Unrestricted.
Notes on Ticknor's tour of Italy and Italian schools of artistry.
Notes from 1816 at Göttingen.
Book of Italian exercises
Notebook containing information about well-known poets and their poems and persons of historical significance, including Euripides, Voltaire, Shakespeare. Written while Ticknor was attended Göttingen.
Notes in German.
Notes on deities and art in a book labeled "Archaeology." The notes on the right hand pages are from a series of lectures delivered to Ticknor while he was in Göttingen during the spring and summer of 1816. In this book, George Ticknor provides notes and detailed descriptions of deities such as Apollo, Bacchus, Zeus, Hercules, and Flora. A section of the book is devoted to Roman iconography.
Notes made briefly in Germany in 1815 and 1816 to prepare him for traveling.
Ticknor's notes on a general statistics course. The notes are broken up into "general statistics" and "special statistics."
Unrestricted.
Notes on lectures at Göttingen in 1817. This volume contains notes on the history of poetry.
A list of Greek words and their definitions.
Defined as "a general contempt for all that is old and memorable and sacred." Ticknor writes about the spirit of the times in which we live and its characterizations.
"De Hymno Homerico…" works of ancient art historically arranged.
Notes on the Iliad.
Notes in Spanish. Mentions of Juan de la Cueva, a poet.
Notes Ticknor took of the conversations and explanations of "Nibby," the archaeologist who traveled around Rome with him from 1817-1818. The notes contain corrections in Nibby's handwriting.
Various notes on poetry and historical figures.
List of Portuguese books with notes by Ticknor.
Ticknor documents the Greek letters and alphabet interspersed with personal remarks on Greek grammatical structure, dialect, and format. The book covers Greek adjectives, conjugation, and pronunciation.
Contains poetry and prose by various authors. The final pages of the book features a table of contents with the name of each poem, its author, and page number. Two sketches of a conductor are inserted in the book.
Ticknor's outline of and notes on Paradise Lost.
Contains notes on early English dramas and poetry.
Commentary on the study of the law, parliament, the King's title, King's council, natives vs. citizens, magistrates, marriage law, as well as its faults.
Scenes from Shakespeare. Extensive quotations and extracts.
"Ancestral Tablets – A Collection of Diagrams for Pedigrees" –a book for recording family genealogy filled in by George Ticknor. Ticknor family genealogy.