Your search for "Letters which mention enclosures" returned 44 letters.
4 pots - William Marchington, a servant, sends his mistress, Bess (Lady St. Loe), four pots, two of which are tons (that is, large wine-vessels or casks) and two of which have covers.
seeds for the garden - Bess (Lady St. Loe) sends her servant James Crompe three bundles of seeds for the garden, labelled by another servant, William Marchington. Bess adds that Crompe will receive 'by the next' (that is, the next letter or carrier) detailed instructions for their use.
sewing materials - Frances Cobham sends her friend, Bess (Lady St. Loe), sewing materials following the latest fashions at Court.
a letter - James Hardwick forwards to his sister, Bess (Lady St. Loe), a letter from one Master Clark, which is an answer to their letters.
a letter - James Crompe, a servant, writes to his mistress, Bess (Lady St. Loe), and encloses a letter from one 'lytton', upon which he summarises and comments.
letters - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, sends his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), letters from his son Gilbert Talbot that he received the same morning.
a letter, lettuce and butter - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) sends her fourth husband, George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, a news letter (which she asks him to return to her after reading), lettuce and butter.
documents - Hugh Fitzwilliam sends enclosed to Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) articles of the peace, written in French because they are not yet available in English although translations are currently in press.
enclosed with another letter (ID 226) - Gilbert Talbot writes jointly to his father George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, and his, Shrewsbury's, wife Bess (countess of Shrewsbury and Gilbert's step-mother and mother-in-law). Gilbert's letter is sent from Padua, Italy, carried with another letter, from his brother-in-law and travel companion Henry Cavendish, which is ID 226, and the next carrier will bring further travel reports.
enclosed with another letter (ID 171) - Henry Cavendish writes jointly to his step-father and father-in-law George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, and his mother, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury). Henry's letter is sent from Padua, Italy, carried with another letter, from his brother-in-law and travel companion Gilbert Talbot, which is ID 171, and the next post will bring further travel reports written in books.
a letter - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, sends his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), a letter from his son Gilbert Talbot, that he recieved by one Nicholas Clark, and asks her to reply.
enclosed with another letter - This letter from Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), in the hand of Scribe A, may itself have been an enclosure. It is a sent letter (endorsed and now in the State Papers) but one delivered without the usual superscription. Furthermore, the letter is written on a single side of paper accordion-folded into a small letter-packet which was stitched flat (that is, such as would be suitable to be enclosed in a small space, perhaps inside another letter).
letters and a pheasant - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, returns a letter to his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), that she had forwarded to him, from her half-sister Elizabeth Wingfield; in addition, Shrewsbury forwards a letter from John Kniveton, and sends a pheasant.
a letter (ID 244) - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to Gilbert Curle, servant and secretary to Mary Queen of Scots, and encloses a letter, which is ID 244, from herself, Bess, to his mistress, the Scots Queen.
enclosed with another letter (ID 243) - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to Mary Queen of Scots and this letter, itself, was the enclosure to ID 243.
goods - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, supplies various goods at the requst of his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), which are either sent with the letter or are to follow: a book, a dozen pigeons, plate (basins, ewers, trenchers), a biliment (that is, a kind of French hood or head-dress worn by women, often richly elaborate) which cost twenty-one pounds, 'fesantes pueltes' (that is, phesant poults or chicks), 'pastes of Astage' (that is, venison pasties), beer, ale, boxes of comfits (that is, preserved sweets such as sugar-plums or sugared almonds), lemons and oranges.
a new year's gift: linen and a drinking glass - Francis Pierrepont sends her mother, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), new year's gifts of a piece of lawn (that is, fine linen) and a drinking glass, which, she says, are 'a remembrance' of her loving duty as a daughter.
letters and money - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, forwards to his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), news letters from his son Gilbert that he received yesterday, and sends ten pounds by 'sir henry fryth' (the latter delivery was perhaps independent of the letter itself).
goods and money - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, sends his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), deliveries of various goods and money.
letters and lettuce - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to her fourth husband, George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, and returns letters to him (saying they require no answer but asking him to thank the writer for them) and sends lettuce.