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         Hawkins Sir Anthony Hope:     more books (21)
  1. THE DOLLY DIALOGUES ... by Anthony (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). Hope, 1896
  2. The Prisoner of Zenda (Classic Thrillers) by Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, 1977-06
  3. Anthony Hope and his books; being the authorized life of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins by Charles Edward Mallet, 1968
  4. Anthony and His Books: Being the Authorised Life of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins by Sir Charles Mallet, 1968
  5. Anthony Hope and His Books: Being the Authorized Life of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins by Sir Charles Mallet, 1935
  6. The Works of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (13 Volumes) by Anthony Hope Hawkins, 1933
  7. Tristram of Blent by Anthony Hope, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, 2007-10-01
  8. RUPERT OF HENTZAU... BEING THE SEQUEL TO A STORY BY THE SAME WRITER ENTITLED THE PRISONER OF ZENDA... by Anthony (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). Hope, 1898
  9. COMEDIES OF COURTSHIP ... by Anthony (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). Hope, 1896
  10. TALES OF TWO PEOPLE ... by Anthony (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). Hope, 1907
  11. RUPERT OF HENTZAU by ANTHONY (SIR ANTHONY HOPE HAWKINS) HOPE, 1918
  12. LOVE'S LOGIC AND OTHER STORIES. by Anthony (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). Hope, 1908
  13. Simon Dale by Anthony Hope, Sir Hawkins, 1969-01-01
  14. COMEDIES OF COURTSHIP ... by Anthony (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). Hope, 1896-01-01

61. FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION: PSEUDONYMS (by Pseudonym)
Hope, Anthony, Hope, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins. Hawkins, Anthony Hope, (18631933). Howard, Hayden, Howard, John Hayden
http://www.sfsite.com/fsf/bibliography/fsfpseudonym03.htm

Index
Page 1 Page 2 Page 4 ... Abbreviations
Pseudonym/Working Name Author Name Comments Ferman, Joe Ferman, Joseph W. Findlay, D.K. Findlay, David Findlay Finney, Jack Finney, Walter B. FitzGerald, Gil FitzGerald, Gillian FitzPatrick, R.C. FitzPatrick, Richard C. Florance-Guthridge, George Guthridge, George Forester, C.S. Forester, Cecil Scott Frazer, Shamus Frazer, James Ian Arbuthnot Freas, Kelly Freas, Frank Kelly Friborg, Albert Compton Foote, Irving 'Bud' Friesner, Esther M. Friesner-Stutzman, Esther Mona Frost, Greg Frost, Gregory Dee Furnas, J.C. Furnas, Joseph Chamberlain Fyfe, H.B. Fyfe, Horace Browne Garcia y Robertson, R. Garcia y Robertson, Rodrigo Gaughan, Jack Gaughan, John Brian Francis Gerrold, David Friedman, Jerrold David Gironel, Bertrand Bretnor, Reginald (1911-1992) also an anagram of Reginald Bretnor Glaskin, G.M. Glaskin, Gerald Marcus Gold, H.L. Gold, Horace Leonard Goldman, E.M. Goldman, Eleanor Maureen Gorman, Ed Gorman, Edward Joseph Gottesman, S.D. Kornbluth, C.M. Grant, C.L. Grant, Charles L. Grinnell, David Wollheim, Donald A. Gross, Gordon

62. FANTASY & SCIENCE FICTION: PSEUDONYMS (by Author)
Hope, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, Hope, Anthony. Hope, William Edward S. Stanton, Will, (1918 ). Howard, John Hayden, Howard, Hayden
http://www.sfsite.com/fsf/bibliography/fsfrealname04.htm

