daughter Maria wrote cover letter when she sent the cabinet with 26 magnifying glasses to the Royal Society (AB 381)
daughter Maria sent cabinet with 26 magnifying glasses to the Royal Society.
Leeuwenhoek mentioned this cabinet in his letter of August 2, 1701. The cabinet was also discussed by Henry Baker in 1739.
ms. Royal Society, no. 2137; L.6.38
Dobell's Little Animals (pp. 98-99) has a translation of Maria's accompanying letter from the Dutch:
Most excellent Sirs
Instantly upon the sad death of my beloved father Anthonij van Lewenhoek [sic] I took care to have this my loss made known to you by our reverenced and most learned pastor, Peterus Griebius [sic]; adding thereto, that after the space of six weeks would be sent to the noble and far famed Royal Society, at London, a little cabinet with magnifying-glasses, made of silver wrought out of the mineral by my dear departed father his very self; which same is now sent to Your Excellencies, even as my late father made it up, with six-and-twenty magnifying glasses in their little cases: truly in itself a poor present to so celebrated a Royal Society, but meant to betoken my father's deep respect for such a learned Society, whereof my most beloved and dear Father, of blessed memory, hath had the honour to have been a fellow member. Your most humble servitress now begs Your Excellencies, please to be so good as to let me have word whether this trifling gift is come safe into the hands of the far famous College, that I may rest content I have fulfilled my Father's wish. Wherewith, most famous Gentlemen, your most respectful Servitress and my father's Grief-stricken the Daughter now and hereafter will ever be and remains
Your humble Servant
Maria van Leeuwenhoek
Antoni's daughter
Delft, 4th October 1723
New Style