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Correspondence commenting on various matters including Greece, the injunction against Dallas' publication of Byron's letters, Moore's publication, Caroline Lamb's relationship with Lord Byron and Byron's engagement to Anne Milbanke. Includes letters from John Cam Hobhouse to various correspondents: (1) 1809-1810, Charlotte Hobhouse; (2) 1815, George Kinnaird; (3) 1816, Caroline Lamb; (4) 1818, Elizabeth Lamb; (5) 1824, William Ponsonby; (6) 1825, Francis Hodgson; (7) 1825, Richard Wilson; (8) Unidentified 'Madam', regarding her letters of Byron; (9) 1827, Charles Barry; (10) 1862, Mrs Thornhill. Also, letters addressed to John Cam Hobhouse from various correspondents: (1) 1818, Countess Isabella Teotochi Albrizzi; (2) Undated, H.E. Fox; (3) 1824, Henry Luttrell; (4) 1824, Emily Cowper; (5) 1824-1828, Francis Hodgson; (6) 1824-1825, William Ponsonby; (7) 1814, Thomas Southcoke; (8) 1821, Frances Wedderburn; (9) Undated, F. B. Parkyns.
Copied letters between Lord Byron and his close friend, John Cam Hobhouse, relating to various matters including domestic affairs, politics and poetry. Also includes correspondence between Hobhouse and John Murray II after Byron's death. Included are: Copies, undated, of letters dated 1818-1823, from Byron to John Cam Hobhouse; Copies, undated, of letters dated 1808-1820, from John Cam Hobhouse to Byron; Copies, undated, of letters dated 1819-1829, from John Cam Hobhouse to Emily Cowper (1819), Henry Luttrell (1824), and John Murray II (1829). Enclosed with the letter to Murray is a sheet of diary notes concerning Byron.
"Correspondence between Hobhouse and Galt, primarily concerning the content and accuracy of Galt's "Life of Lord Byron". Also includes a letter of Hobhouse to W. Finden, as well as a manuscript list of 'Subjects'."
Correspondence between John Cam Hobhouse and Thomas Moore discussing matters relating to Byron's death, such as the erection of a monument to Byron, the destruction of Byron's memoirs and Moore's aim to write a biography of Byron. Includes a poem by Moore.
Hobhouse discusses mutual acquaintances and also Byron's debts.
Hobhouse discusses mutual acquaintances and also Byron's debts.
Letters from John Cam Hobhouse to John Hanson, Byron's lawyer, discussing - on Byron's behalf - business matters relating to Byron's estate and property, particularly as they concern his wife, Lady Anne Byron.
The letter from Mary Shelley discusses her wish to be present at a debate in the House of Commons. Lord Byron is frequently mentioned in the correspondence.