Index
Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 ... Abbreviations
Author Name Pseudonym/Working Name Comments Herzog, Emile Maurois, André Hewison, Robert John Hewison Hewison, R.J.P. Holdsworth, Gladys Bronwyn Stern, G.B. Hope, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins Hope, Anthony Hope, William Edward S. Stanton, Will Howard, John Hayden Howard, Hayden Howard, Vechel Rigsby, Howard Hubbard, Philip Maitland Hubbard, P.M. Hutchinson, Joyce Carstairs James, Kathleen Iams, Samuel Harvey Jr Iams, Jack Jacob, Piers Anthony Dillingham Anthony, Piers Jaworski, Francis Anthony Javor, F.A. Jeapes, Benjamin Patrick Jeapes, Ben Jenkins, William Fitzgerald Leinster, Murray Jennings, Gary (Gayne) Jeffries, Gregory G. (1923-1999) story intro: "G.J. is an inventor, businessman who died in 2009, was reborn in 1978. Perhaps reborn is the wrong word; Mr. J. returned to this world a few years ago. Let him tell his incredible, fascinating story ..." Jesse, Fryniwyd Tennyson Jesse, F. Tennyson (1889-1958) also known as Wynifred Margaret Tennyson Jesse; see Joanna Collenbrander: A Portrait of Fryn: A Biography of F. Tennyson Jesse(1984) Johnson, Simon Sigvart

63. IMDb User Comments For The Prisoner Of Zenda (1937)
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins was a successful London barrister, who got his measure of permanent fame as the author of several novels.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0029442/usercomments
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IMDb user comments for
The Prisoner of Zenda
Filter: Best Chronological Prolific Authors Loved It Hated It Hide Spoilers: Page 1 of 2: Index 16 comments in total 6 out of 6 people found the following comment useful :-
Rousing fun 6 December 2003
Author: Robert J. Maxwell (rmax304823@yahoo.com) from Deming, New Mexico
Mixed identities, castles, swords, fancy uniforms, Ruritanian romance, royal intrigues it's all here. What a lot of fun.
Niven hadn't gotten very far in Hollywood until he landed this role, which he was able to do only through the influence of Hollywood's "British colony." He began the shoot by playing the part in the breezy manner we now see on screen. This displeased the director and the producer, who wanted it dramatic, but when they saw how it looked on film they were tickled pink. (Both Niven and Fairbanks were to go on to meritorious service in World War II.)

64. Free EBooks - Alphabetical List - GLOBUSZ PUBLISHING
AKA Hawkins, Sir Anthony Hope. Dolly Dialogues; Frivolous Cupid; Prisoner Of Zenda, The; Rupert of Hentzau. Hope, Laura Lee. Bobbsey Twins At Meadow Brook
http://www.globusz.com/authors_h.asp
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65. Berkshire History: Biographies: Kenneth Grahame (1859-1932)
grand uncle was the poet, James Grahame, while his cousin, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (alias Anthony Hope) was the author of ‘The Prisoner of Zenda’.
http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/kgrahame.html

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Kenneth Grahame
Born: 8th March 1859
at 30 Castle Street, Edinburgh, Midlothian
Author
Died: 6th July 1932 at Pangbourne, Berkshire
Kenneth was the son of an affluent lawyer from an old Scottish family. He had a number of famous relatives: his curate great grand uncle was the poet, James Grahame, while his cousin, Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (alias Anthony Hope) was the author of ‘The Prisoner of Zenda’. Kenneth was born in Edinburgh but, upon his father’s appointment as Sheriff-Substitute of Argyllshire the following year, the family moved north to Inverary. Tragedy struck in 1864 when Kenneth’s mother died of scarlet fever. His alcoholic father was unable to cope and Kenneth and his siblings were sent to England to live with their maternal grandmother at ‘The Mount’ (Herries School) in Cookham Dean by the Thames. The family also rented Fernhill Cottage in Winkfield for a while when the house in Cookham became unsafe. Kenneth's favourite uncle, David Ingles, was the curate at nearby

66. Hope
Anthony Hope Hope, Anthony, pseud. of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins,1863–1933, English novelist. A lawyer, he Bob Hope - Hope, Bob, 1903–2003,
http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/us/A0824141.html
in All Infoplease Almanacs Biographies Dictionary Encyclopedia
Daily Almanac for
Sep 10, 2005

67. De Freitas Books - Vanity Fair Print Images
Rudyard Kipling Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins Sir Thomas Henry Hall Caine George Augustus Moore Samuel Rutherford Crockett Max Beerbohm
http://www.defreitasbooks.com/illustrations/illVanity/vanitylit4.html

