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                <title>John Jones to Thomas Pennant, 21 September 1779</title>
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                        <settlement>Warwick</settlement>
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                        <idno>CR 2017 /TP243</idno>
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                    <persName ref="pe0322">John Jones</persName>
                    <placeName ref="pl1347">Oxford</placeName>
                    <date when="1779-09-21">21 September 1779</date>
                    
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                    <persName ref="pe0232">Thomas Pennant</persName>
                    
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                <opener>
                    <salute>Dear Sir</salute>
                </opener>
                
                <p>On Friday last I returned here from <placeName ref="pl3322">Beechwood</placeName> where I received the most friendly and the 
                    most obliging Reception. I took an Opportunity to examine all the M.S.S. more leisurely than before, but found nothing to your
                    present Purpose; what now remains, relates almost all together to 
                    <placeName ref="pl1245">Southwales</placeName>.<note type="editorial">Jones's reference to 'what now remains' reflects his knowledge
                        that Sir John Sebright had lent more than twenty Lhuyd manuscripts from his collection at Beechwood to Pennant by the beginning
                        of December 1778. See Thomas Pennant to John Strange, 3 December 1778, British Library, Egerton MS 2001, f. 215. Pennant thanks 
                        Sir John Sebright for 'his liberal communication of several of the late Mr. EDWARD
                        LLWYD's Manuscripts' in the 'Advertisement' to <hi rend="italic">A tour in Wales 1770 [1773]</hi> (2nd edn., 1784), II, p. ii, and evidence 
                        of his consultation of them is noted in footnotes throughout both volumes of the tour. Further on this lending, see Eiluned Rees and Gwyn
                        Walters, 'The Dispersion of the manuscripts of Edward Lhuyd', <hi rend="italic">WHR</hi>, vol. 7, no. 2 (1974), 148–80, at 162–3. Pennant's interest 
                        in south Wales appears to have waned following his abandonment of a journey there during summer 1776. See his correspondence with 
                        John Price, dated 8 September 1776 
                    (<ref target="1488.xml">1488</ref>); and cf. also his 
                    avowal that he is uninterested
                    in the south in a letter to Richard Bull during 1784 (<ref target="1037.xml">1037</ref>).</note> There is one Volume 
                    in f<hi rend="superscript">o</hi>. almost full of Drawings, of Monuments, Antiquities, Inscriptions &amp;<unclear>a</unclear>. in that Part of the
                    Principality. In some of <persName ref="pe0044">Lhwyd</persName>'s Pocket Books I found <sic>ā</sic> Account of his Travels in Ireland
                    and Scotland, written almost entirely in Welsh, but I had not sufficient Leisure to compare them to satisfy myself that they are a 
                    complete Journal.<note type="editorial">Due to the dispersal of the Lhuyd manuscripts, it is not easy to identify the two items mentioned by Jones 
                    here. They may possibly have featured among the forty items purchased by Sir Watkin williams Wynn III (1772–1840) at
                    the Sebright sale of 1807. The items included 'Mr. Edward Lhwyd's Notes and Drawings of Antiquities, Monuments, &amp;c. in Wales, as well as
                    material 'Relative to [Lhuyd's] Travels'. These manuscripts were all lost in fires either at the Covent Garden house of the Wynns or at a later fire at Wynnstay
                    in 1858. See Rees
                    and Walters, op. cit., 164, 171–2. </note> I had been given to understand that Lhwyd's MS.S. were at <placeName ref="pl3322">Beechwood</placeName>, but I found
                    several of his Handwriting in <persName ref="pe0138">L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi> Macclesfield</persName>'s 
                    <bibl type="authorial">
                        <title ref="bi0078">Collection</title>
                    </bibl>, 
                    besides several Volumes which I presume must have been 
                    his Property.<note type="editorial">Edward Lhuyd's hand in the Macclesfield collection (now NLW, Llanstephan 1–154) is limited to 
                    five manuscripts (Llanstephan 4, 84, 137, 145 and 185). Of these, two are compilations of Lhuyd's, a Cornish vocabulary 
                    dated <hi rend="italic">c</hi>. 1700 (Llanstephan 84), 
                    and a pocket field notebook of 1698 (Llanstephan 185). Daniel Huws, <hi rend="italic">A Repertory of Welsh Manuscripts and Scribes</hi>
                    (Aberystwyth: Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies, forthcoming).</note>
               </p>
                
                <p>I rode one Morning to <placeName ref="pl2876">Berkhamsted</placeName> and called at 
                    <persName ref="pe0145">D<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Jeffreys</persName>'s but had not the good Fortune to find him at Home, 
                    however I had the Pleasure to hear that all the Family were well. I enclose herewith a Frank which I procured at 
                    <placeName ref="pl3322">Beechwood</placeName> agreeably to the Request mentioned in your Favour which I received on my Arrival there.
                    I propose going to <persName ref="pe0138">L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi> Macclesfield</persName>'s to morrow, and to examine
                    his Lordships's M.S.S. once more. If any thing occurs worth your Attention you may depend upon receiving it with all possible
                    Expedition. I am
                </p>
                
                <closer>
                    <salute>Dear Sir<lb/>
                    your obliged humble Servant
                </salute>
                    <signed>
                        <persName ref="pe0322">Jno Jones</persName>
                    </signed>
                    <dateline>
                        <placeName ref="pl1347">Oxford</placeName> Sept: 21 1779</dateline>
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                            <persName ref="pe0232">T. Pennant Esq<hi rend="superscript">r</hi>
                            </persName>
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