- Letter from a Yellow Cherry Blossom (film by Kawase)
Naomi Kawase: …with Tsuioku no dansu (2003; Letter from a Yellow Cherry Blossom), which chronicled the final days in the life of one of Kawase’s mentors, Kazuo Nishii, a photographer and film critic suffering from cancer. Her motion picture Sharasojyu (2003; Shara), about the family of a young boy who disappeared without…
- Letter from America (radio program)
Alistair Cooke: His weekly 15-minute program, Letter from America, broadcast from 1946 to 2004, was one of the longest-running series on radio. The texts of many broadcasts were collected in One Man’s America (1952) and Talk About America (1968). From 1956 to 1961 Cooke hosted and narrated the weekly television “magazine”…
- Letter from Artemizia in the Town, to Chloë in the Country, A (work by Rochester)
English literature: The court wits: The most brilliant of these, A Letter from Artemisia in the Town, to Chloë in the Country (written about 1675), combines a shrewd ear for currently fashionable idioms with a Chinese box structure that masks the author’s own thoughts. Rochester’s determined use of strategies of indirection anticipates Swift’s tactics as…
- Letter from Birmingham Jail (work by King)
Martin Luther King, Jr.: The letter from the Birmingham jail: In Birmingham, Alabama, in the spring of 1963, King’s campaign to end segregation at lunch counters and in hiring practices drew nationwide attention when police turned dogs and fire hoses on the demonstrators. King was jailed along with large numbers…
- Letter from Italy, A (work by Addison)
Joseph Addison: Early life: 1718) and the poetic epistle A Letter from Italy (1704). From Italy Addison crossed into Switzerland, where, in Geneva, he learned in March 1702 of the death of William III and the consequent loss of power of his two chief patrons, Somers and Halifax. He then toured through Austria, the…
- Letter from Jamaica (work by Bolívar)
Letter from Jamaica, Letter written by Latin American soldier, revolutionary, and statesman Simón Bolívar in 1815 while in exile in Jamaica in which he articulates his desire for Latin American unity and his vision of republican government. One of Bolívar’s most important pieces of writing and a
- Letter from Sydney, A (work by Wakefield)
Edward Gibbon Wakefield: In his first important book, A Letter from Sydney . . . (published in 1829 while he was still in prison), which was thought by many to have come from Australia, he proposed the sale of crown lands there in small units at a “sufficient price” (fixed and modest), rather…
- letter mail
postal system: United States: First-class, or letter, mail (called letter post in the United Kingdom) is the basis of the postal service monopoly and, as the class of mail most commonly used by the public, has generally had a simplified rate structure. The other classes were established according to…
- letter of credence (diplomacy)
diplomacy: Credentials: …is sent forth with a letter of credence addressed by his head of state to the head of the host state to introduce the ambassador as his or her representative. In most major capitals a copy of credentials is now first provided privately to the foreign minister, after which the…
- Letter of Introduction (film by Stahl [1938])
John M. Stahl: …to more familiar material with Letter of Introduction (1938), which starred Andrea Leeds as a would-be actress who refuses to use her estranged actor father (Adolphe Menjou) to break into the business; Edgar Bergen and his ventriloquist dummy Charlie McCarthy were also prominently featured. Next was When Tomorrow Comes (1939),…
- Letter of Lentulus (apocryphal writing)
Christianity: Art and iconography: …writing of the early church—the Letter of Lentulus, supposedly written by a certain Lentulus, who was named consul in the 12th year of the emperor Tiberius. As the superior of Pontius Pilate, the procurator of Judaea, he by chance was staying in Palestine at the time of the trial of…
- letter of marque (government commission)
letter of marque, the name given to the commission issued by a belligerent state to a private shipowner authorizing him to employ his vessel as a ship of war. A ship so used is termed a privateer. Before regular navies were established, states relied on the assistance of private ships equipped for
- Letter of Wholesome Counsel (work by Knox)
John Knox: Escape to the Continent: …faithful in Scotland an important Letter of Wholesome Counsel (1556) enjoining not only private family worship but also weekly meetings of believers for corporate Bible study and discussion. From these weekly meetings, Reformed congregations grew apace, and from the leaders of these congregations came the elders of the Reformed Church.
- Letter on Humanism (work by Heidegger)
continental philosophy: Foucault: …set by Heidegger’s 1947 “Letter on Humanism,” which the German philosopher intended as a rejoinder to French existential humanism as represented by Sartre. Whereas Sartre stressed the dignity of human existence as embodied in the For-itself, Heidegger emphasized the primacy of being—and thus, by implication, the derivative or subaltern…
- Letter on the Blind for the Use of Those Who Can See (work by Diderot)
history of the blind: Education and the blind: …and education with his “Letter on the Blind for the Use of Those Who Can See” (1749). The essay suggested that the sense of touch could be honed for reading in blind persons, foreshadowing the 19th-century invention of the Braille writing system. Diderot included a section on Saunderson and…
- letter post
postal system: United States: First-class, or letter, mail (called letter post in the United Kingdom) is the basis of the postal service monopoly and, as the class of mail most commonly used by the public, has generally had a simplified rate structure. The other classes were established according to…
- Letter to a Hostage (work by Saint-Exupéry)
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry: …Lettre à un otage (1943; Letter to a Hostage), a call to unity among Frenchmen, and Le Petit Prince (1943; The Little Prince), a child’s fable for adults, with a gentle and grave reminder that the best things in life are still the simplest ones and that real wealth is…
- Letter to a King (work by Guamán Poma de Ayala)
Felipe Guamán Poma de Ayala: …nobleman who wrote and illustrated El primer nueva corónica y buen gobierno (1612–15; “The First New Chronicle and Good Government”), a critical account of Spanish rule in Peru.
- Letter to a Noble Lord (work by Burke)
nonfictional prose: Changing interpretations: Edmund Burke’s Letter to a Noble Lord (1796) was praised a century and a half after its composition as the greatest piece of invective in the English language. William Godwin’s Political Justice (1793) does not compare in the majesty of its prose to those supreme models, but…
- Letter to American Teachers of History (essay by Adams)
Henry Adams: …Applied to History” (1909) and Letter to American Teachers of History (1910), Adams calculated the demise of the world. Basing his theory on a scientific law, the dissipation of energy, he described civilization as having retrogressed through four stages: the religious, mechanical, electrical, and ethereal. The cataclysm, he prophesied, would…
- Letter to Coroticus (work by Saint Patrick)
St. Patrick: …his spiritual autobiography, and his Letter to Coroticus, a denunciation of British mistreatment of Irish Christians.
- Letter to Father (work by Kafka)
Franz Kafka: Kafka and his father: …an den Vater (written 1919; Letter to Father), a letter that never reached the addressee, Kafka attributed his failure to live, to cut loose from parental ties and establish himself in marriage and fatherhood, as well as his escape into literature, to the prohibitive father figure, which instilled in him…
- Letter to Maria Gisborne (poem by Shelley)
Percy Bysshe Shelley: His “Letter to Maria Gisborne” in heroic couplets and “The Witch of Atlas” in ottava rima (both 1820; published 1824) combine the mythopoeic mode of Prometheus Unbound with the urbane self-irony that had emerged in Peter Bell the Third, showing Shelley’s awareness that his ideals might…
- Letter to Monsieur d’Alembert on the Theatre (essay by Rousseau)
Voltaire: Later travels of Voltaire: …the morality of theatrical performances, Lettre à d’Alembert sur les spectacles (1758). Rousseau’s view that drama might well be abolished marked a final break between the two writers.
- Letter to Sister Benedicta (novel by Tremain)
Rose Tremain: In Letter to Sister Benedicta (1978), a middle-aged woman whose family life is unbearable writes to her former teacher, a nun, looking for solace. The Cupboard (1981) explores the relationship between an older, neglected writer and the journalist sent to interview her.
- Letter to the Free Society of Traders, A (work by Penn)
William Penn: Founding and governorship of Pennsylvania: Before his return, he published A Letter to the Free Society of Traders (1683), which contained his fullest description of Pennsylvania and included a valuable account of the Delaware based on firsthand observation. With the accession of his friend the duke of York as James II in 1685, Penn found…
- Letter to the World (ballet)
Martha Graham: Maturity of Martha Graham: In Letter to the World (1940; also called The Kick), a work about Emily Dickinson, several characters are used to portray different aspects of the poet’s personality.
- Letter to Three Wives, A (film by Mankiewicz [1949])
Joseph L. Mankiewicz: Directing: …1949 Mankiewicz directed and wrote A Letter to Three Wives, which exemplified his signature style of intelligent and witty banter and furthered his reputation as a “literary” director. The drama centres on three married women (Linda Darnell, Ann Sothern, and Jeanne Crain) who each receive a letter from a friend…
- Letter to Voetius (work by Descartes)
René Descartes: Residence in the Netherlands: In his Letter to Voetius of 1648, Descartes made a plea for religious tolerance and individual rights. Claiming to write not only for Christians but also for Turks—meaning Muslims, libertines, infidels, deists, and atheists—he argued that, because Protestants and Catholics worship the same God, both can hope…
- Letter to You (album by Springsteen)
Bruce Springsteen: Without The Big Man: …E Street Band to record Letter to You live in the studio. Like Western Stars, it took on aging and mortality, but here he also movingly and eloquently expressed the power of music to sustain humanity and the relationship of the musicians to each other and to the audience. Several…
- Letter to...the Sheriffs of Bristol, on the Affairs of America, A (work by Burke)
Edmund Burke: Political life: …the Colonies” (1775), and “A Letter to…the Sheriffs of Bristol, on the Affairs of America” (1777). British policy, he argued, had been both imprudent and inconsistent, but above all legalistic and intransigent, in the assertion of imperial rights. Authority must be exercised with respect for the temper of those…
- Letter, A (work by Hofmannsthal)
Hugo von Hofmannsthal: …“Ein Brief” (also called “Chandos Brief,” 1902). This essay was more than the revelation of a personal predicament; it has come to be recognized as symptomatic of the crisis that undermined the esthetic Symbolist movement of the end of the century.
- Letter, The (song by Carson)
Alex Chilton: …Box Tops—on the song “The Letter.” “The Letter” was a surprise hit, spending four weeks at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 chart in 1967. It later resurfaced as a cover version by Joe Cocker. The Box Tops returned to the top 10 with “Cry like a Baby,”…
- Letter, The (film by Wyler [1940])
William Wyler: Films of the 1940s of William Wyler: The Letter (1940), based on a short story and play by W. Somerset Maugham, became one of the decade’s biggest hits and featured another formidable Academy Award-nominated performance by Davis as the unfaithful wife of a rubber plantation owner (Herbert Marshall) who goes broke trying…
- lettera antica (calligraphy)
roman script, in calligraphy, script based upon the clear, orderly Carolingian writing that Italian humanists mistook for the ancient Roman script used at the time of Cicero (1st century bc). They used the term roman to distinguish this supposedly classical style from black-letter and national
- Lettera semiseria di Grisostomo al suo figliuolo (work by Berchet)
Italian literature: Opposing movements: Giovanni Berchet (patriotic poet whose Lettera semiseria di Grisostomo al suo figliuolo [1816; “Half-Serious Letter from Grisostomo to His Son”] is an important manifesto of Italian popular romanticism), Silvio Pellico, Ludovico di Breme, Giovita Scalvini, and Ermes Visconti were among its contributors. Their efforts were silenced in 1820 when several…
- Letteraria Italiana, Accademia (Italian literary academy)
Academy of Arcadia, Italian literary academy founded in Rome in 1690 to combat Marinism, the dominant Italian poetic style of the 17th century. The Arcadians sought a more natural, simple poetic style based on the classics and particularly on Greek and Roman pastoral poetry. The Academy of Arcadia
- Letteratura (Italian review)
Italian literature: The return to order: >Letteratura, while having to tread carefully with the authorities, provided an outlet for new talent. Carlo Emilio Gadda had his first narrative work (La Madonna dei filosofi [1931; “The Philosophers’ Madonna”]) published in Solaria, while the first part of his masterpiece, La cognizione del dolore…
- letteratura americana e altri saggi, La (work by Pavese)
Cesare Pavese: …americana e altri saggi (1951; American Literature, Essays and Opinions, 1970). His work probably did more to foster the reading and appreciation of U.S. writers in Italy than that of any other single man.
- Lettere (work by Svevo)
Italo Svevo: …with Montale was published as Lettere (1966). Svevo ultimately has been recognized as one of the most important figures in modern Italian literary history.
- lettere a Maria, Le (work by Aleardi)
Aleardo, Count Aleardi: His love lyrics, Le lettere a Maria (1846; “The Letters to Maria”), were eagerly read; but back in Verona and prevented by the Austrian government from practicing law, he wrote a series of bitterly anti-Austrian poems, notably Le città italiane marinare e commercianti (1856; “The Maritime and Commercial…
- lettere da Capri, Le (work by Soldati)
Italian literature: Other writings: …Le lettere da Capri (1953; The Capri Letters) and Le due città (1964; “The Two Cities”)—and in a later novel, L’incendio (1981; “The Fire”), which takes a quizzical look at the modern art business—showed himself to be a consistently skilled and entertaining narrator. There are many other accomplished authors who…
- Lettere dal carcere (work by Gramsci)
Italian literature: The return to order: …in Lettere dal carcere (1947; Letters from Prison).
- Lettere di politica e letteratura edite ed inedite (work by Balbo)
Cesare, Count Balbo: In Lettere di politica e letteratura edite ed inedite (1847), Balbo called for a specifically moderate Italian party.
- Lettere familiare (work by Caro)
Annibale Caro: …are his free and graceful Lettere familiare (pub. 1572–74; “Familiar Letters”) and a smooth translation of Virgil’s Aeneid (1581). He also wrote one of the most original comedies of his time, Straccioni (completed 1544), and a version of Longus’ Daphnis and Chloe called Amori pastorali di Dafni e Cloe (“The…
- lettered olive (snail)
olive shell: …southeastern American waters is the lettered olive (Oliva sayana), about 6 cm (2.5 inches) long. Abundant in the Indo-Pacific region is the 8-centimetre (3-inch) orange-mouthed olive (O. sericea).
- Letterier. Louis (French director)
Incredible Hulk: The Hulk in television and film: …The Incredible Hulk, directed by Louis Letterier, appeared in 2008. The character was integrated into Marvel’s larger cinematic universe with Mark Ruffalo’s scene-stealing turn as the jade giant in The Avengers (2012). Ruffalo returned as the Hulk in Avengers: Age of Ultron (2015), Thor: Ragnarok (2017), Avengers: Infinity War
- lettering
map: Nomenclature: Lettering is selected by the map editor in styles and sizes appropriate to the respective features and the relative importance of each. For topographic maps and most others that follow conventional practice, four basic styles of lettering are used in the Western world. The Roman…
- Letteris, Meir (Polish-Jewish author)
Hebrew literature: Beginnings of the Haskala movement: One poet, Meir Letteris, and one dramatist, Naḥman Isaac Fischman, wrote biblical plays.
- Letterman, David (American talk-show host)
David Letterman is an American late-night talk-show personality, producer, and comedian, best known as the host of the long-running Late Show with David Letterman. After graduating from Ball State University (1969) with a degree in telecommunications, Letterman tried his hand at television as a
- letterpress printing
letterpress printing, in commercial printing, process by which many copies of an image are produced by repeated direct impression of an inked, raised surface against sheets or a continuous roll of paper. Letterpress is the oldest of the traditional printing techniques and remained the only
- Letters (works by Plato)
Plato: Life: … in Sicily (many of the Letters concern these, though their authenticity is controversial) led to a deep personal attachment to Dion (408–354 bce), brother-in-law of Dionysius the Elder (430–367 bce), the tyrant of Syracuse. Plato, at Dion’s urging, apparently undertook to put into practice the ideal of the “philosopher-king” (described…
- Letters (work by Vonnegut)
Kurt Vonnegut: …his correspondence was published as Letters (2012). Complete Stories (2017) collects all of his short fiction.
- Letters (album by Webb)
Jimmy Webb: Later hits and works: …include Words and Music (1970), Letters (1972), El Mirage (1977), and others. Several songs from his solo albums had greater commercial success when recorded by other artists.
- Letters (novel by Barth)
American literature: Realism and metafiction: …and the epistolary novel in LETTERS (1979). Similarly, Donald Barthelme mocked the fairy tale in Snow White (1967) and Freudian fiction in The Dead Father (1975). Barthelme was most successful in his short stories and parodies that solemnly caricatured contemporary styles, especially the richly suggestive pieces collected in
- Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians (work by Catlin)
Madog Ab Owain Gwynedd: In Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians (1841), George Catlin surmised that Madog’s expedition had reached the upper Missouri River valley and that its members were the ancestors of the Mandan Indians. There is a tradition of a…
- Letters and Papers from Prison (work by Bonhoeffer)
Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Ethical and religious thought of Dietrich Bonhoeffer: …in 1951 (Widerstand und Ergebung; Letters and Papers from Prison, 1953, enlarged ed. 1997), are of interest both for their theological themes, especially as developed in the letters to his friend and later editor and biographer, Eberhard Bethge, and for their remarkable reflection on cultural and spiritual life. Reviewing the…
- Letters and Prose Writings, The (work by Cowper)
William Cowper: The Letters and Prose Writings, in two volumes, edited by James King and Charles Ryskamp, was published in 1979–80.
- letters close (government grant)
diplomatics: The royal chanceries of medieval France and Germany: …use of letters patent and letters close (open or closed letters). Privileges continued to be sealed with a hanging seal; the seal on letters patent was impressed on the document and was used to seal up letters close.
- Letters for Origin, 1950-1956 (work by Olson)
Charles Olson: … (1953), The Distances (1960), and Letters for Origin, 1950–1956 (1969). Posthumous collections of Olson’s work include A Nation of Nothing but Poetry: Supplementary Poems, edited by George F. Butterick (2000), and Collected Prose, edited by Donald Allen and Benjamin Friedlander (1997).
- Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies (work by Dickinson)
John Dickinson: …1767–68 as the author of Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania, to the Inhabitants of the British Colonies, which appeared in many colonial newspapers. The letters helped turn opinion against the Townshend Acts (1767), under which new duties were collected to pay the salaries of royal officials in the colonies.…
- Letters from an American Farmer (work by Crèvecoeur)
agrarianism: Agrarianism in the 18th and 19th centuries: John de Crèvecoeur published Letters from an American Farmer. According to de Crèvecoeur, the land-owning farmer not only acquires independence and freedom but also personifies the new American. In the early 19th century, the Virginia politician John Taylor defended the Jeffersonian view in The Arator (1813). Taylor decried the…
- Letters from Iceland (work by Auden and MacNeice)
W. H. Auden: Life: …Iceland with MacNeice, described in Letters from Iceland (1937), and a trip to China with Isherwood that was the basis of Journey to a War (1939). Auden visited Spain briefly in 1937, his poem Spain (1937) being the only immediate result; but the visit, according to his later recollections, marked…
- Letters from Iwo Jima (film by Eastwood [2006])
Clint Eastwood: 2000 and beyond: …of Our Fathers (2006) and Letters from Iwo Jima (2006), both of which focus on the Battle of Iwo Jima. The latter, told from the Japanese perspective, was nominated for several Oscars, including best director and best film.
- Letters from Langston: From the Harlem Renaissance to the Red Scare and Beyond (work by Hughes)
Langston Hughes: …political exchanges were collected as Letters from Langston: From the Harlem Renaissance to the Red Scare and Beyond (2016).
- Letters from Mexico (letters by Cortés)
Latin American literature: Chronicles of discovery and conquest: …whose Cartas de relación (1519–26; Letters from Mexico) told of the tortuous campaign by which a few hundred Spaniards took over the powerful Aztec empire, aided by gunpowder, horses, cunning, and the resentful peoples who were subject to Aztec rule. Cortés was a vigorous writer, with a flair for the…
- Letters from Prison (work by Gramsci)
Italian literature: The return to order: …in Lettere dal carcere (1947; Letters from Prison).
- Letters from the Earth (work by Twain)
Letters from the Earth, miscellany of fiction, essays, and notes by Mark Twain, published posthumously in 1962. Bernard De Voto, Twain’s second literary executor, compiled the writings in 1939, but publication of the work was held up for two decades by Twain’s daughter Clara. The pieces in the
- Letters of a Russian Traveler (work by Karamzin)
Nikolay Mikhaylovich Karamzin: …described his impressions in his Pisma russkogo puteshestvennika Letters of a Russian Traveller, 1789–1790), the most important of his contributions to a monthly review, Moskovsky zhurnal (1791–92; “Moscow Journal”), that he founded on his return. Written in a self-revealing style influenced by Jean-Jacques Rousseau and Laurence Sterne, the “Letters” helped…
- Letters of Allen Ginsberg, The (work by Ginsberg)
Allen Ginsberg: The Letters of Allen Ginsberg was published in 2008, and a collection edited by Bill Morgan and David Stanford that focuses on Ginsberg’s correspondence with Kerouac was published as Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters in 2010. Wait Till I’m Dead: Uncollected Poems (2016)…
- Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, The (work by Tolkien)
J.R.R. Tolkien: …as Letters from Father Christmas), The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien (1981), the children’s stories Mr. Bliss (1982) and Roverandom (1998), and The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún (2009), two narrative poems drawn from northern legend and written in the style of the Poetic Edda. The Fall of Arthur (2013) is…
- Letters of Junius (English political essays)
Sir Philip Francis: Francis may have written the Letters of Junius, a series of bitter lampoons against the government of King George III published by a London newspaper from 1769 to 1772, when he was a clerk in the war office.
- Letters of Mephibosheth Stepsure (work by McCulloch)
Canadian literature: From settlement to 1900: …Thomas McCulloch, in his serialized Letters of Mephibosheth Stepsure (1821–22), and Thomas Chandler Haliburton, in The Clockmaker (1835–36), featuring the brash Yankee peddler Sam Slick, adroitly brought their region to life and helped found the genre of folk humour.
- Letters of Obscure Men, The (work by Rubeanus and von Hutten)
German literature: Reformation: Epistolae obscurorum virorum (1515–17; The Letters of Obscure Men), a witty satire written in large part by the humanists Crotus Rubeanus (Johannes Jäger) and Ulrich von Hutten against the anti-Semitic and antihumanistic forces at work in the German universities, opened a gap between humanists and conservative scholastic intellectuals that…
- Letters of Peter Plymley to My Brother Abraham Who Lives in the Country (work by Smith)
Sydney Smith: …the first of several famous Letters of Peter Plymley to My Brother Abraham Who Lives in the Country, attacking what he saw as Protestant ignorance, obscurantism, and bigotry. Its success was immediate, and it was followed by four more letters published in 1807 and five in 1808.
- Letters on Chivalry and Romance (work by Hurd)
romance: The 18th-century romantic revival: …by Richard Hurd in his Letters on Chivalry and Romance (1762). To Hurd, romance is not truth but a delightful and necessary holiday from common sense. This definition of romance (to which both Ariosto and Chrétien de Troyes would no doubt have subscribed) inspired on the one hand the romantic…
- Letters on Dancing and Ballets (work by Noverre)
Jean-Georges Noverre: …French choreographer whose revolutionary treatise, Lettres sur la danse et sur les ballets (1760), still valid, brought about major reforms in ballet production, stressing the importance of dramatic motivation, which he called ballet d’action, and decrying overemphasis on technical virtuosity. His first choreographic success, Les Fêtes chinoises (1754), attracted the…
- Letters on England (work by Voltaire)
Voltaire: Return to France: …work of incisive brevity: the Lettres philosophiques (1734). These fictitious letters are primarily a demonstration of the benign effects of religious toleration. They contrast the wise Empiricist psychology of Locke with the conjectural lucubrations of René Descartes. A philosopher worthy of the name, such as Newton, disdains empty, a priori
- Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man (work by Schiller)
aesthetics: The aesthetic experience: …with beauty he plays” (Briefe über die ästhetische Erziehung des Menschen [1794–95; Letters on the Aesthetic Education of Man]).
- Letters on the American War (work by Hartley)
David Hartley, the Younger: …parliamentary speeches and in his Letters on the American War (1778–79). He was also sympathetic toward the French Revolution and critical of the African slave trade.
- Letters on Toleration (essay by Locke)
A Letter Concerning Toleration, in the history of political philosophy, an important essay by the English philosopher John Locke, originally written in Latin (Epistola de Tolerantia) in 1685 while Locke was in exile in Holland and first published anonymously in both Latin and English (in a
- letters patent (government)
letters patent, a form of grant by the British sovereign to the patentee of some dignity, office, privilege, franchise, or monopoly, including monopoly rights in an invention. Letters patent derive their name from the fact that, as Sir William Blackstone said, “they are not sealed up, but exposed
- Letters to a Landholder (work by Ellsworth)
Oliver Ellsworth: Life: His “Letters to a Landholder,” printed in the Connecticut Courant and the American Mercury, had a broad influence during the ratification debates, much as the Federalist papers did in New York.
- Letters to Juliet (film by Winick [2010])
Gael García Bernal: …Control (2009), the romantic comedy Letters to Juliet (2010), and the politically provocative También la lluvia (2010; Even the Rain), in which he portrayed a besieged movie director.
- Letters to Lithopolis (work by Henry)
O. Henry: Henryana (1920), Letters to Lithopolis (1922), and two collections of his early work on the Houston Post, Postscripts (1923) and O. Henry Encore (1939), were published. Foreign translations and adaptations for other art forms, including films and television, attest his universal application and appeal. The O. Henry…
- Letters to Live Poets (poetry by Beaver)
Bruce Beaver: …first major collection of poems, Letters to Live Poets (1969). It was, he said, an attempt at a “spiritual, intellectual, and emotional autobiography.” His later collections include Lauds and Plaints (1974), Odes and Days (1975), Death’s Directives (1978), and As It Was (1979).
- Letters to My Father (work by Styron)
William Styron: …his correspondence were issued as Letters to My Father (2009) and Selected Letters of William Styron (2012).
- Letters to Sarapion, The (work by Athanasius)
St. Athanasius: Other works: …Athanasius’s other important works are The Letters [to Sarapion] on the divinity of the Holy Spirit and The Life of St. Antony, which was soon translated into Latin and did much to spread the ascetic ideal in East and West. Only fragments remain of sermons and biblical commentaries. Several briefer…
- Letters to the Dead (ancient Egyptian text)
Book of the Dead, ancient Egyptian collection of mortuary texts made up of spells or magic formulas, placed in tombs and believed to protect and aid the deceased in the hereafter. Probably compiled and reedited during the 16th century bce, the collection included Coffin Texts dating from c. 2000
- Letters to Vernon Watkins by Dylan Thomas (work by Watkins)
Vernon Phillips Watkins: …interest is his edition of Letters to Vernon Watkins by Dylan Thomas (1957).
- Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark (work by Wollstonecraft)
Mary Wollstonecraft: …Wollstonecraft’s late notable works are Letters Written During a Short Residence in Sweden, Norway, and Denmark (1796), a travelogue with a sociological and philosophical bent, and Maria; or, The Wrongs of Woman (1798), a posthumously published unfinished work that is a novelistic sequel to A Vindication of the Rights of…
- Letters Written from the Mountain (essay by Rousseau)
Jean-Jacques Rousseau: Years of seclusion and exile of Jean-Jacques Rousseau: …écrites de la montagne (1764; Letters Written from the Mountain). No longer, as in the Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, was Geneva depicted as a model republic but as one that had been taken over by “twenty-five despots”; the subjects of the king of England were said to be…
- Letters, Office of (ancient Rome)
diplomatics: The Roman and Byzantine empire: …Roman imperial chancery, called the Office of Letters (ab epistulis), was subdivided into a Greek and a Latin department. In the 5th century four letter offices existed, all under the ultimate control of the magister officiorum (“master of offices”): the scrinium epistolarum (“letter office”) handled mainly foreign, legal, and administrative…
- Letters, The (film by Riead [2014])
Max von Sydow: He played a priest in The Letters (2014), a Mother Teresa biopic. In 2015 von Sydow joined the cast of the sci-fi epic Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and the following year he portrayed the Three-Eyed Raven in the HBO TV series Game of Thrones. His later movies included The…
- letterset (printing)
dry offset, offset printing process combining the characteristics of letterpress and offset. A special plate prints directly onto the blanket of an offset press, and the blanket then offsets the image onto the paper. The process is called dry offset because the plate is not dampened as it would be
- Lettice and Lovage (play by Shaffer)
Maggie Smith: …of the World (1984), Shaffer’s Lettice and Lovage (1987), and Edward Albee’s Three Tall Women (1994); for a subsequent Broadway production of Lettice and Lovage, she won a Tony Award in 1990. In 1999 she appeared as the title character in Alan Bennett’s The Lady in the Van at the…
- Letting Go (novel by Roth)
Philip Roth: Roth’s first novel, Letting Go (1962), was followed in 1967 by When She Was Good, but he did not recapture the success of his first book until Portnoy’s Complaint (1969; film 1972), an audacious satirical portrait of a contemporary Jewish male at odds with his domineering mother and…
- letting-out process (fur industry)
fur: …one of two processes: the letting-out technique or the skin-on-skin method. The letting-out process involves slicing a skin into narrow diagonal strips and then sewing them together to form a longer and narrower strip that will run the full length of a coat. The skin-on-skin process is much simpler and…
- Lettish language
Latvian language, East Baltic language spoken primarily in Latvia, where it has been the official language since 1918. It belongs to the Baltic branch of the Indo-European family of languages. (See Baltic languages.) In the late 20th century Latvian was spoken by about 1.5 million people. The
- Lettow-Vorbeck, Paul von (German officer)
Paul von Lettow-Vorbeck was a lieutenant colonel commanding Germany’s small African force during World War I (1914–18), who became a determined and resourceful guerrilla leader hoping to influence the war in Europe by pinning down a disproportionately large number of Allied troops in his area.