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Men of Letters For details (price, condition, presence of biography, etc.),
click on the subject's name. Rudyard Kipling Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins Sir Thomas Henry Hall Caine George Augustus Moore ... Conditions of sale, and orders Wilfrid M. de Freitas - Bookseller P.O. Box 883, Stock Exchange Tower Montreal, Canada H4Z 1K2 Tel: (514) 935-9581 Fax: (514) 931-8999 E-mail: Wilfrid@deFreitasBooks.com Last updated: 5/13/05 Site maintained by Susan Ravdin

68. De Freitas Books - Vanity Fair Prints
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins. Anthony Hope . December 26, 1895. Literary, Novelist. Fine. Loose; Bio. Faint edge dusting. Mattable. $45. Henry Hawkins, QC
http://www.defreitasbooks.com/vanityfair/vanityHtoK.html

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Names A-C Names D-G Names L-O ... Names T-Z Name Caption Date Subject Price Carl Haag "The Glorious East" April 26, 1884 Art, Painting Fine. Loose; Bio. Mattable. H. Rider Haggard "She" May 21, 1887 Literature Fine. Matted. Neil Haig "I Say" July 28, 1898 Sporting; polo Fine. Matted. Newman Hall "Come to Jesus" November 23, 1872 Clergy Near fine. Loose; Bio. Faint background offset and light patch. Near-mattable. William Hall-Walker "Colonel William Hall-Walker, M.P." May 12, 1909

69. Kenneth Grahame Biography
He was also the cousin of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (18631933), author (as Anthony Hope) of The Prisoner of Zenda (1894). Grahame s father was appointed
http://www.applebookshop.co.uk/author/grahame.htm
Kenneth Grahame (1859-1932)
Kenneth Grahame Kenneth Grahame was born at 30 Castle Street, Edinburgh, on 8 March 1859. He was the third child of an affluent advocate, and his great-grand-uncle was the poet and curate James Grahame. He was also the cousin of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (1863-1933), author (as Anthony Hope) of "The Prisoner of Zenda" (1894). Grahame's father was appointed Sheriff-Substitute of Argyllshire in 1860, and the family moved to Inverary. Grahame's mother died of scarlet fever in 1864, and his father, a heavy drinker, was incapable of caring for the children, so they were sent to Cookham Dene in Berkshire to be brought up by their grandmother. Grahame was educated at St Edward's School, Oxford (1868-75), but was unable to enter Oxford University. Instead, after a period working for his uncle in London, he joined the Bank of England as a gentleman-clerk in 1879, rising to become Secretary to the Bank in 1898. Grahame contributed essays and stories to "The Yellow Book" and W. E. Henley's "National Observer", and his collections "Pagan Papers", "The Golden Age" and "Dream Days" were well received by critics such as Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch ("Q", 1863-1944), who became a close friend. Grahame's stories centred on a fictional family of five children which he had created during his own childhood. Grahame married Elspeth Thomson in 1899, and their only child, Alastair, was born the following year (he was killed in 1918). Grahame created the character of Toad to amuse his son, but it was not until 1908 that he published "The Wind In The Willows", which had its origins in letters he had written to Alastair. By then he had already retired from the Bank (in 1907) due to ill health. The book was not an immediate success, but would achieve wider popularity thanks to the 1930 stage version, "Toad of Toad Hall" by A. A. Milne (1882-1956), whose "Winnie-the-Pooh" (1926) was created for his own son Christopher Robin.

