Current Search: Thomas Campbell Letters (x) » text (x)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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Handwritten letter from Thomas Campbell asking for the third volume of Bacon, dated November 12.
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Date Issued
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1843
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F26_02
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell to Archibald Alison.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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A letter of introduction for Dacres Adams, traveling with a friend in Scotland, written by Thomas Campbell to Archibald Alison (1757-1839). Campbell speaks highly of Adams to Alison.
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Date Issued
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1828-07-02
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F18_04
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell to Henry, Lord Cockburn.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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A letter of introduction for Dacres Adams ('The young man himself has something in his nature that will never allow him to be an illiberal and therefore I like to introduce him among the Whigs - as I believe that intercourse with them will insensibly concilate and alter his hereditary feelings in politics'), written by Thomas Campbell to Lord Cockburn.
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Date Issued
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1828-07-02
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F18_03
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell to Lady Burdett.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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Handwritten letter from Thomas Campbell to Lady Burdett, Thanking her for a subscription, and sending a copy of his poems.
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Date Issued
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1843
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F26_01
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell to Mary Campbell.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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Letter written by Thomas Campbell, signed "T. C." to Mary, probably his niece Mary Campbell, dated 61 Lincolns Inn Fields, June 26, 1838. It is concerned with his health and activities surrounding the coronation of Queen Victoria. He attended the royal levee on Wednesday with Joseph Gwilt, but was indisposed with gastric fever and unable to eat. The Earl Marshall has sent him a ticket for a seat in Poet's Corner at Westminster Abbey for the coronation on Thursday, but Campbell doubts if he...
Show moreLetter written by Thomas Campbell, signed "T. C." to Mary, probably his niece Mary Campbell, dated 61 Lincolns Inn Fields, June 26, 1838. It is concerned with his health and activities surrounding the coronation of Queen Victoria. He attended the royal levee on Wednesday with Joseph Gwilt, but was indisposed with gastric fever and unable to eat. The Earl Marshall has sent him a ticket for a seat in Poet's Corner at Westminster Abbey for the coronation on Thursday, but Campbell doubts if he will be able to attend. He has ceased work on Petrarch, but has the news that 6,000 copies of his poems have sold within the year.
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Date Issued
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1838-06-26
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F22
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell to Mrs. Dugald Stewart's brother, Lord Corehouse.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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A letter of introduction for Dacres Adams, traveling with a friend in Scotland, written by Thomas Campbell to Lord Corehouse, brother to the widow Mrs. Dugald Stewart and friend of Sir Walter Scott.
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Date Issued
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1828-07-02
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F18_02
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letter from Thomas Campbell to the widow of Dugald Stewart.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas
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Abstract/Description
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A letter of condolence written by Thomas Campbell to Mrs. Dugald Stewart.
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Date Issued
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1828-07-02
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F18_01
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Format
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Document (PDF)
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Title
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Letters signed from Thomas and Matilda Campbell.
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Creator
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Campbell, Thomas, Campbell, Matilda Sinclair
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Abstract/Description
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Three autograph letters, signed, to Mrs. James Carrick Moore and to her daughters Harriet and Louisa, 3 pages 8vo, one with address-leaf and nother with the front portion of an envelope, from York Chambers, St. James Street, dated December 1835, January 1836, and one with no date, together with a letter from Campbell's wife to Mrs. Moore, 1 page 8vo, from 10 Seymour Street West, not dated. (Glue stains affecting the signature of Mrs. Campbell's letter.) Mounted together on a single album leaf...
Show moreThree autograph letters, signed, to Mrs. James Carrick Moore and to her daughters Harriet and Louisa, 3 pages 8vo, one with address-leaf and nother with the front portion of an envelope, from York Chambers, St. James Street, dated December 1835, January 1836, and one with no date, together with a letter from Campbell's wife to Mrs. Moore, 1 page 8vo, from 10 Seymour Street West, not dated. (Glue stains affecting the signature of Mrs. Campbell's letter.) Mounted together on a single album leaf. Friendly and affectionate letters, playfully describing James Carrick Moore as "insincere, affected and hypocritical" accepting an invitation to drink tea with the Moores after he had dismissed the "two dull men" with whom he was engaged to dinner, asking Harriet Moore to "stand or rather sit by me" on another occasion, "...and defend me from being attacked about my illustrations", and on the third occasion regretfully declining the opportunity of visiting the zoo. "To return to the subject of your husband he is an estimable man in some respects...He affects unfriendliness without a grain of sincerity. He will call his best friend a greedy merchant, a pawnbroker, etc. and even hint he is a fool, all the while thinking in his heart of hearts that his friend is a wise and money-scorning man. I never knew a greater hypocrite in the affection of ill nature. But he is always sincere in showing the opposite quality..."
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Date Issued
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1835, 1836
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Identifier
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FSU_MSS_1948003_B2_F21
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Format
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Document (PDF)