Ms notes 'On the quadratic construction', 'On the squaring approach', etc.
Material dated 26 May 1857, 17 Feb. 1860-31 Dec. 1860.
Correspondence re the death of Rose's cousin, Elise Paget.
Hasse's pre-war letters are all in very fluent English, with some personal and general as well as mathematical news. His letters in German use the 'du' form right to the end.
G.116: 1932, Nov., Dec.
G.117: 1933, Jan.-June. Letter of 20 January has a ms. note by G.H. Hardy.
G.118: 1933, July-Dec. Hasse's letters of 20 and 24 October and 11 November include news of German mathematicians in Germany and abroad.
G.119: 1934. Includes material re Hasse's and Davenport's joint paper (Bibliog. 8), and Hasse's appointment at Göttingen.
G.120: 1935
G.121: 1936, 1938, 1939
G.122: 1946, 1947, 1949, 1952, 1963, 1967. (1967 death of Hasse's wife).
Contents of a folder so inscribed.
C.116: 'Analytic methods for Diophantine equations and inequalities'. 26pp. ms. draft.
C.117: 'Goldbach's Problem'. 16pp. ms. draft.
C.118: 'Vinogradov's result on sums of 3 primes'. 16pp. ms. draft.
C.119-121: Variously titled and paginated shorter ms. drafts.
C.122: Untitled ms. draft paginated 24-40A.
C.123: Questions papers, etc.
C.124: Original folder inscribed with calculations.
136: Printed letter, 9 Apr 1896 from A. Llewelyn Roberts, Secretary of the Royal Literary Fund, with MS notes on back.
138: Printed piece, The Shakspeare Year, 1893-1894
Will be honoured if the King decides to appoint him a member of the Privy Council (see 3/110). Encloses his particulars (see 3/116b).
Koninklijke Akademie van Wetenschappen te Amsterdam, Section for Philology and History - Sends a subscription to the bibliography.
Las Vegas, Nouveau Mexique - Asks for her help in finding an editor in France for the novel he has written in French.
95 Sloane Street, London, S.W.1. - Suggests they send an inscribed copy of 'The Fear of the Dead' vol. III to the Clerk of the Drapers' Company; thanks them for his own copy.
110 Rue du Bac, Paris [on mourning paper] - Gives permission to include three poems by Paul Hyacinthe Loyson in Lady Frazer's 'Fleurs de France'.
Institute of Anatomy, University College, London - Thanks Frazer for writing to him concerning the republication of Marett's Frazer Lecture; while he regrets that quotations taken out of context make him look disrespectful to Frazer, he believes in discussion of differences and asks that the lecture be published.
Cambridge. - Thanks Bessie for her letter; no doubt they will have opportunities of discussing some of her points [presumably written in response to Dickinson's dialogue, see 2/115]. Thinks the key point for him is whether there are some people who are homosexual with no heterosexual inclinations at all; he would agree with German writers that there are, since besides himself he knows at least two others. Believes Bessie may be right that women are ready to take a 'more reasonable view' than men. Does not dispute what she says about marriage - though of course he has no direct experience - but maintains that what he says about 'the other kind of love' has some truth in it. Doesn't disagree about the names, which can be altered. Is trying to work off his gloom with experiments in verse, and is reading more Shakespeare.
Paris. - Returned to Paris the day before yesterday; went through his poems again in England and has various suggestions to make to Trevelyan regarding them. Sets these out at length in detail, with quotations, but acknowledges that his English is 'shaky' and Trevelyan should have the final say. In his fourth point, requests Bessie's opinion on the sound of a line. Found M. N. [Marie Nicolayevna Germanova] in a very bad condition, pale and weak and needing two camphor injections a day for her heart. Is very grateful to Bessie for the rug.
Postmarked Englefield Green, Surrey. - Not enough words for the trio in Act II [of "The Bride of Dionysus"]; he will restore some rejected lines; Ariadne needs to end with a prayer.
Is writing a brief birthday letter 'with chilblained fingers in the fireless library'. Wonders whether Julian and Gordon B[ottomley] have 'mutually remembered one another'. Glad he need not go up [to London?] on Friday to organise new photographs, as the roads are 'still very bad here'; Julian will need to be sure his car is in 'good working order' before fetching it from the Shiffolds. [Umberto] Morra would like both Bob and Julian to come; bus would be better than train; he is not certain of dates yet, but it will probably be after he has been to I Tatti [Bernard Berenson's house] for Easter. Nicky [Mariano] writes that they would like to put them both up at I Tatti; in the unlikely event of sudden visitors, she would find Julian a room in Florence.