√ | Century of Experience | Evidence | Name of Reader / Listener / Reading Group | Author of Text | Title of Text | Form of Text | |
| 1800-1849 | 'Affectation is never more tiresome and ridiculous than in a letter. Madame de Sevigne was the best letter-writer that... | Mr Sharpe | Marie de Rabutin-Chantal, marquise de Sevigne | Letters | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Affectation is never more tiresome and ridiculous than in a letter. Madame de Sevigne was the best letter-writer that... | Mr Sharpe | Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl of Chesterfield | Letters to his Son | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Affectation is never more tiresome and ridiculous than in a letter. Madame de Sevigne was the best letter-writer that... | Mr Sharpe | Jonathan Swift | Letters | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Affectation is never more tiresome and ridiculous than in a letter. Madame de Sevigne was the best letter-writer that... | Mr Sharpe | Voltaire [pseud.] | Letters | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Affectation is never more tiresome and ridiculous than in a letter. Madame de Sevigne was the best letter-writer that... | Mr Sharpe | Horace Walpole | Letters | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Affectation is never more tiresome and ridiculous than in a letter. Madame de Sevigne was the best letter-writer that... | Mr Sharpe | Heloise | [Letters to Abelard] | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'After reading many private as well as public documents of his age, I am persuaded that he and lord Melville were the ... | Mr Sharpe | | unknown | Print: Book, probably manuscripts as well |
| 1800-1849 | 'As to curious MSS, there is no such thing here; no varieties, but dull charters of religious houses, and canting live... | Mr Sharpe | | [various MS letters, religious charters and poems] | Manuscript: various |
| 1800-1849 | 'As to curious MSS, there is no such thing here; no varieties, but dull charters of religious houses, and canting live... | Mr Sharpe | | [volumes published by the Bannatyne club] | Print: Book |
| 1800-1849 | 'Letters bring Lady M. W. M[ontagu] into my head, which I now do not confess in public ever to have read, for they are... | Mr Sharpe | Mary Wortley Montagu | Letters and Works of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu | Print: Book |