20 Merton Street, Oxford -- Sends the letters about Aldis Wright that he means to be a gift to Trinity.
Zonder titel20 Merton Street, Oxford -- Informs him that he is sending letters relating to William Aldis Wright to Hugh Macdonald to be given to Trinity.
Zonder titelTrinity College, Cambridge -- Thanks him for the copy of the Athenaeum containing his article about Shakespeare.
Zonder titelConcerning William Aldis Wright's writer's cramp.
Zonder titelBeccles -- Reminiscences by a schoolfellow and long time friend of William Aldis Wright.
Beccles -- Gives information on William Aldis Wright's relatives.
Beccles -- Further information about William Aldis Wright.
Zonder titelConcerning William Aldis Wright.
Concerning William Aldis Wright's parents.
Zonder titelRavensleigh, 33, The Avenue, Beckenham -- Some notes on William Aldis Wright.
Zonder titelGives a history of his work on Shakespeare's plays, and asks for more information about Clark's new edition.
Zonder titelChancery Office, Manchester -- Sends by railway the MSS on Shakespeare by his great uncle Roger Wilbraham.
Zonder titelThe Atheneum -- Provides information about the meaning of a "country captain" in India; shares a conjecture about the first scene of "Measure for Measure".
Zonder titelSchool Hall, Bury St Edmunds -- Shares notes on legal terms in The Merchant of Venice.
Zonder titelConcerning the origin of "Ut Re Mi Fa Sol La" as a note on the music lesson in The Taming of the Shrew.
Zonder titelSends notes on Lear, and two short notes from Troilus and Cressida and Antony and Cleopatra.
Zonder titelDulwich -- Writes to remind Clark that he should correct the mistake about his edition of Shakespeare; meant to send him some notes but has been distracted with legal worries; sends a note for Cymbeline.
Zonder titel8 New Cavendish Str., W. - Is heading to Paris, regrets that he can't construe Shakespeare and that there is no literal Latin prose translation.
Zonder titelThe Priory, 21 North Bank, Regents Park -- Suggests that Clark should print the two versions of Hamlet with commentary which he would find instructive, as he has never seen the whole of the first version except in Hugo's French translation; is sending him the new edition of his life of Goethe in part because Clark liked the original, and in part to show he is not unmindful of Clark's kindness.
Zonder titelAbout the "ball" in the ball and sceptre, references Arthur Taylor's work On the Glory of Regalia.
Zonder titelConcerning the Shakespeare/Francis Bacon authorship debate.
Zonder titelAccompanied by an envelope addressed to Clark with compliments of Macmillan & Co.
Zonder titelNote enclosing a copy of a letter from Woollaston to Lord Camden, asking for permission for W. G. Clark to consult the Dering MS of "Henry the Fourth".
Zonder titel