BRACERS Notes

Record no. Notes, topics or text
23302
23303
23304
23305
23306
23307
23308
23309
23310
23311
23312

"I am most pleased that you found my letter of use to you and I should be in your debt if you could contribute towards putting the lie to the fiction that I have advocated war against the Soviet Union."

23313
23314

Verso contains "the solution" to Fermat's famous last theorem.

23315
23316
23317
23318
23319
23320
23321
23322
23323
23324

On verso of Easley's letter.

23325
23326
23327
23328
23329
23330
23331
23332
23333
23334
23335
23336

Not a letter but two poems both signed by Edmonds.

23337
23338
23339
23340
23341
23342

On verso of Edwards' letter.

23343
23344
23345
23346
23347
23348
23349
23350
23351

"I am much interested by what you have to say about the past relations between the British and the Afghans. The Afghan War of 1878, of which my family strongly disapproved, is my earliest political recollection."

23352
23353

"Let the People Think (an unfortunate title imposed upon me by American publishers)."

[Actually it was the U.K. publisher, since the book was never published in the U.S.—K. Blackwell]

23354
23355

Poem is titled "The Bridges".

23356
23357
23358
23359
23360
23361
23362
23363
23364
23365
23366
23367

On verso of Ejvegard's letter.

23368
23369
23370
23371
23372

Enclosure is an open letter in mimeo form, signed and dated 29 January 1960.

23373

On verso of Ekowski's letter.

23374
23375

Letter is from the Tottenham branch of the union.

23376
23377
23378
23379
23380
23381
23382
23383
23384

A typed mimeo titled "A Message Concerning the Twelfth Day of December, 1955."

23385
23386
23387

Typescript is titled "The H Bomb".

23388

Ts. is titled "A New Hypothesis. E.A. Ellis".

23389
23390
23391
23392
23393
23394
23395

"If you could find a publisher, I should be delighted and I should be proud to have the quotation about bishops and bookmakers as a motto."

23396
23397
23398
23399
23400
23401