Single Letter

HAM/1/5/4/22

Note from Lady Warwick to Mary Hamilton

Diplomatic Text


Mrs. Dickenson




Dear Mrs. Dickenson

We shall be very
happy to have
the pleasure of
seeing you &
Mr. Dickenson on
Sunday for dinner
at ½ past 5 -- Believe me
      sincerely yours     H: Warwick

(hover over blue text or annotations for clarification;
red text is normalised and/or unformatted in other panel)

Normalised Text


Mrs. Dickenson




Dear Mrs. Dickenson

We shall be very
happy to have
the pleasure of
seeing you &
Mr. Dickenson on
Sunday for dinner
at ½ past 5 -- Believe me
      sincerely yours     Henrietta Warwick

(consult diplomatic text or XML for annotations, deletions, clarifications, persons,
quotations,
spellings, uncorrected forms, split words, abbreviations, formatting)

Metadata

Library References

Repository: John Rylands Research Institute and Library, University of Manchester

Archive: Mary Hamilton Papers

Item title: Note from Lady Warwick to Mary Hamilton

Shelfmark: HAM/1/5/4/22

Correspondence Details

Sender: Henrietta Greville (née Vernon), Countess of Warwick

Place sent: unknown

Addressee: Mary Hamilton

Place received: unknown

Date sent: not before June 1785
notBefore June 1785 (precision: high)

Letter Description

Summary: Note from Lady Warwick to Mary Hamilton, inviting her and John Dickenson to dinner.
   

Length: 1 sheet, 34 words

Transliteration Information

Editorial declaration: First edited in the project 'Image to Text' (David Denison & Nuria Yáñez-Bouza, 2013-2019), now incorporated in the project 'Unlocking the Mary Hamilton Papers' (Hannah Barker, Sophie Coulombeau, David Denison, Tino Oudesluijs, Cassandra Ulph, Christine Wallis & Nuria Yáñez-Bouza, 2019-2023).

All quotation marks are retained in the text and are represented by appropriate Unicode characters. Words split across two lines may have a hyphen on the first, the second or both fragments (reco-|ver, imperfect|-ly, satisfacti-|-on); or a double hyphen (pur=|port, dan|=ger, qua=|=litys); or none (respect|ing). Any point in abbreviations with superscripted letter(s) is placed last, regardless of relative left-right orientation in the original. Thus, Mrs. or Mrs may occur, but M.rs or Mr.s do not.

Acknowledgements: XML version: Research Assistant funding in 2014/15 and 2015/16 provided by the Department of Linguistics and English Language, University of Manchester.

Research assistant: Donald Alasdair Morrison, undergraduate student, University of Manchester

Transliterator: Gabriel O'Connell, undergraduate student, University of Manchester (submitted November 2014)

Cataloguer: Lisa Crawley, Archivist, The John Rylands Library

Cataloguer: John Hodgson, Head of Special Collections, John Rylands Research Institute and Library

Copyright: Transcriptions, notes and TEI/XML © the editors

Revision date: 2 November 2021

Document Image (pdf)