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Press cuttings with reviews of Trevelyan's translation of Theocritus' idylls, most sent to Trevelyan by Durrant's Press Cuttings agency, from: the "Daily Telegraph"; the "Birmingham Post"; the "Glasgow Herald"; the "Morning Post"; the Guardian (a piece by R. Ellis Roberts entitled "Convention and Artifice", also discussing Lytton Strachey's "Pope" and D. N. Smith's "Dryden)"; the "Nation and Athenaeum"; the "Saturday Review"; the "Observer"; the "Journal of Education"; the "Weekly Westminster"; the "Manchester Guardian"; the "New Statesman"; the "Times Literary Supplement" (two copies); and the "Scotsman".

Half page with advertisement for the Casanova Society's edition of Trevelyan's Theocritus.

TRER/46/321 · Item · 27 Sept 1924
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

The Shiffolds. - Thanks his father for his letter and for his 'kindness' in paying the fifty pounds into Robert's account. Is glad his father thought he had done the right thing with the Macaulay notes [on Theocritus]; has now sent in the manuscript and the book will appear soon after Christmas. Will send his father a copy. It will be 'beautifully printed, costing a guinea'; is sorry it will be so expensive, but 'the publishers [the Casanova Society] talk of a cheap edition later on'. Hopes to send his father his translation of Antigone before Christmas; this will be 'quite a cheap book, brought out by the Liverpool University Press'

The New Statesman has been writing about 'that anonymous story about the Prince of Monaco [
The Fall of Prince Florestan of Monaco
, originally published in 1874]', which Robert 'always thought was written by Sir Charles Dilke', though the New Statesman seems not to know the author. Is 'almost sure' his father told him that Dilke wrote it.

As his father will have head, Julian has 'cut his knee with a stick, and so cannot go back to school till Wednesday'; there is nothing else wrong with him.