news of AFB's success in the tripos, The Figaro and the Graphic have requested her portrait: 67 Regency Square, Brighton
Welcombe, Stratford on Avon. - Glad to hear they are all well; Caroline sends love; a 'cuckoo for ever calling here' makes him think of 'the dear little boy' [Paul] and of 'Will Shakespeare'. They have just finished Hogg [his life of Shelley], and thinks more of Hogg 'in his queer way' than ever; has been reading a Macmillan edition of Shelley: 'What a poet!'. Has read [Roger] Fry's article in the Burlington Magazine, and paid a second visit to the illuminated manuscripts [exhibition at the Burlington Fine Arts Club] yesterday before leaving London; has also looked through the British Museum facsimiles here and at Grosvenor Crescent. Hopes Fry's wife will 'go on satisfactorily'. The 'Doctorate business' [his forthcoming honorary degree at Cambridge] is 'very plain sailing': Lord Halsbury, Lord Rayleigh, and Sir James Ramsey will also be staying at [Trinity College] Lodge; they lunch at [Gonville &] Caius, whose Master [Ernest Roberts] is Vice Chancellor. Others receiving honorary degrees are: the Duke of Northumberland; Admiral Sir John Fisher; Charles Parsons; Sir James Ramsay; Sir W[illiam] Crookes; Professor Lamb; Professor Marshall; Asquith; Lord Halsbury; Sir Hubert Herkomer; Sir Andrew Noble; Rudyard Kipling; Professor Living; they will 'advance on the Senate House...like the English at Trafalgar'. in two columns. Is looking forward to dinner in the hall at Trinity. Went to Harrow on Tuesday and will tell Robert about it and about the 'Cacciola affair'.
One copy inscribed to 'Miss Ramsay', the other to 'Miss Lilias Ramsay'.
Includes Lionel Tennyson's verse "Annotated edition of uneasy lies the head that wears a stolen hat, an unhappy story" with a note by H. M. Butler dated 1901 identifying the author and circumstances. Another poem from J. H. R. to M. S. K. [James Henry Ramsay to Mary Scott Kerr] is dated 1861, and a postcard to Mme. F. Galton in Cannes is unsigned and dated from Florence, April 14, 1893.
Offprint from the Scottish Historical Review, Vol. XIX, No. 76.
letters of congratulation continue to pour in for Agnata
Three copies of a genealogical chart printed in three parts carried down to 1 March 1916. One copy is corrected with some corrections to 1917, with many edits of information, but not recording Gordon Butler's death, and possibly done by Sir James Ramsay.