Identificatie
referentie code
Titel
Datum(s)
- 3 Oct. 1926 (Vervaardig)
Beschrijvingsniveau
Omvang en medium
1 postcard
Context
Naam van de archiefvormer
archiefbewaarplaats
Geschiedenis van het archief
Directe bron van verwerving of overbrenging
Inhoud en structuur
Bereik en inhoud
31 Endcliffe Rise Road, Sheffield.—Comments briefly the latest issue of the Review. His own article on ‘Temples and Hammonds’ has been printed in Notes and Queries.
(Dated 3 Oct. Postmarked 3 Oct. 1926.)
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Transcript
31 Endcliffe Rise Rd. Sheffield
3 Oct.
R.E.S. p. 422. {1} I think Marsh and Dunnington, however spelt in the will, must stand for March and Doddington. The other forms dont appear in the Gazetteer. One wd suppose that Peerson was native of March.
A. W. Reed is very kind to Merrill whose book is really a disgrace to scholarship in its textual inaccuracy. {2}
Notes & Queries has printed my article on Temples and Hammonds. {3}
Ever yours
G.C.M.S.
[Direction:] Dr McKerrow | Messrs Sidgwick & Jackson | 44 Museum St | London | WC1
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Postmarked at Sheffield at 6.30 p.m. on 3 October 1926. Another postmark declares, ‘BRITISH GOODS ARE BEST’.
{1} The reference is to Cecil S. Emden’s article ‘Lives of Elizabethan Song Composers: Some New Facts’, Review of English Studies, ii (1926), 416–22.
{2} See Reed’s review of The Life and Poems of Nicholas Grimald by L. R. Merrill (1925), ibid., pp. 483–5.
{3} ‘Temple and Hammond Families and the Related Families of Nowell and Knollys’, Notes and Queries, cli. 237–9 (2 Oct. 1926).