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            <title>Thomas Gray to Richard Farmer (12 April 1770)</title>
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               <name ref="#AH">Alexander Huber</name>
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            <pubPlace>Oxford</pubPlace>
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                  <country>USA</country>
                  <settlement>Washington, D.C.</settlement>
                  <institution key="FOLG">Folger Shakespeare Library</institution>
                  <idno>W.b.487, no. 5</idno>
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                     <note>the manuscript is one of many included in several volumes of Garrick-related correspondence, purchased by Mr. Folger from Bernard Quaritch in 1913, Lot 281 in Sotheby Catalogue for 7th and 8th July 1917.  This is the "Catalogue of Valuable Printed Books, Autograph Letters . . . including the Library of the Late Bram Stoker, Esq." However, the Garrick items are listed as "Property of a Gentleman," not as part of the Stoker material; a copy is at the British Library, Add. MSS. 5860, 57</note>
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                        <title>Correspondence of Thomas Gray</title>, 3 vols. Ed. by the late Paget Toynbee and Leonard Whibley, with corrections and additions by H. W. Starr. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1971 [1st ed. 1935], letter no. 516, vol. iii, 1119-1120
				<ref type="url">http://www.e-enlightenment.com/search/letters/print/?printref_sourceedition=graythOU0084&amp;printref_docnumber=516</ref>
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                     <bibl>
                        <title>Bibliotheca Farmeriana. A catalogue of the curious, valuable and extensive library, in print and manuscript, of the late Revd. Richard Farmer, ... Which will be sold by auction, ... by Mr. King, ... on Monday, May 7, 1798, ...</title> London: Thomas King, 1798, part of Lot 8102
			</bibl>
                     <bibl>
                        <title>The Letters of Thomas Gray, including the correspondence of Gray and Mason</title>, 3 vols. Ed. by Duncan C. Tovey. London: George Bell and Sons, 1900-12, letter no. CCCLX, vol. iii, 273-274
				<ref type="url">https://www.thomasgray.org/texts/diglib/primary/ToD_1900iii/1/273</ref>
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               <persName cert="high" ref="http://viaf.org/viaf/50024557">Farmer, Richard, 1735-1797</persName>
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            <p>This letter is part of the correspondence calendar of the complete correspondence of Thomas Gray. The calendar contains detailed bibliographic records for all known original, copied, or published letters written by or to the poet as well as the full-text, where available.  Each record is accompanied by digitised images of the manuscript, where available, or digitised images of the first printed edition.</p>
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         <p>Mr Gray returns Mr Farmer's Books, with many Thanks. The MS. Letters would be of some Value, if the Transcriber had better understood
					what he was about: but there are so many words mistaken, so many omitted, that the Sense can often only be made out by Conjecture. </p>
         <p>Does not recollect that they have been printed in any of the Collections: but thinks he has seen several of them (the Originals) in
					the Harleian Library. Lord Herbert plainly had seen them, &amp; (as
					far as they goe) has made them the Foundation of his History. They serve to shew, as he says, That
					the Cardinal, in his Dispatches was more copious than eloquent.</p>
         <p>The Instructions to Tunstall &amp; Wingfield, after the Battle of
					Pavia, &amp; the King's Directions after he had signed the Peace with Francis, are most
					remarkable.</p>
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            <dateline>Pemb: Hall. 12 April.</dateline>
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