Sir Francis Meynell., 01/01/1914-12/31/1958
Collection-level Scope and Content Note
This collection essentially comprises the life and letters of Sir Shane Leslie whose boundless energy and wide-ranging interests took him all over Britain, the United States and Canada, bringing him in touch with people in many fields including the arts, economics, education, literature, politics and religion. Sir Shane's personal papers also reflect his deep concern and interest in Irish culture and politics, particularly the question of Irish independence through Home Rule.
The correspondence series of the collection reads like a who's who particularly from 1900 through 1971. Famous names include Angela Antrim, Margot Asquith, Nancy Astor, William Maxwell Aitken, Lord Beaverbrook, Hilaire Belloc, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, J.E.C. Bodley, Brendan Bracken, G.K. Chesterton, Winston Churchill (cousin), Sydney Cockerell, Bourke Cockran, George Curzon, Charles Dilke, Alfred Douglas, Mrs. Fitzherbert, Francois Aidan Gasquet, Rupert Hart-Davis, Vyvyan Holland, John Maynard Keynes, William Somerset Maugham, Alice, Francis and Viola Meynell, Horace Plunkett, George Bernard Shaw, Clare Sheridan (wife of Wilfrid Sheridan, great-great grandson of Richard Brinsley Sheridan), Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice, Mark Sykes, Evelyn Waugh, William Butler Yeats.
The collection includes a signed black and white photograph inscribed by Leo Tolstoy to Shane Leslie, during the latter's visit to the great Russian author in Moscow in 1907. Sir Shane's manuscripts are also included in great abundance in the collection, including those for his autobiography, “Long Shadows.” The typescripts and drafts of a biography planned by Iris Leslie are also included in this series. Other notable series include Sir Shane's journals and appointment books; scrapbooks, particularly those concerning his visit to the U.S. 1957-1958; and editions of Sir Shane's own works that include tipped-in items such as correspondence relating to the work, notes by Sir Shane, and press cuttings.
Dates
- 01/01/1914-12/31/1958
Collection-level Access Restrictions
Most manuscripts collections at the Georgetown University Booth Family Center for Special Collections are open to researchers; however, restrictions may apply to some collections. Collections stored off site require a minimum of three days for retrieval. For use of all manuscripts collections, researchers are advised to contact the Booth Family Center for Special Collections in advance of any visit.
Extent
From the Collection: 40.25 Linear Feet (80 boxes and 1 oversized folder )
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Container Summary
Contains 3 undated ALS to Shane Leslie from Sir Francis Meynell, founder of the Nonesuch Press (1923), and brother of Viola Meynell (poet and writer). Reference to Viola Meynell's letters about which Meynell writes: "There is no likelihood of...publication"; to his first wife Hilda's illness; and to World War One: "Daily the sadness and the horror grow. A spriritual renascence or even a social, born out of the wedding of such horrors and such fear, would have been something gained; but there is not even this. Cruelty and blood and lust are in the air even here, here far from any shells but those of the Zeppelins. I was in Soho when they came over London. The restaurants and theatres emptied; women lay fainting on the pavement...and twenty minutes after...the thousand prostitutes in Shaftesbury Avenue were conducting their "business as usual." The shadow of death is a mighty thing, but this flame of death, this trumpet of doom, is a mightier. There was terror for a little time, but there was no understanding..."
Subjects and Associated Physical Materials
WORLD WAR ONE - REFERENCE BY FRANCIS MEYNELL: Autographed Letter
MEYNELL, FRANCIS - CORRES. TO SHANE LESLIE: Autographed Letter
MEYNELL, HILDA SAXE - REFERENCE BY FRANCIS MEYNELL: Autographed Letter
MEYNELL, VIOLA - LETTERS, PUBLICATION - REFERENCE BY FRANCIS MEYNELL: Autographed Letter
Creator
- From the Collection: Leslie, Shane, 1885-1971 (Person)
Repository Details
Part of the Georgetown University Manuscripts Repository
Lauinger Library, 5th Floor
37th and O Streets, N.W.
Washington DC 20057
speccoll@georgetown.edu