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TRER/12/234 · Item · 11 June 1915
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Welcombe, Stratford on Avon. - An 'enviable description of the Azalea Paradise of dear Theodore's' [Robin Ghyll?]. Forgets how long the flowers last; they have stayed in one place this year long enough to have 'an idea of the transitoriness of flowers'; likes the 'little veronicas' increasingly. Has been seeing much of [Cecil] Knight, the head of the grammar school [King Edward VI School, Stratford]; his 'type is a very high one indeed'; he was at Pembroke College and greatly admired some 'Harrow men' who would have been Robert's contemporaries, Law and Prior. Has been reading much Plato after his recent 'great bout of Latin', and has had some 'wonderfully interesting letters from [Henry] Jackson', about Plato and himself, which Sir George finds just as interesting; he has sent him the 'Proelections' read in the Senate for the candidates for the [Cambridge] Greek Professorship in 1906: Jackson himself; Verrall; Adam, Headlam; Ridgeway. Caroline is well and strong, for her.

Add. MS b/35/5 · Item · c 1947-c 1955
Part of Additional Manuscripts b

St. Giles's House, Chesterton Lane, Cambridge. Dated March 3 1898 - Thanks him for the photographs which recalled happy days being guided by Apostolis through Greece; congratulates him on finishing ['Pausanias'?] and for finding quiet in Cambridge when most 'live in a ceaseless tempest of teaching and tutoring'.