Royal Library: Thott 323 (Context and purpose) Transcription by Esther Inglis of Guy du Faur, Seigneur de Pibrac's Quatrains (September 1606)
Esther Inglis
(Scribe)
Full entry.
Cambridge University
Library: MS Additional 8460 (Context and purpose) Miscellany in verse and prose (c.1665-1714.
Elizabeth Lyttelton probably began compiling this manuscript in the mid to
late 1660s, when she is first mentioned in her father's letters as helping him
organize his papers (Keynes, Works, IV, p. 29, letter
21 (13 August 1668)). She might have continued until she gave the manuscript
to her cousin Edward Tenison in
1714 (p. 174), though the latest dateable item
in the miscellany is 1710 (see Item 6.25).) Elizabeth Lyttelton
(author, scribe)
Cambridge University
Library: MS Additional 8460 (Item 2.33) Miscellany in verse and prose (c.1665-1714.
Elizabeth Lyttelton probably began compiling this manuscript in the mid to
late 1660s, when she is first mentioned in her father's letters as helping him
organize his papers (Keynes, Works, IV, p. 29, letter
21 (13 August 1668)). She might have continued until she gave the manuscript
to her cousin Edward Tenison in
1714 (p. 174), though the latest dateable item
in the miscellany is 1710 (see Item 6.25).) Elizabeth Lyttelton
(author, scribe)
Cambridge University
Library: MS Additional 8460 (Item 6.15) Miscellany in verse and prose (c.1665-1714.
Elizabeth Lyttelton probably began compiling this manuscript in the mid to
late 1660s, when she is first mentioned in her father's letters as helping him
organize his papers (Keynes, Works, IV, p. 29, letter
21 (13 August 1668)). She might have continued until she gave the manuscript
to her cousin Edward Tenison in
1714 (p. 174), though the latest dateable item
in the miscellany is 1710 (see Item 6.25).) Elizabeth Lyttelton
(author, scribe)
Cambridge University
Library: MS Additional 8460 (Item 6.50) Miscellany in verse and prose (c.1665-1714.
Elizabeth Lyttelton probably began compiling this manuscript in the mid to
late 1660s, when she is first mentioned in her father's letters as helping him
organize his papers (Keynes, Works, IV, p. 29, letter
21 (13 August 1668)). She might have continued until she gave the manuscript
to her cousin Edward Tenison in
1714 (p. 174), though the latest dateable item
in the miscellany is 1710 (see Item 6.25).) Elizabeth Lyttelton
(author, scribe)
The British Library: MS Lansdowne 740 (Item 1) Religious poetry on the third and fourth commandments (c. 1600-1636) Anne Southwell
(author)
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