Typewritten copies of two interviews conducted with Hughes with autograph annotations. One interview with Egbert Faas was published in London Magazine (January 1971) and later in Ted Hughes: An Unaccomodated Universe (1980) and the other entitled 'The Other Language' was conducted by John Horden ...
Partly printed, partly autograph material consisting of two workbooks for school children studying Hughes's work for Advanced Level English and an accompanying letter by the author of the workbooks, Andrew Worrall. The workbooks are entitled 'Ted Hughes: Selected Poems 1957-1981' and 'Crow'.
Autograph detailed listing of the material, which Hughes sent to Emory University as part of the institution's purchase of his archive in 1997. Drafts of information about work that Hughes was keeping, its relationship to the material being sent to Emory and his future plans for it are also inclu...
Partly typewritten, partly autograph correspondence between Hughes, Ron Schuchard (Professor of English at Emory) and Steve Enniss (then Curator of Literary Collections).
Sketches, the majority of which are of people and animals drawn by Hughes on loose sheets of paper and in sketchbooks. These include a sheet of what appear to be aztec symbols and numerous sketches of a bull, which appear to be versions of the sketch included on the front cover of 'Moortown Diary...
Two printed volumes The Translations of EZRA POUND (Faber and Faber, London, 1970) and a copy of the journal, Shenandoah (vol. XIII, no.2, winter 1962) entitled 'A Symposium on Robert Graves'.
Partly typewritten, partly autograph material, which consists of the following - two poems written for Hughes by Assia Wevill and one poem written by Leonard Baskin; a letter 'from Bill [William] Merwin to Dido' dated 15th October 1970; a letter to Nicholas Hughes from Aurelia Plath dated 25th Au...
Side of a cardboard box marked 'Laureate's Choice Oloroso Seco Sherry Williams and Humbert'. This box was one of those in which Hughes's Poet Laureate sherry was sent to him. The motif of the bird within the laurel wreath was designed and drawn by Hughes himself (sketches of the motif can be foun...