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A Descendant of William Shakespeare letter from one Joan Mandrell, the governess of Anne Hall, praying her correspondent to send "twenty guineas for the payment of rent." The interest of this document to the students of local history lay in the fact that this Anne Hall was the ancestress of the Pooke family. Joan Mandrell's letter was addressed upon the back of the sheet, though the name of the addressee was no longer decipherable, but the letters ". . . . bington Hall" were, and are, clearly legible, as also the date. The letter further contains a minute description of Anne Hall's return to London from a foreign school and of the writer's devotion to the addressee, whom she treats throughout as mother of the young woman committed to her care. This Anne Hall later married Henry Pooke, whose son Charles made his fortune in politics under Walpole's administration, founding the family and estate of Understoke, which is so familiar to every Cambridgeshire man.

More than one student noted the coincidence between these two publications appearing but a fortnight apart; and at the end of May a paper was already prepared to be read to the Genealogical Society showing that the lineage of the poet had been continued in the Pookes.

So far the matter was of merely antiquarian interest, for Charles Pooke's great grandson, General Sir Arthur Pooke, had died in 1823 at Understoke without issue. It was, however, of some importance to all those who care for the literary history of their 161