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Lathrop proposes a visit with Winter that will include a night out at the theatre and dinner. Lathrop also mentions Winter's praise of that excellent Longfellow.
This note is about two stalls for a performance of Shakespeare's Much ado about nothing. The letter is signed G.P. Lathrop.
Lathrop writes to Charles de Kay, 7 March 1877, on Atlantic monthly letterhead, rejecting two poems. Includes extensive comments on one of the poems, including a quotation from Plutarch, decrying the carnal treatment of the unspecified subject. He also asks about a news item in the Tribune, in which female members of the Art Students' League posed for their classmates, and "fled precipitously from the ordeal."
Jones "was beholden to [the recipient's] criticism upon [Jones'] fourth appearance in Hamlet."
He writes that Shakespeare appeared to have the knowledge of law, medicine, philosophy, language, etc., which would be impossible for an uneducated young man, but his genius as a poet is an insoluble mystery. On the other hand, Bacon had all the knowledge but it does not appear that he had a speck of poetry. Date partially illegible; appears to be: 19[2?]7 November [25?].
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