Two letters from Scott to Ticknor are given in the article on Scott.
Fragments of Voyages and Travel, by Basil Hall. Third series.
Chapter I. contains a letter written by Scott in the original manuscript of The Antiquary, explaining why the author particularly liked that novel.
Letters, hitherto unpublished, written by members of Sir Walter Scott's family to their old governess. Edited, with an introduction and notes, by the Warden of Wadham College, Oxford.
London, 1905.
See pp. 13-15 for a letter from Scott, and pp. 37-38 for a note of instructions in regard to his daughter Sophia's history lessons.
Correspondence between J. Fenimore Cooper and Sir Walter Scott.
The Knickerbocker Magazine, xi: 380; April, 1838.
The letter from Scott to Cooper quoted above, p. 102, is here given.
Fiction, Fair and Foul. By John Ruskin.