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TRER/14/17
Titre
Letter from George Macaulay Trevelyan to R.C. Trevelyan
Date(s)
- 18 Oct 1897 (Production)
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Trinity. - Afraid he was not 'the "young person" who had taken out the Aeschylus' as his Greek can cope with Homer, and Aristophanes to some extent, but not the tragic poets; might have been able to learn if 'there had been a rational system of teaching classics'. The Fellowships were given to 'very good men' on the principle that those who were 'at their last chance' should receive them; this principle would make Moore and Barnet [sic: Lionel Barnett?] 'safe for next year', and George has other reasons for thinking this. A shame Moore could not get one this year. If there is a third fellowship next year he himself stands a chance, and his work was 'very much approved of'. Hopes that Bob is getting on well with his poetry.
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Mots-clés - Noms
- Trevelyan, George Macaulay (1876-1962), historian, public educator, and conservationist (Sujet)
- Aeschylus (c 525 BC- c 456 BC) tragedian (Sujet)
- Homer (fl 750 BC-700 BC) poet (Sujet)
- Aristophanes (c 446 BC-c 386 BC), Greek comic playwright (Sujet)
- Trinity College, Cambridge (Sujet)
- Moore, George Edward (1873–1958), philosopher (Sujet)
- Barnet, Lionel David (1871-1960) orientalist (Sujet)