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ChicagoAmericaChicago, Illinois;d8TSE takes up lectureship in;a4
I ought to have written to you at once, and wished to do so: but the battle with the cold and its consequent lassitude, in the first very busy three days, left me feeling too tired to sit up to a typewriter during the intervals. My train proved a very slow one (TheresaEliot, Theresa Garrett (TSE's sister-in-law);f4, in changing the berth for a compartment, had changed the train also, without knowing it, to a much slower train leaving at the same hour). ThenNef, John Ulric;a2 Professor Nef1 had a dinner party the same night; the next day was spent in making arrangements, and'Aims of Education, The'first lecture;a2 that night there was a dinner party at the Chancellor’s, followed by my first lecture.2 And last night I had my first ‘seminar’, which meant talking most of the time during two hours. There are also press interviews. ThisHuxley, Julianlunch in Chicago with;a6 afternoon, after lunching with the Chancellor, the President, the Vice-President, and Julian Huxley, I came back to the Hotel and lay down for most of the afternoon. I had some supper sent up to my room, and after I have written this I shall go to bed. I do not have to speak in public again for a week, so I hope that I shall make more rapid progress. TheAmericaChicago, Illinois;d8its climate;a5 climate of Chicago comprehends a very warm sun and a very cold wind, and what with the heating which is more than I am used to, one has to be careful of sudden changes between heat and cold. But my rooms at the hotel are comfortable; and I have as a luxury a French breakfast served in my room. The people are extremely friendly; and to judge from the reception of my first lecture, they are very easily pleased.
I shall write at more length in a few days time. I wanted only to write at once to say that I had been very sorrowful, and that your letter was such and came at such a moment that it helped me. I wish I could help you as much. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
1.John Ulric Nef, Jr. (1899–1988): economic and cultural historian; from 1936, Professor of Economic History, University of Chicago. He was co-founder, with Robert Maynard Hutchins, Robert Redfield and Frank H. Knight, of the Committee on Social Thought – an interdisciplinary research foundation that brought into the fellowship at Chicago a series of leading international artists and thinkers including TSE, Marc Chagall, Jacques Maritain and Igor Stravinsky. Nef served as executive secretary and chairman of the Committee from 1945 to 1964. In addition, he was chair of the Center for Human Understanding, 1958–67. His own publications included Industry and Government in France and England, 1540–1640 (1940), The Conquest of the Material World (1964), The Rise of the British Coal Industry (1966), The United States and Civilization (1967) and Search for Meaning: Autobiography of a Non-Conformist (1973). In 1980 he was awarded the prestigious University of Chicago Medal.
2.The first lecture (of four) on ‘The Aims of Education’, was titled ‘Can Education Be Defined’. The set of lectures, delivered in Oct. and Nov., was first published, as ‘The Aims of Education’, in To Criticise the Critic (1965): see CProse 7, 511–69.
3.JohnNef, John Ulric Ulric Nef (1899–1988), Professor of Economic History, invited TSE to visit Chicago to offer a series of seven or eight lectures, under the auspices of the Committee on Social Thought (a high-level interdisciplinary department which he co-founded in 1941).