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1390584445.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
0243234732.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
1334835799.Gpaperback. Good. Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items. May be an ex-library book. paperback
8563'The Drawing-Room Palace Hotel Buxton. Thursday Evening August 19th 1880.'. 4to 8 pp. Stitched pamphlet on grey paper. Text clear and complete. Good though somewhat creased and a little stained. In small type. Divided into two sections: 'Selections from the opinions of the London press' and 'Selections from the opinions of the provincial press'. In a long quotation on the front page: 'Charles Dickens made the practice famous and Mr. Joseph Hatton has begun his platform career in the same modest careful and unpretentious way .'. p.1 'From General Press Notices'. 'The Drawing-Room, Palace Hotel, Buxton. Thursday Evening, August 19th, 1880.' unknown
254165 April no year but presumably between 1941 and 1944. Cambridge. Draper inspired characters in two of Agatha Christie’s books. Among others impressed by her work were Bernard Shaw Thornton Wilder John Gielgud Katharine Hepburn Maurice Chevalier Laurence Olivier Henry James Henry Adams Edith Wharton Joyce Grenfell Emma Thompson David Mamet and Maureen Lipman. See Ross’s entry in the Oxford DNB. 3pp 12mo on bifolium of light-grey paper. In good condition lightly aged. Folded once for postage. Addressed to ‘Dear Sir David’ and signed ‘Ruth Draper.’ Presumably written during Ross’s Vice-Chancellorship 1941-1944. Begins: ‘Sir Arthur Salter has written me of your very kind invitation to lunch or dine with you on April 8th. I shall be motoring from Hitchin on Monday - not arriving until about four o’clock so luncheon will not be possible.’ She is not sure ‘at what time my performance at the New Theatre takes place! If it is at 6.30 - like the London theatres both tea - dinner are out of the question - though supper after the performance would be very agreeable! If the perfomance is at 8 - I could come to tea at 4.30 - & have a little time to rest before it.’ She will understand if her suggestions are ‘impossible for you’ but is ‘none the less honored by you invitation to dine which were I not working I should be very happy to accept . dinner is almost impossible a very sketchy meal before I go to the theatre’. If he would ‘leave word at the Randolph Hotel’ she will ‘ask on arriving for a message’. She ends by expressing her pleasure ‘to be coming to Oxford again’. From the papers of Sir David Ross. 5 April [no year but presumably between 1941 and 1944]. Cambridge. unknown