70. Twain Reid's Guest
Treasurer of Lincoln s Inn; Edward Cooper Willis, Treasurer of the Inner Temple; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Anthony Hope Hawkins, Sir Lawrence AlmaTadema,
http://www.twainquotes.com/19070622.html
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The New York Times, June 22, 1907
MARK TWAIN IS REID'S GUEST.
Ambassador Invites a Distinguished Company to Meet Him.
LONDON, June 21. - Ambassador Reid gave a dinner to Mark Twain (Samuel L. Clemens) at Dorchester House this evening. The guests included John Hicks, the American Minister to Chile; Lord Tennyson, President of the Royal Literary Fund; Sir Edward John Poynter, President of the Royal Academy; Sir Ernest Waterlow, President of the Royal Society of Painters in Water Colors; Sir George D. Goldie, President of the Royal Geographical Society; Lord Glenesk, President of the Newspaper Press Fund; Sir George Reid, ex-President of the Royal Scottish Academy; Prof. Hubert Von Herkomer, R.A.; Alfred Austin, the Poet Laureate; Lord MacNaughton, Treasurer of Lincoln's Inn; Edward Cooper Willis, Treasurer of the Inner Temple; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Anthony Hope Hawkins, Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Edwin Austin Abbey, Sidney Lee, Henry W. Lucy, ("Toby, M.P.,") August Belmont, Bram Stoker, O. J. W. Comyns Carr, Isaac N. Ford, Harry Brittain, John R. Carter, Secretary of the American Embassy, and the editors of several of the London papers. There were no speeches at the dinner. Later the guests inspected the pictures and other treasures of Dorchester House.

71. Twain Speech "The Drama"
SL Clemens, ( Mark Twain, ) Anthony Hope Hawkins, Sydney Grundy, I Hope that what I have read in the papers is untrue, and that Sir Henry will keep
http://www.twainquotes.com/19000707.html
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The New York Times, July 7, 1900
TWO SPEECHES.
Made in London by Mr. Choate and Mark Twain at a Dinner to Sir Henry Irving.
An event of literary as well as dramatic interest was the welcome-home dinner given in London to Sir Henry Irving on June 9 at the Hotel Savoy on his return from his American tour. Mr. R. D'Oyly Carte was the Chairman of the occasion, on his immediate right at the dinner being the guest of the evening, and on his left the Hon. Joseph H. Choate, United States Ambassador. At the tables, which were beautifully decorated with flowers, some fashioned to represent the Union Jack and others formed into the Stars and Stripes, sat, among others, Sir L. Alma-Tadema, Sir John Tenniel, Mr. Pinero, Bret Harte, S. L. Clemens, ("Mark Twain,") Anthony Hope Hawkins, Sydney Grundy, E. A. Abbey, Henry Arthur Jones, and Laurence Irving. In reply to a toast to "Our American Visitors" Mr. Choate said: Mr. S. L. Clemens, ("Mark Twain,") in proposing the toast of "The Drama," said:

72. 1
Grove, George, Sir (1), 1892. Hope, Anthony Hawkins, Anthony Hope (1), 1899. Irving, Henry, Sir (1) nd. Lang, Andrew (7), 1889 nd
http://libweb.princeton.edu/libraries/firestone/rbsc/aids/besant.html
Sir Walter Besant Correspondence
Box/Folder listing
Letters by Besant to:
"Dear Sir" (1) "My Dear Chatto" (1) "Dear Sir" (2) Monkswell, Lord (9) Haggard, H. Rider (1) Fox, John Charles (1) Whitehouse, J. Howard (1) unidentified (21) poem "May Dew" poem, lines from "Faith and Freedom" "Dear Madam" (11) [Besant's typist] Toynbee, Mr. (1) Various people (49): mostly unidentified Various people (39): Allon, Henry (1) Chapman, E. W. (4) Craig, J. A. (1) Crommelin, May de la Chervis (5) Devey, Louisa (2) Ellaby, J. (1) Keene, C. J. Perry (1) Kitton, Frederick G. (2) Murray, Frank (1) Murray, R. (1) Palmer, Mr. (1) Peard, Frances Mary (2) Piper, Mrs. (1) Pollock, Walter H. (2) Stack, Elliot? (1) Tuer, Andrew (1) Watts, ? (1) unidentified (10) "My dearProfessor" "My DearSir" [Charles Eyre Parcos?] Pritchard, Walter (1)
Letters to Besant from:
Allingham, William (1) Caine, Hall, Sir (5) Dufferin, Frederick, Earl of (1) Grove, George, Sir (1) Hope, Anthony [Hawkins, Anthony Hope] (1) Irving, Henry, Sir (1) n.d. Lang, Andrew (7) Newbolt, Henry, Sir (1)

