Item 137 - Letter from Julius Charles Hare

Identity area

Reference code

Add. MS a/77/137

Title

Letter from Julius Charles Hare

Date(s)

  • 24 Nov. [1843] (Creation)

Level of description

Item

Extent and medium

5 pp.

Context area

Archival history

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer

Content and structure area

Scope and content

JCH is unsure whether Christian C. J. Bunsen is at home. When JCH last saw him he mentioned that he had had to decline a kind invitation from WW to come to Cambridge. Bunsen is concentrating on the printing of his book on Egypt. JCH gives his opinion of a recent Shakespeare production. It seems to JCH 'that the principle of the greatest dramatic poets has not been to make their characters talk in the form of thought which prevailed in their own times, but they have made them give utterance to the deepest thoughts of their own age & of their own individual minds. The most remarkable example of this is of course Hamlet, the Dane, who went to study at Wittenburg, under Doctor Martin Luther. But the same principle prevails in Macbeth, Lear, & indeed everywhere in Shakespeare; one of the chief marvels in whom is the manner in which he combines this with a sufficient regard to the characteristic spirit and manners of the age which he is representing'.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

Accruals

System of arrangement

Conditions of access and use area

Conditions governing access

Conditions governing reproduction

Language of material

    Script of material

      Language and script notes

      Physical characteristics and technical requirements

      Finding aids

      Allied materials area

      Existence and location of originals

      Existence and location of copies

      Related units of description

      Related descriptions

      Notes area

      Alternative identifier(s)

      Access points

      Subject access points

      Place access points

      Genre access points

      Description identifier

      Institution identifier

      Rules and/or conventions used

      Status

      Level of detail

      Dates of creation revision deletion

      Language(s)

        Script(s)

          Sources

          Accession area