Your search for "Letters which mention enclosures" returned 44 letters.
lettuce - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) sends 'letes' (that is, lettuce) to her fourth husband, George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury.
a letter - An unknown correspondent sends enclosed to Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) a copy of a letter from 'my cousin Sidnaye'. The correspondent desires Bess's opinion on the letter; furthermore, the correspondent says, this is the second copy sent to Bess in a fortnight, fearing that the first had not reached her.
a letter - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, and his wife, Bess (countess of shrewsbury), write to Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, regarding the claim of Bess's granddaughter Arbella Stuart to the earldom of Lennox. They enclose a letter from diplomat Robert Bowes (d. 1597), Elizabeth I's ambassador in Scotland, which elucidates the currently Scottish political sitaution.
a letter - Gilbert Talbot and his wife Mary write jointly to George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury (Gilbert's father), and his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury and Mary's mother), and enclose a letter from Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, to Shrewsbury.
a letter - Gilbert Talbot writes jointly to his father George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, and his step-mother and mother-in-law Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), and encloses a letter he received yesterday from Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, to Bess.
a letter - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) forwards a letter she received the same day from her son-in-law, Sir Henry Pierrepont (husband to her daughter Frances), to her daughter Mary Talbot.
letters - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, forwards to his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), letters he intercepted the previous night. He describes the letters, which were evidently sent between their servants, as 'folysch' (that is, foolish) and as containing intelligence.
a letter - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, returns to his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), a letter from Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester.
a letter (ID 228) - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes jointly to her step-son and son-in-law, Gilbert Talbot, her son William Cavendish and one Master Clarke. She encloses a second letter from herself, Bess, to Gilbert, which is ID 228, that he, Gilbert, may show to Sir Thomas Cornwallis.
enclosed with another letter (ID 227) - Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to her step-son and son-in-law Gilbert Talbot and this letter, itself, was the enclosure to ID 227.
documents - George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, and his wife, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), send legal documents (a counterpane of a lease indenture and a conveyance) to Shrewsbury's servant Thomas Baldwin.
a note - Gilbert Talbot and his wife Mary send to Bess (countess of Shrewsbury; Gilbert's step-mother and mother-in-law; Mary's mother) a note enclosed with their letter.
hair clippings and a pot of jelly - Arbella Stuart sends her grandmother, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), strands of her hair clipped on the sixth day of the moon (a traditional practice) and a pot of jelly (that is, most likely, a fruit conserve or jam) made by her servant.
jewellery - Nicholas Kynnersley, a servant at Wingfield, writes a covering note to his mistress, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), to accompany some of her most valuable jewellery which he sends.
a letter - Grace Cavendish returns to her mother-in-law, Bess (countess of Shrewsbury), a letter from her husband (Bess's eldest son) Henry Cavendish written during his travels to Constantinople.
letters - Robert Devereux forwards to Bess (dowager countess of Shrewsbury) letters of recommendation for the bearer, one Christopher Hannam.
documents - Bess (dowager countess of Shrewsbury) writes to Lady Elizabeth Kitson in order to tie up legal paperwork for lands made over to Bess's youngest son Charles Cavendish on his marriage to Lady Kitson's daughter Margaret (who had died in childbirth the previous year). In addition to the letter, the bearer brings a legal release which Bess had had drawn up, to show to Lady Kitson.
documents - Bess (dowager countess of Shrewsbury) sends documents to Sir Robert Cecil, which will be presented by her son, William Cavendish, and which relate to her land dispute with her step-son and son-in-law Gilbert Talbot, seventh earl of Shrewsbury.
a letter - Bess (dowager countess of Shrewsbury) sends enclosed, to Sir Robert Cecil and Sir John Stanhope, a declaration written by her granddaughter Arbella Stuart. The sent declaration, written in Arbella's own hand, is ID 141; Cecil's copy of the declaration, made on receipt by a scribe, is ID 142.
a letter - Bess (dowager countess of Shrewsbury) sends enclosed, to Sir Robert Cecil, a letter written by her granddaughter Arbella Stuart. The enclosed letter from Arbella to Cecil and Stanhope is exant: Hatfield House, Cecil Papers 135, fols 147-49, printed in Sara Jayne Steen (ed.), The Letters of Lady Arbella Stuart (Oxford, 1994), pp. 134-38.