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Add. MS a/355/4/7 · Item · 3 Nov. 1927
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Department of English, University of Chicago.—Looks forward to reading McKerrow’s new book, as he has long used his Notes on Bibliographical Evidence in training graduate students.

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Transcript

The University of Chicago, Department of English
November 3, 1927

Dr. R. B. McKerrow
Enderley
Little Kingshill
Great Missenden
Bucks, England

Dear Dr. McKerrow:

Ever since its first publication we have been using your Notes on Bibliographical Evidence in the training of our graduate students. I began it, and other instructors who have continued my work have, like me, found the “Notes” invaluable in our work. I heard rumors last year that you were revising and enlarging the “Notes”, and I am delighted to receive your letter of October 19 announcing that the enlargement is on its eve of publication. I have no doubt at all that we shall find the new book even more interesting and valuable than the old.

I am very grateful to you for sending me a copy, and shall examine it eagerly as soon as it arrives. If I can possibly find time to do so I shall review it for Modern Philology.

At present it is very doubtful whether we shall visit England during the next six months, but we shall certainly return before very long, and I shall hope to see you again.

Sincerely yours,
John M. Manly

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Typed, except the signature. At the foot is the reference ‘JMM:JB’.

Add. MS a/457/2/3 · Item · 26 Sept. 1927
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Clarendon Press, Oxford.—The free copies will be despatched as advised.

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Transcript

The Clarendon Press, Oxford
26th September 1927

Dear Sir,

Thank you for the list of persons to whom you wish your free copies distributed. {1} They will be despatched on the day of publication, i.e. 20th October.

We shall be sending the copy for Prof. J. M. Manly to the University of Chicago as he will have returned to America by 20th October.

Yours faithfully
G E Durham

R. B. McKerrow Esq.,
Enderley
Little Kingshill
Great Missenden
BUCKS

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Typed, except the signature. The reference ‘3249(Pub)/D’ is typed at the head after the printed words ‘Please quote’.

{1} Cf. Add. MS. a. 457/5/3.

Add. MS a/457/5/3 · Item · c. 25 Sept. 1927
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

(Undated. This list was compiled in response to a letter from G. E. Durham dated 23 Sept. 1927 (Add. MS a. 457/2/1) and a version of it was received by Durham on or before the 26th (Add. MS a. 457/2/3). The persons, etc., listed are A. W. Pollard, W. W. Greg, Miss H. C. Bartlett, Miss E. M. Albright, Prof. Max Förster, Miss Field, Frank Sidgwick, Louvain Library, Sir Israel Gollancz, G. C. Moore Smith, and J. M. Manly. A note has been made of those who were also written to, and those from whom acknowledgements were received.)

MCKW/A/3/23 · Item · 18 Apr. 1924
Part of Papers of R. B. McKerrow

Department of English, University of Chicago.—Is unable to contribute to the first number of the Review, but hopes to send something later. American scholars will not expect to be paid for contributions.

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Transcript

The University of Chicago, Department of English
April 18, 1924

Dr. R. B. McKerrow

% {1} Sidgwick and Jackson
3 Adams {2} Street
London, W.C.2, England

Dear Mr. McKerrow:

Your letter of March 17th reached Chicago while I was absent on a visit of two weeks to Alabama.

I was very much interested in your project to establish The Review of English Studies and send you my heartiest good wishes. I shall also be glad to aid you at any time in any way that I can. Just at present I cannot promise to send you an article for the first number because I am too deeply engaged with the preparation of other publications, articles, and books, which are long overdue. Some time during the summer or autumn, I think I might promise to send you something.

I am not surprised that you will not be able to pay for contributions and I am quite sure that no American scholar will expect any pay, as no publication of this class in this country is able to pay at all.

Again wishing success to your undertaking, I am

Sincerely yours,
John M. Manly

JMM:IL

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Typed, except the signature.
{1} The percentage sign represents ‘c/o’.
{2} A mistake for ‘Adam’.

Add. MS a/355/4/10 · Item · 13 Nov. 1927
Part of Additional Manuscripts a

Box 13, Department of English, University of Chicago.—Praises his book, and suggests arrangements for reviewing and promoting it in America. Thanks him for reading her manuscript on Spenser and Lipsius, and refers to her forthcoming article on the date of the Mutability cantos.

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Transcript

Box 13 The University of Chicago, Department of English
November 13. 1927

Dear Mr. McKerrow:

Your fine book, Introduction to Bibliography, came yesterday, and I am delighted with it. I have read it in part already, but lent it for a few days to Professor Tom Peete Cross, so that he could recommend it in a new manual on bibliographical method (a beginner’s book for first year graduate students) {1}. By the way, I think Professor Cross would be the best reviewer in America for your book and that it is the kind of book he would like to review. If your publishers have not already sent to Modern Philology a review copy, I would suggest designating Professor Cross as reviewer, & that the copy be sent to him directly. Professors Manly and Crane will help recommend to students, and so shall I. Modern Philology and Modern Language Notes seem to me the most important reviewing places to reach scholars & text editors in this country. Of course, if your publishers would insert paid advertisement†, the Publications of the Modern Language Association would be the best place, as it reaches more interested people than any other publication. I’m not a member of the American Bibliographical Association, and I don’t know how useful they would be in advertising foreign works; but their membership is much smaller than the M.L.A., anyway.

I have ordered several copies for Harper Library at the University of Chicago, and I think more will be ordered later. All the libraries ought to buy it. It would help to have it recommended by the American Library Association, which issues from Washington lists of books desirable for libraries to buy. I don’t know the details of how this is worked, but, if I hear, will drop you a note. You ought to get a good American sale to add to the English. It’s a fine book. I shall study it carefully and thoroughly, and it will help me greatly. Thank you for remembering me.

I received the manuscript on Spenser and Lipsius {2}, and thank you for your kindness in reading and criticising it. I am aware of the difficulty of proving that Lipsius’ Constancy was known to Englishmen before the edition printed in London in 1586. It was written in the 70’s, however. I shall pull in the horns of the argument and try to suggest no more than evidence warrants, and offer it to an American journal later. As to the date of the Mutability cantos, I am practically certain they were written 1579-80, and an article on that will appear in April Studies in Philology. {3}

I am sorry I wounded your feelings by calling you “Professor”. Our new President in a speech recently assured us that Professors are no longer branded as such by their poverty and eccentricity, etc., but that the best of them in a crowd could pass for merchants! So you see my hailing you as Professor isn’t quite so bad as it seemed.

The antics of Mayor Bill Thompson of Chicago keep us all amused. He is too funny to weep or fume over.

Thanking you cordially for the gift of your very attractive and useful book. I remain

Sincerely yours,
Evelyn May Albright

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{1} Presumably a revised edition of his List of Books and Articles designed to serve as an Introduction to the Bibliography and Methods of English Literary History, first published in 1919.

{2} Presumably Albright’s article on ‘Spenser’s Mutability and Lipsius’s Constancy’, which was still ‘not yet published’ in 1929 (see Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, vol. xliv, no. 3 (Sept. 1929), p. 722), and seems never to have seen print. Albright may have submitted it to McKerrow for possible inclusion in the Review of English Studies.

{3} ‘Spenser’s Reasons for Rejecting the Cantos of Mutability’, Studies in Philology, vol. xxv, no. 2 (Apr. 1928), pp. 93-127.