[35 School St., Andover, Mass.]
I am, I believe, making progress, and have to report to my doctor tomorrow for the last time before sailing – I report finally to the surgeon after my return. I find I still tire easily, andFabers, theon TSE's 1951 Spain trip;i3 I do not propose to join the Fabers in all of their sightseeing. Thetravels, trips and plansTSE's spring 1951 trip to Spain;h3itinerary;a4 programme is as follows: April 5, sail from Tilbury to Gibraltar on the ‘Oreades’ of the Orient Line. We arrive at Gibraltar on Sunday, and stay there until Tuesday the 10th when we drive to Granada, and stay there until Sunday the 15th, when we go to Torremolinos, said to be a quiet place at the seaside. There one merely rests (perhaps bathes) until the 22nd, to spend two nights at Ronda. On the 24th to Seville, and from there fly to Madrid on May 1st. On May 7th we fly from Madrid to London. IFaber, Enid Eleanor;c7 doEliot, Esmé Valerie (née Fletcher, TSE's second wife);a6 not yet know the hotels, which Enid Faber is dealing with (going this way, I have the minimum of travel-business to attend to myself), but my secretary will have the names, in case I do not get them in time to notify anybody.
I do not feel particularly eager to go anywhere, and only comfort myself by thinking of the engagements in London which I escape. (NotSunday Timesawards TSE £1,000 Literary Prize;a6 all: on Wednesday there is a luncheon of the ‘Sunday Times’, at which I receive a medal for the Cocktail Party).1 ButFestival of Britain;a1 I do escape the ceremonies, which I should otherwise have to attend, connected with the opening of the ‘Festival of Britain’ for which I do not think there is, in the present state of the world and local affairs, a very joyous festival mood;2 but perhaps the people will enjoy it when they get it. I shall on the whole be glad to be back in London again, for I shall have lost the best part of five months this year, through illness.
Thank you for all your news: I hope that your brief Easter holidays have brought you a little rest and welcome change, but I fear not enough. YourAbbot Academy, Andover, Massachusetts;b2 problems, from year to year, are very difficult. What is the alternative to staying on at Abbott? is the question most in my mind. I wish that I could have come over this spring, though I doubt whether any counsel I could offer could be very helpful. There is so much to be unhappy and so much to be apprehensive about, that it is very difficult to retain any measure of Christian serenity.
IfFamily Reunion, The;j6 you will send me the name of your pupil, I will send an inscribed copy of the English ‘Family Reunion’.3 GoodnessConfidential Clerk, The;a3 knows when I shall be able to get the play finished; and it is a struggle, in these times, to believe that such labours are worth while.
IPerkins, Edith (EH's aunt);k4 must write to Aunt Edith before I leave, asPerkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle)TSE receives old clothes of;j4 two large parcels have arrived of Uncle John’s clothes to dispose of. Of course she is right to do this, but it is painful I find to have to do it.
1.See ‘The Sunday Times’ £1,000 Literary Prize Awarded to Mr T. S. Eliot’, Sunday Times, 5 Nov. 1950, 1. ‘The Sunday Times Prize of £1,000 and a commemorative gold medal, which is presented each year for an outstanding contribution to English Literature, has been awarded by the Editor-in-Chief, Viscount Kemsley, to Mr. T. S. Eliot, O.M., for his poetical play, “The Cocktail Party”.
‘“The Cocktail Party” was first produced at the Edinburgh Festival in August, 1949, when Mr Harold Hobson described it in The Sunday Times as “a distinguished, a profound and an absorbing play.”
‘After a run at Brighton in January, it was taken to New York by an English company, where it was immediately acclaimed by the literary and dramatic critics. The London production has been running with outstanding success since May.
‘The play was published in book form in March, simultaneously in England and America. It has been translated into French, German, Italian and Swedish, and is being translated into half a dozen other languages.
‘Mr T. S. Eliot, who was born an American citizen but has long taken Britain as the country of his adoption and nationality, was made a member of the Order of Merit in 1948, in which year he received the Nobel Prize for Literature. “The Cocktail Party” is but the latest of many outstanding contributions to literature by the most eminent of living English poets.’
2.For the Festival of Britain 1951, TSE was invited to contribute ‘an article of some 750 words on The Spoken Word … particularly in relation to Spoken Poetry and Poetic Drama’. See ‘The Spoken Word’, published in the official souvenir programme Festival of Britain 1951: London Season of the Arts (Lund Humphries, 1951): CProse 7, 611–16.
3.The pupil who requested a copy of Family Reunion was called Fay White.
7.EsméEliot, Esmé Valerie (née Fletcher, TSE's second wife) Valerie Fletcher (1926–2012) started work as TSE’s secretary on 12 Sept. 1949, and became his second wife on 10 Jan. 1957; after his death in Jan. 1965, his literary executor and editor: see 'Valerie Eliot' in Biographical Register.
1.TSE was mistaken here. EnidFaber, Enid Eleanor Eleanor Faber (1901–95) was the daughter of Sir Henry Erle Richards (1861–1922), Fellow of All Souls College and Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy at Oxford University, and Mary Isabel Butler (1868–1945).
3.DrPerkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle) John Carroll Perkins (1862–1950), Minister of King’s Chapel, Boston: see Biographical Register.