1-30: Anglo-French Financial Mission to the USA
- Reeks
- 10 Sept. 1915-16 Dec. 1919
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1-30: Anglo-French Financial Mission to the USA
379-394: School of Biological Sciences
Part of Papers of Sir Alan Hodgkin
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
A subscription indicates that the letter is cited from the 1632 edition.
Extract from Boileau’s translation of Horace, Satires, II
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
No heading. Four lines of verse.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Extract from Chant VII of Voltaire’s La Henriade
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
No heading. Six lines of verse. First line: ‘A ta faible raizon garde-toi de te rendre’.
‘Début des Géorgiques.’ The opening of Delille’s translation of Virgil’s Georgics.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
First line: ‘Je chante les moissons; je dirai sous quel signe’.
Verses, by an Augustinian friar
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Introduced by the following words: ‘De la critiqe amère: je citerè cette Strofe, adressée par [un] Augustin à un ministre réformé. page 389.’ First line: ‘Va, coquin, insolent, sans ame’.
Cited from De Paris, des mœurs, de la littérature, et de la philosophie, by J. B. S. Salgues (1813), pp. 388–9. The introductory words were rephrased.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See L’Anti-Sans-Souci, ou la Folie des nouveaux philosophes naturalistes, deïstes, et autre impies (1760).
‘Einvokacion ô Soleil.’ The beginning of the second canto of Lemierre’s La Peinture.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
In verse. See Antoine-Marin Lemierre, La Peinture (1769).
‘Remontrance q’à ozé fère un Saje ô plu gran Monarke de la terre é d’une voâ ferme é asurée.’
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Extracts from Examen de l’Homme des Champs
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
‘Prospektus de la Relijion Chrétienne’
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
‘Descripcion de Paris.’ Part of the fourth canto of Delille’s L’Homme des champs
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
In verse. First line: ‘Du hô de cè kôtô d’où Paris nou dékouvre’. Last line: ‘Il promenèt au pè sè douce rêverie.’
See Jacques Delille, L’Homme des champs, ou Les Géorgiques françoises (1800), pp. 153–5.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See Lettres cabalistiques, iv (1741). 252–60.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See Lettres cabalistiques, iv (1741). 174–81.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See Lettres cabalistiques, iv (1741). 181–94.
Extract from Le Voyageur français, by the Abbé de la Porte, etc.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
No heading. First words: ‘Note: Soù la minorité d’Achmet I.’ Last words: ‘effroaia-ble mélanje de barbarie, d’einsolence é de justice.’
See Joseph de la Porte, etc., Le Voyageur françois (1768 ed.), i. 391–2. The passage does not appear in the first edition, which was published in 1765.
(There is no writing on these pages, though all but the last have borders.)
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
This is a virtually complete transcript of the book published under this title in 1796 (some publication details were omitted). The fourth canto was copied out twice. Dated at the end ‘Chaussegros-Vital. à Paris, au coin de la rue du Harlay, Boulevert de Baumarchais, ce 4 Juin à 8 heures, 15.mi du soir, 1831.’
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See Marcus Manilius, Astronomicon, trans. A. G. Pingré (4 vols., 1786).
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See ‘M. Mirabaud’ (Paul-Henri Dietrich, Baron d’Holbach), Système de la Nature (1770).
‘Discours Eternel.’ A verse treatise, in four parts. Author unknown.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See Les Exemples célèbres, ou Nouveau choix de faits historiques et d’anecdotes (1817), pp. 113–31.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
In verse. The passage on p. 94 headed ‘Imne o Soleil. Chant cekon [i.e. second]’ is in fact adapted from part of the first canto.
The poem was first published in 1777; the preliminary discourse was added in the second edition of 1778.
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
See François Fénelon, Lettres sur divers sujets concernant la religion et la métaphysique (1718).
Note on the importance of a woman’s reputation
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
(There is no writing on these pages, though all but the last have borders.)
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
‘Statuts de l’Ordre de l’Annonciation.’ By Joseph Grosset?
Part of Crewe Manuscripts
Probably incomplete. The title is subscribed ‘J. G.’ and the name Joseph Grosset appears on p. 4. The text refers to the Order of the Rosy Cross, the mystical word ΑΒΡΑΣΑΧ (Abrasach), the ideas of Isaac Hollandus, and other terms of esoteric philosophy. There is no writing on pp. 3a and 3b, which were probably missed out by mistake.