Well, I thought the January 2017 Crocodile Mystery was going to be a tricky one, but Misha Teramura not only identified the phenomenon correctly (an endorsement written across the hole created when an early modern letter was torn open at the wax seal), he pinpointed the letter in question: Folger MS L.a.874, a letter from Edward Stafford, 12th Baron Stafford, Stafford Castle, to Walter Bagot and Walter Chetwynd, 6 May 1599.
Here’s a full view of the page the detail came from, followed by a full view of the page with the endorsement “Ld. Stafford, 6th of May 1599.”
The idea of posting a close-up of this letter as a Crocodile Mystery began with a question sent to LunaHelp@folger.edu, where someone wondered why the front and the back of the same sheet looked different:
fol. 2r image shows there is damage to the sheet, there’s a hole in the paper and it is torn and scrunched on the side; fol. 2v image does not show either of these two damages. Did something happen to the sheet between the two photographs?
In fact, the only thing that happened between the two photographs is that the photographer turned the page, so instead of seeing a blank background through the hole, you see the page underneath. LUNA displays the four pages as four separate images, side-by-side:
This series of snapshots of the letter shows what’s going on more clearly:
The vault had already closed for the day when I received the question, so I wasn’t able to take snapshots. I could have waited until the next day to respond, but where’s the fun in that? Why not print out the LUNA images, tape them together, cut out the holes, then fold it up as a recreation of the original sealed letter and send snapshots of that?
Recreating the folded-up letter made it clear that it had originally been a “tuck-and-seal” letter packet: the long end was tucked inside the short one, with a wafer of wax slipped inside to stick it together securely.
For more information about the ways letters were sealed before the era of envelopes, see the Collation posts “A letter from Queen Anne to Buckingham locked with silk embroidery floss” and “Let’s make a model!”
And if you want something nicer than taped-together print-outs for a facsimile, the Folger Shop sells an actual size replica of Folger MS X.d.494, a tucked-and-sealed letter from William Cecil, Baron Burghley, relating to the defeat of the Spanish Armada. [Update: replica now also available through the Folger Shop online. EB 2017-01-05]
Stay connected
Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.