Your search for "Letters entirely by a scribe" returned 8 letters.
Bess (Lady St. Loe) instructs her servant James Crompe on the management of several builders; and perceives how 'Sir James is much misliked for his religion but I think his wisdom is such that he will make small account of that matter'. She also relates a message for her aunt Marcella Linacre about a garden for the new house, enclosing '3 bundles of garden seeds'.
Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to Lord Thomas Paget, reprimanding him about persuading her son Henry to negotiate an agreement with unspecified contemptible parties, which has been to Henry's disadvantage. She asks Paget to 'stand the more [Henry's] friend' for the conclusion of the matter.
Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to an unidentified addressee with advice on how to write a persuasive letter to one of her sons, suggesting that 'the more earnest and plain it is the more good it will do you'.
Bess, countess of Shrewsbury, writes a somewhat cryptic letter to Mary Queen of Scots, to do with 'your little poor creature' and other letters, which Bess has also sent. For the accompanying letter to Mary's servant, Gilbert Curle, see ID 243.
Contemporary, sixteenth-century copy of letter ID 145. Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to Sir Francis Walsingham, concerning her orphaned grand-daughter, Arbella Stuart's financial welfare, reiterating her suit to the queen that the annual £400 previously granted to Arbella's mother (Elizabeth, countess of Lennox) now go to her, in addition to £200 for 'her maintenance during her minority'.
Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to Sir Thomas Cornwallis following the death of Margaret Cavendish (née Kitson), wife of Bess's son Charles Cavendish, asking him to use his influence with Sir Thomas Kitson (Cornwallis's son-in-law) to ensure that Charles is treated 'as much to his commodity as that by her life might have come to him'. A postscript by Bess instructs, 'Good Jewel I pray you take pains to write out this too with your own hand'.
Bess (countess of Shrewsbury) writes to her husband, George, sixth earl of Shrewsbury, informing him that 'I have not attended on your lordship at this time proceeding only out of a great fear of your lordship's wrath & heavy displeasure conceived against me'. She would rather suffer 'dispossession of any earthly benefits' than continue to be chastised with the 'extreme rigour of words'.
A fragment of a draft letter from Bess (dowager countess of Shrewsbury) and her stepson and son-in-law, Gilbert (seventh earl of Shrewsbury), to Sir Fulke Greville, concerning debts owed to him. They offer to repay him by selling land if necessary.