Seventeen letters to his father and his sister Julia.
Sem título2 Brook Street - Thanks WW for a copy of his work on English University education: 'The whole argument is strong, or I would say convincing - greatly needed, moreover, at this particular time, where we are surrounded by such novelties in speculation'. For instance HH's 'old acquaintance Hamilton [William Hamilton] (the Ed. Review) who even as a boy of 18 was besotted by the same spirit of vague and verbose speculations, which still governs his understanding'. HH's and WW's mutual friend Hallam [Henry Hallam] has lost his eldest daughter.
Wimpole Street - thanks him for his Life of Aristotle
Wimpole Street - glad to see Cambridge steering a steady course
Wimpole Street - invitation to dinner
Wimpole Street - invitation to dinner to meet Whewell
Loose at the back of the book are four bifolia entitled "Middle Voice", and another smaller bifolium on the same topic.
Hallam describes a couple of problems he has with page 241 of WW's second volume of The Elements of Morality: WW is misleading with one of his expressions and too strong with his argument. 'I do not make any other remark on your book, though there are moral points in what I have got the good fortune to agree with you'. WW takes Paley's word, expediency, in too confined a way.
Loose sheet between pages 84 and 85 on the location of the Scamandrian plain [in Homer's Iliad].
Trinity Lodge - WW has been working on the historical part of his Morality ['The Elements of Morality, Including Polity', 2 vols., 1845]. This has led him to re-read Hallam's [Henry Hallam] books: 'I am glad to find that they have risen much in my estimation on closer inspection; for I like the man. They are, especially the English Constitution ['Constitutional History of England from Henry VII's Accession to the Death of George II', 1827] a series of condensed, able, lawyer like, or rather judge like discussions of all the principal constitutional questions which are history offers, He is an old Whig and at times rather a stern one; but then he is an old Whig not a new Whig; and I see scarcely any points on which we the constitutional Conservatives are called upon to differ with him'. WW compares his 'judicial gravity and fairness' with the 'sophistical advocacy of Macaulay!' [Thomas Babington Macaulay]. WW can appreciate RJ's disgust at 'The Times' and its treatment of the tithe commutation. WW thinks 'something of the same kind should be done for Ireland with regard to the advantages of the union'.
Includes list: '1810 / Unpaid Bills'.
Presents a copy of the new edition of his History of Literature of Europe
Loose papers include library request slips.