73. Poetry Of A Wonderful Random Assortment
Anthony Hope (Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins). +++++-. Chu Shu-chen (ca. 1200) Stormy Night in Autumn. Like a flight of arrows the wind
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/2464/poems13.html
Edgar Allan Poe
The City in the Sea Lo! Death has reared himself a throne
In a strange city lying alone
Far down within the dim West,
Where the good and the bad and the worst and the best
Have gone to their eternal rest.
There shrines and palaces and towers
(Time-eaten towers that tremble not!)
Resemble nothing that is ours.
Around, by lifting winds forgot,
Resignedly beneath the sky The melancholy waters lie. No rays from the holy heaven come down On the long night-time of that town; But light from out the lurid sea Streams up the turrets silently Gleams up the pinnacles far and free Up domes up spires up kingly halls Up fanes up Babylon-like walls Up shadowy long-forgotten bowers Of sculptured ivy and stone flowers Up many and many a marvellous shrine Whose wreathed friezes intertwine The viol, the violet, and the vine. Resignedly beneath the sky The melancholy waters lie. So blend the turrets and shadows there That all seem pendulous in air, While from a proud tower in the town Death looks gigantically down. There open fanes and gaping graves Yawn level with the luminous waves But not the riches there that lie In each idol's diamond eye Not the gaily-jewelled dead Tempt the waters from their bed;

74. VANITY FAIR PRINTS
Sir Anthony Panizzi, KCB Ape. January 17, 1874. Books. $65; PhilipHenry StanHope, $75; Anthony Hope Hawkins. Spy. December 26, 1895. Anthony Hope.
http://www.philaprintshop.com/vfliterary.html
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Literary
George John Whyte-Melville.
September 23, 1871. "The novelist of Society."
Matthew Arnold
November 11, 1871. "I say, the critic must keep out of the region of immediate practice."
James Anthony Froude.
January 27, 1872. "He created Henry VIII, exploded Mary Stuart, and demolished Elizabeth."
Wilkie Collins.

75. Tantor Audio Books : Kenneth Grahame
He was also the cousin of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins who wrote The Prisoner of Zenda under the pen name Anthony Hope . In the early years Grahame lived
http://www.tantor.com/AuthorDetail.asp?Author=Grahame_K

76. US Catalog Of Copyright Entries (Renewals) - 1925 Books: KL
Little Tiger, Anthony Hope (pseud of Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins), 23Oct25A869780 24Oct52R101301, Millicent Hope Churchill (C) Richard Sheldon Hope Hawkins
http://www.ibiblio.org/ccer/1925a5.htm

Books from 1925
Key to abbreviations:
  • A/As - Author/Authors
  • C - Child of the author
  • E - Executor of the author
  • NK - Next of Kin of the author
  • PCW - Proprietor of a Composite Work
  • PWH - Proprietor of a Work made for Hire
  • PPW - Proprietor of a Posthumous Work
  • W/Wr - Widow/Widower of the author
Title Author Registration
Renewer Kasriel The Watchman, And Other Stories Rufus Learsi (pseud of Israel Goldberg)
Jewish Publication Society of America (PWH) Kate Douglas Wiggin As Her Sister knew Her Nora Archibald Smith
Helen K Bradbury (NK) The Katherine Pyle Book Of Fairy Tales comp by Katherine Pyle
Gerald J Pyle (E) The Keeper Of The Bees Gene Stratton-Porter
Jeannette Porter Meehan (PPW) Keep Marching, song? (in 'The Pennant Songs...') Carolyn R Freeman, music by J Lincoln Hall
Rodeheaver Co (PWH) The Kenworthys Margaret Wilson (Turner)
(A) Keyboard Harmony Simplified Art Shefte
(A) Key To The Fowlkes-Goff Practice Tests In Arithmetic For Grades Seven, Eight, And Nine [Robert Louis Stevenson] ed Myrtle L Kaufmann, ill by Frank Godwin John C Winston Co (PWH) Kidnapped, illustrations only

77. Whitehern Museum Archives - Search Results
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (18631933) was the author of The Prisoner of Zenda (1894), Rupert of Henzau (1898), The Dolly Dialogues (1894) and other novels
http://www.whitehern.ca/result.php?doc_id=W-MCP2-4.052

