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Archival description
Journal of a Stay in Rome
FRAZ/34/12 · Item · 1900-1928
Part of Papers of Sir James Frazer

20 pp. diary kept from 10 Dec. 1900 to 28 Feb. 1901 listing J. G. and Lilly Frazer's movements in Rome: places visited, and people seen, including [Giacomo] Boni, Wickham Steed and Madame [Clémence] Rose, Professor and Mrs [William] James, R. A. Neil, and A. E. Shipley. J. G. Frazer makes notes from a meeting on 16 Jan. with Miss Roma Lister, who gathered Italian folklore from peasants, and mentions her colleague C. G. Leland. On 19 Jan. he makes notes from a meeting with Dr [F. H.?] Burton-Brown, who lived amongst the Naga tribes in Assam. On 31 Jan. he describes an expedition to Nemi. On 27 Feb. he leaves Rome for Perugia. At the back of the volume are 2 1/2 pages of a bibliography of anthropological works, and two page list of 'Books Lent' from 1894-1905, to F. M Cornford, W. Ridgeway, A. B. Cook, W. H. D. Rouse, Miss [Aelfrida?] Tillyard, S. A. Cook, A. A. Bevan, and Prof. C. Bendall. This is followed by a short list of 'Ovid. Books to be Kept, Sept. 1928'.

TRER/17/128 · Item · 24 Sept 1908
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Lamb House, Rye, Sussex. - Sorry that Sir George had the trouble of his 'kind letters' about James's brother and his wife [William and Alice?], when he and Lady Trevelyan had family trials; particularly that any concern about 'this so sadly impracticable visit' should have troubled them when they were anxious about 'Mrs Robert' . Pleased to think that should now have passed, as he has just had a 'reassuring word' from Robert, having written as soon as he heard of their 'misfortune [Bessie and Robert Trevelyan's daughter Susan was born on 16 September, but died soon afterwards; the anxiety may have been about Bessie's own health]. William and Alice were uncertain about their sailing date for America; fears this made them 'rather thankless subjects of offering hospitality' but 'meant intensely well' and have just left James 'full of good wishes' to the Trevelyans and 'regrets for the pleasure they awkwardly lost'. He himself will 'subside here' after a rather 'agitated summer'; autumn is the time he most enjoys here. Expects the Trevelyans have plans to travel, though is very glad he himself does not.