Letter from Thomas MacGreevy to George Yeats. 11 January 1935

Bibliographic Information



Original Source
Letter from Thomas MacGreevy to George Yeats 11 January 1935 Thomas MacGreevy National Library of Ireland. Autograph letter signed. NLI MS 30,859


Abstract
MacGreevy begins the letter wishing W.B. Yeats good health during his stay in Spain and then informs George Yeats that a Jean Lucrat painting he obtained for the Dublin Modern Gallery has been under attack. He concludes with a short discussion of the play "The Player Queen."


Electronic Edition Information
Published by: Susan Schreibman and Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities

Date of Electronic Text: 27 March 2006
Document ID Number: let.mac.1935-01-11.xml
Text Size: 8 kb
Availability: This text and its accompanying image is available only for the purpose of academic teaching and research. It may not be reproduced, reprinted, or copied for any other purpose, in whole or in part, in print or on the World Wide Web, without the explicit permission of the copyright holders. For copyright information, please contact Susan Schreibman.


Responsibility for Document Creation and Encoding
Creation of machine readable text by: Susan Schreibman
Annotations and Proofing by: Tanya Clement, Ann Saddlemyer, and Susan Schreibman
Header creation and markup by: Deena Adelman

Encoding Principles
This text has not been normalised.
Titles of texts, foreign words, personal names, place and organisational names, and emphasised text have been encoded. Personal and organisational names have been standardised through the REG attribute of the <persName>, <orgName>, and <rs> elements. Standardised spelling may be found in the Thomas MacGreevy Archive name database, "Who's Who in the Archive."

Keywords
Domestic Life
Career and Finances
Art
Irish
1990-1999
MacGreevy-GeorgeYeats
PersonalLetter

31 January 2008

Responsibility for Document Creation and Encoding
Final Proofing
Tanya Clement

Proofed letter for content and encoded letter to conform to new letter template.