78. Anne Applebaum -- Serendipity Rules Okay
described by a contemporary Mancunian as full of oddities, outof-the-waynesses, flights, madness, comicalities etc ; on Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins,
http://www.anneapplebaum.com/other/2000/12_16_spec_drabble.html
The Spectator Serendipity Rules Okay December 16, 2000 A review of The Oxford Companion to English Literature, Ed. Margaret Drabble. The Oxford Companion to English Literature Ed. Margaret Drabble Oxford University Press, pp. 1184, It isn't history, it isn't fiction, and it isn't scholarship, although it contains elements of all three: in fact, one might say that The Oxford Companion to English Literature belongs in a genre all of its own. That being the case, one might also say that reviews of Companions to English Literature belong to a genre all of their own as well. The idea is to read the new guide, edited by distinguished author X, and compare it to previous guides, written by distinguished authors Y and Z, either howling at the new elements of political correctness the entries on 'Gay and Lesbian Literature,' say, or 'Hypertext' or, alternatively, heaping praise upon them. Ditto Hypertext, which in fact refers to the internet: the entry also contained some valuable tidbits did you know that one Vannevar Bush first began dreaming of something like the internet in 1945? but still seemed not completely at home in a Companion to English Literature. Here, for example, are not one but three entries on 'Arcadia': one refers almost tongue in cheek to the actual place

79. Welcome To Paul Edmund Norman's The Gateway
Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins (18631933) was a barrister who added a new word to the English language - a word which conjures up images of a romantic
http://www.gatewaymonthly.com/51zend.html
Home Contents Features Reviews ... Contact (First published in Story Paper Collectors' Digest Christmas Special 2004 - references to Mary Cadogan refer to first publication)
Born in Clapton London, he was the son of a schoolmaster, the Revd. Edwards Comerford Hawkins. Through his mother Jane Isabella Grahame, he was a first cousin of the author of The Wind in the Willows. Kenneth Grahame.
Educated at Marlborough College, the young Hawkins then had a brilliant career at Balliol College, Oxford. A considerable athlete and sportsman, he played rugby for his college, became President of the Union, and obtained a first-class degree. Having decided to become a lawyer. he was called to the Bar by the Middle Temple in 1887. He practised for some seven years in the same chambers as Herbert Henry Asquith. who was to become Prime Minister. He also became keenly interested in politics, and as a Liberal stood unsuccessfully for South Buckinghamshire in the General Election of 1892.
By this time he had also begun another career as an author. He wrote short stories for various magazines in the late I 880s, and in 1890 published his first novel, A Man of Mark. In 1893 his light Society sketches The Dolly Dialogues appeared in the Westminster Gazette: they were a series of conversations between Dolly, Lady Mickleham, and a Mr. Samuel Carter.
In 1894 he took the bold decision to forsake the Bar and become a full-time writer, and for the next thirty years, novels poured from his pen. He had also loved the stage since childhood, and at one time had thought of becoming an actor. In 1898 his first play The Adventures of Lady Ursula was produced. and others followed in 1900 and 1903.

80. MAIN INDEX
FROM SHANE LESLIE 1938 (MARAUG) Sir Shane Leslie Papers Hawkins, Anthony Hope - CORRESPONDENCE William Zimmerman Manuscripts Collection
http://www.library.georgetown.edu/dept/speccoll/mi/mi}822.htm
GO TO SPECIAL COLLECTIONS HOME PAGE
RETURN TO INDEX KEY LIST
GO TO BOTTOM OF SEGMENT GO TO PREVIOUS SEGMENT ... HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. FROM SHANE LESLIE 1938 (MAR-AUG) Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. FROM SHANE LESLIE 1938 (SEPT-DEC)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. FROM SHANE LESLIE 1939 (JAN-MAY)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. FROM SHANE LESLIE 1939 (JUNE-DEC)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. FROM SHANE LESLIE 1940 (JAN-FEB)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. FROM SHANE LESLIE RE IRELAND (TRANSC)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE (UNDATED)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE (UNDATED)
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE 1926
Sir Shane Leslie Papers
HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE 1929
Sir Shane Leslie Papers HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE 1930 Sir Shane Leslie Papers HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE 1931 Sir Shane Leslie Papers HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE 1932 Sir Shane Leslie Papers HAWKES, MAY - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE 1933

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