LANKESTER
(Sir Edwin Ray, 1847-1929, Zoologist)
Signature from an Autograph Letter Signed with some text
“Will... asking ‘’’ me another, yours sincerely...”, 4½” x 2½” max, no place, no date
Item Date:
0
Stock No:
42127
£40
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LANKESTER
(Dr Edwin, 1814-1874, Surgeon and Naturalist)
Autograph Letter Signed to E. Cook
asking if he will “allow me & my friend... to call on you tomorrow... to look at your charming conservatory. My friend Mr Launders is about to put up a glass house & I hope he doesn’t. I want him to see your place. Should you not be at home would you leave permission for us to inspect your Magic Cave...”, 2 sides 8vo., 8 Lamb Row, 12th November
Item Date:
1850
Stock No:
42826
£375
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LARDNER
(Revd. Dionysius, 1793-1859, Irish Scientific Writer)
Signature, with three others,
with a note at the top 'Board Meeting of the Association' in another hand, no place, 30th August
Item Date:
1839
Stock No:
51048
£15
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[LAYARD
(Sir Austen Henry, 1817-1894, Archaeologist & Diplomat, Excavator of Nineveh)]
Attractive Woodcut Portrait from the 'Illustrated News',
showing him full length, three quarter face, speaking in the House of Commons and emphasizing a point with his right hand, 6½" x 5¼" laid down in part on old paper 7½" x 7¼", from p. 28 of the issue for 16th June
tiny closed tear in blank background near laying down
Item Date:
1855
Stock No:
56019
£25
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LAYARD
(Sir Austen Henry, 1817-1894, Archaeologist, M.P. & Diplomat, Excavator of Nineveh)
Long Autograph Letter Signed to Alexander MITCHELL
(of Stow, Midlothian, and Carolside, Berwickshire, Captain Grenadiers Guards, M.P. for Berwick-on-Tweed, 1865-1868), thanking him for writing instead of "enjoying the country and all the rest, I hope, you are getting", Layard's work has almost cut him off "from society. The price of office is not a small one" (as Under-Secretary to Russell at the Foreign Office), he hopes to get a holiday in the middle of September, and is thinking of North Italy, "but if I could manage to get to Scotland ... I should require no workroom I promise, but devote myself to play" at Carolside, however "I like to get clear out of Great Britain, so as to have no temptation to return to London before my time. If I am within reach I always feel anxious ... & fancy I ought to be at headquarters", he is grieved to find "poor Sir John Harding," (the Queen's Advocate), "so ill. I much fear that he will never be able to attend to business of any kind again ... In the United States the Confederates seem now to be gaining ground, and the summer months work in their favor. Unfortunately I see no prospect of an end to this terrible war", he points Mitchell to the 'Daily News' of the 28th for "a most interesting account of the last moments of Cavour" (who had seen Vittorio Emanuele II proclaimed King of Italy but whose health had given way), "furnished by his niece who was with him ... Friday is the Ministerial Irish Dinner - the harbinger of the end of the season. I shall be truly glad when I am released from Derby Griffith and Col. Sykes", and asks to be remembered to Mrs Mitchell (Fanny Georgiana Jane, née Hasler, afterwards wife, 1877, of the 11th Lord Reay), 7 sides 8vo., House of Commons, 30th July
Item Date:
1861
Stock No:
56104
£375
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