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GB 891 RAS GOV7-RAS GOV7/8 · File · 30th Nov 1846
Part of Royal Asiatic Society Governance: Correspondence Volume Two

'Copy of a Report to the Bombay Government on Lithographic Limestone from the South-East Coast of Arabia', written by H.J. Carter, Assistant Surgeon, in which he describes the limestone ridge on the eastern coast which runs in a north-east direction as they approached the south-western half of the Kuria Muria Bay. This forms mountains near the coast with a tableland inland. Carter writes his description to send with some specimens and describes from where he took the specimens. He also writes about the people who inhabit the region.

Carter H.J. 1813-1895
GB 891 BHH-BHH/9-BHH/9/3 · File · 12th Jan 1848
Part of Papers of Brian Houghton Hodgson

Copy of a letter to the Editor of the Delhi Gazette. Copy of a letter from "A Morfussillite" concerning his scorn for the use of vernacular education. Copy is in Hodgson's hand and he has added his opinion that, "This writer is evidently as bitter an opponent of the living as of the dead languages of the people..." Handwritten, 2 pieces, 6 sides, dated 12 January 1848.

Hodgson Brian Houghton 1800-1894 Orientalist
GB 891 TM-TM/2-TM/2/2-TM/2/2/3 · File · [March 1800]
Part of Papers of Thomas Manning, Chinese Scholar, First English visitor to Lhasa, Tibet

Copy of a letter from Thomas Manning to Charles Lamb, India House, London. Manning discusses Burnet's history (pleased with), Hume (easy, sweet, obscure), Gibbon (pointed, terse, brilliant), Robertson (judicious, vigorous). He writes that he does not generally share Lamb's letters with Lloyd. He further asks that Lamb does not refer to Manning as an atheist in case the Catholics should come to the fore and Manning might find himself as one of "Smithfield's Illuminati". Dated [March 1800]. Copy is handwritten, 2 pieces, 3 sides

GB 891 TM-TM/2-TM/2/2-TM/2/2/2 · File · 9 February 1800
Part of Papers of Thomas Manning, Chinese Scholar, First English visitor to Lhasa, Tibet

Copy of a letter from Thomas Manning to Charles Lamb from Cambridge. Manning is writing to put forward his feelings concerning a matter between Ld (Lloyd) and a Lady concerning a letter Ld wrote to the Lady about her writing. Manning defends Lloyd. He also mentions that Southey is a friend of Lloyds. Dated 9 February 1800. Copy is handwritten, 3 pieces, 3 sides

GB 891 TM-TM/2-TM/2/2-TM/2/2/6 · File · 28 November 1800
Part of Papers of Thomas Manning, Chinese Scholar, First English visitor to Lhasa, Tibet

Copy of a letter from Thomas Manning to Charles Lamb, India House, London. Manning complains that only the beginning of Lamb's last letter had arrived. Manning has been browsing Currie's Edition of Burn's Works, the prose parts he has found "cost me more blasts & execrations that would Damn a regiment of foot soldiers". Manning reckons he has a good account in the "Father's books" He asks again about Lamb's Tragedy. Dated 28 November 1800. Copy is handwritten 2 pieces. 2 sides

GB 891 TM-TM/2-TM/2/2-TM/2/2/4 · File · [17 March 1800]
Part of Papers of Thomas Manning, Chinese Scholar, First English visitor to Lhasa, Tibet

Copy of a letter from Thomas Manning to Charles Lamb, India House, London. Manning writes about the gap in their correspondence and might have supposed that "you & the Jolly Excise-man had missed you way one night & tumbled into the water in Liquor-pond Street, had not that busy winch. fame... spread a report that you and Coleridge were seen lately in the city". Manning is looking forward to the Easter break and on to the long summer vacation. He enquires whether Lamb has heard anything more of his Tragedy. Dated [17 March 1800]. Copy is handwritten, 1 piece, 2 sides