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Shaw is asking McEvoy to hear Miss Dickens "before you make any further arrangements concerning David Ballard."
Typed letter, signed by Robert L. Kincaid, Executive Vice President of Lincoln Memorial University, to George Bernhard Shaw, London England, 1944 Dec. 22. Endorsed by G. Bernhard Shaw in regard to granting permission to quote his written statements relative to the erection of a replica of the Barnard statue of Abraham Lincoln in London. The stamped and addressed envelope, in the handwriting of George Bernard Shaw, is addressed to Robert L. Kincaid of Lincoln Memorial University ...
With postscript on verso, signed with initials. Regarding the development of his handwriting.
Mr. Whitefield has recently died, and his will indicates that his daughter Ann should be left in the care of two men, Roebuck Ramsden and Jack Tanner. Ramsden, a venerable old man, distrusts John Tanner, an eloquent youth with revolutionary ideas, saying "He is prodigiously fluent of speech, restless, excitable (mark the snorting nostril and the restless blue eye, just the thirty-secondth of an inch too wide open), possibly a little mad". In spite of what Ramsden says, Ann accepts Tanner as her guardian, though Tanner doesn't want the position at all. She also challenges Tanner's revolutionary beliefs with her own ideas. Despite Tanner's professed dedication to anarchy, he is unable to disarm Ann's charm, and she ultimately persuades him to marry her, choosing him over her more persistent suitor, a young man named Octavius Robinson.