out in pencil: Expresses how much he enjoyed, and profited from, the Methods of Ethics; reports that he read [Plato's] Republic again that summer. Refers to the 'struggle across the Channel', which, he claims, 'is now neither more nor less than God v the Devil with the odds on the Devil.' Refers to the Dreyfus Affair. Quotes a stanza from Heine.

Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist