Dear colleagues:
Well, that was a thoroughly incorrect URL, wasn't it?
I thought I had copied the URL from Emily's message of 4 September, but
obviously I hadn't. Sorry!
Here's the correct URL for the corrected page:
http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/timeline/colonial/jamestwn/
jamestwn.html
Apologies for the diversion.
--Jurretta, feeling incorrect
On Sep 10, 2006, at 7:15 PM, Jurretta Heckscher wrote:
> Dear colleagues:
>
> The erroneous description of the language of the Records of the
> Virginia Company at
> http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=documents&div=91 has now been
> corrected.
>
> --Jurretta Heckscher
>
> On Sep 5, 2006, at 9:33 AM, Emily Rose wrote:
>>
>> It is not surprising that school children are confused about American
>> history when
>> the Library of Congress Learning Page
>> http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/timeline/colonial/jamestwn/
>> jamestwn.html
>> instructs us that the relevant American “documents were written in
>> Middle
>> English”
>>
>> (for the generally accepted notion that the use of Middle English
>> went out
>> in the fifteenth century, see Wikipedia:
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_English)
>>
>> Emily Rose
>> New Hall, Cambridge
>>
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