letter| Written or printed message, chiefly a personal communication. Letters are valuable as reflections of social conditions and of literary and political life. Legally, ownership of a letter (as a document) passes to the recipient, but the copyright remains with the writer. |
| Outstanding examples include: |
Ancient Cicero (Roman), Pliny the Younger (Roman), and St Paul; |
Medieval Abelard and Héloïse (12th-century France), the Paston family (15th-century England); |
16th century Erasmus (the Netherlands), Luther, Melanchthon (Germany), Spenser, Sidney (England); |
17th century Donne, Milton, Cromwell, Dorothy Osborne, Wotton (England); Pascal, Mme de Sévigné (France); |
18th century Pope, Walpole, Swift, Mary Wortley Montagu, Chesterfield, Cowper, Gray (England); Bossuet, Voltaire, Rousseau (France); |
19th century Emerson, J R Lowell (USA); Byron, Lamb, Keats, Fitzgerald, Stevenson (England); George Sand, Saint-Beuve, Goncourt brothers (France); Schiller, Goethe (Germany); Gottfried Keller (Switzerland); |
20th century T E Lawrence, G B Shaw, Ellen Terry, Katherine Mansfield (England); Rilke (Germany). |
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