Letter to William Osler from J. Beattie Crozier, 9, Elgin Avenue, London, England. Enthusiastic comments on his address to the Classical Association. Critics of it. Mentions his financial problems. Civilities.- Attached is an extract from an unidentified magazine. "THE TRAGEDY OF A SCHOLAR", by T.P. O'Conor, from the Daily Telegraph, January 11, 1919. It is an article on Beattie Crozier.
Letter to George H. Perley from William Osler, Browne's Hotel, London, England. Apologizes not to be able to greet him in person for all he has done for the country through the war. Explains that he is presiding at the annual meeting of the British Medical Association.
Letter to William Osler from W.H. Saunders, The City Temple, London, England. Invitation to give a lecture at the City Temple Literary Society on the 4th of March, 1920 on "Oliver Wendell Holmes". If the subject does not suit him, he can suggest another one and same thing about the date.
Letter to William Osler from Guido Biagi, The Savoy Hotel, London, England. Thanks for their hospitality in Oxford. Enjoyed his library and the visit to the institutions. Hopes to see him in Italy, but warns him that he could not find somewhere in that country with the atmosphere of restful learning present in Oxford.
Letter to John George Adami from William Osler, The Athenaeum, London, England. Congratulations on his nomination for the Vice-Chancellorship of Liverpool.
Letter to William Osler from William Francis Smith, 39, Dorset Square, Barker Street, London, England. (Notes in book, 'Rabelais in his Writings', W.F. Smith. Critical of his own paper on Rabelais. Civilities.
Letter to William Osler from George Nathaniel Marquis of Curzon, Foreign Office, London, England. Explains that he would receive him and his friends regarding the situation in Vienna if he would be of any use, but that the Foreign Office here has nothing to do with the organization helping Vienna. It is done exclusively in Paris, and their representative is Lord Robert Cecil. Comments on a declaration of Balfour on the subject.
Curzon of Kedleston, George Nathaniel Curzon, Marquess, 1859-1925
Letter to Karl Friedrich Wenckebach from Harriette Chick, London, England. Osler has asked her to write to Wenckebach about the work coming out in this Institute and elsewhere in England upon the role of accessory food factors (vitamins) in a diet.
Letter to John Collins Warren from William Osler, London, England. (Cable). Massachusetts General Hospital men in England at Ether Day Dinner send greetings to him and to the Hospital.