√ | Century of Experience | Evidence | Name of Reader / Listener / Reading Group | Author of Text | Title of Text | Form of Text | |
| 1800-1849 | 'To Time' 'In Fancy's eye, what an extended span / ...' 'Clare' | E.E.R. | John Clare | 'Address to Time' from The Village Minstrel | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'On Taste' 'Taste is from Heaven /...' | E.E.R. | John Clare | 'On Taste' from The Village Minstrel, Volume II. | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'On Taste' 'Taste is from Heaven /...' | E.E.R. | John Clare | 'Sorrows for a Friend' from The Village Minstrel, | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Life' 'Life thou art misery, or as such to me...' | E.E.R. | John Clare | 'Life' from The Village Minstrel, Volume II. | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Sorrows for a Friend' 'O ye brown old oaks that spread the silent wood...' 'Clare' | E.E.R. | John Clare | 'Sorrows for a Friend' from The Village Minstrel, | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Early Rising' 'Just at the early peep of dawn...' [transcribes text] 'Clare'. | Mary Dugdale | John Clare | Early Rising | Unknown |
| 1900-1945 | 'Coachman's daughter Anne Tibble was enraged by "The Waste Land", which she read as a scholarship student at a redbric... | Anne Tibble | John Clare | [poetry] | Print: Unknown |
| 1800-1849 | H. J. Jackson discusses copy of John Clare, Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery (1820) annotated by Eliza Loui... | Eliza Louisa Emmerson | John Clare | Poems Descriptive of Rural Life and Scenery | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | Elizabeth Barrett to Mary Russell Mitford, 26 May 1845:
'Thank you, thank you, for letting me see the pencilled lin... | Elizabeth Barrett Barrett | John Clare | unknown | Manuscript: Unknown |
| 1900-1945 | Leonard Woolf to Edmund Blunden, 14 August 1924:
'I admired your book on Clare very much. It passed through my hand... | Leonard Woolf | John Clare | Madrigals & Chronicles: Being newly found Poems written by John Clare | Print: Book |