[35A School St., Andover; forwarded to Apt. 17, 90 Commonwealth Ave, Boston]
I was very happy to find your letter of June 11th in my cabin, and glad to know that the hat-box had been delivered and found satisfactory. I like the colour rather better than that of the suitcase; and the box, I must admit, was not so expensive as I had expected anything of the sort to be in America.
I am glad that you should be away from the vicinity of Boston, and hope that the weather has improved. Thetravels, trips and plansTSE's 1955 visit to America;i7TSE's return from;a8 day I sailed was the finest of my whole visit; the voyage was very calm – but I have assured my doctor that a voyage on an Eastward bound liner from New York, in June, is anything but a rest cure. On the Q. Elizabeth, dancing goes on from midnight to three a.m.; and on the first two or three nights some of the young barbarians were very noisy going to bed afterwards. Then there were all sorts of people wanting conversation and autographs – some of them telephone to the cabin – butDahlberg, Gildahounds TSE on boat;b1 I managed to evade Miss Gilda Dahlberg,1 who thought that a common interest in the theatre was enough to form an introduction, andPower, Tyrone;a1 mentionedCoward, Noëlname dropped by Gilda Dahlberg;a5 that she knew Tyrone Power2 and (as an afterthought) Noel Coward. Some of them were very pleasant – anEliot, Dr Martha May (TSE's cousin);b3 intelligent Polish doctor who knew Martha Eliot, a freshman from Bryn Mawr (Miss Barbara Mitnik) and two nuns. Otherwise, the company looked to be the descendents [sic] of the lower classes of every European race, and very prosperous. OneHuebsch, Benkeeps TSE company at sea;a1 friend on the boat, Ben Huebsch the publisher.3
My doctor is pretty well satisfied with me, as indeed he should be, to find my heart functioning quite normally after that arduous five weeks. Well, I did all I could in the time, and I couldn’t have seen more of you or of anyone within those limits. I did very much enjoy my day with you. It seemed very odd, to deliver you and say good-bye at the door of the Massachusetts General Hospital.
I’ll write again soon, as I’m sure I have forgotten to say something. I’ve been rather languid, but enjoying the relative anonymity of London, where no one knows who one is.
NowMrs Edmund Osborne (EH's friend);a1 I shall write a note to Mrs. Osborne, before going out.4
1.GildaDahlberg, Gilda Dahlberg, née Rebecca Krieger (1902–79), American actor: she was to appear in Federico Fellini’s film 8½ (1963).
2.TyronePower, Tyrone Power (1914–58), popular American movie star: action hero.
3.BenHuebsch, Ben Huebsch (1876–1964), American publisher, first with his own imprint and then, from 1925, with Viking Press.
4.TSE duly wrote this note to ‘Mrs Edmund Osborne’ – a friend of EH – on 27 June 1955: ‘Emily advised me that you should be arriving in London to-day, so may I invite you to tea with me here in Russell Square on Thursday next, the 30th? It is a very plain tea at 4.15, and I hope you will bring your daughter with you.’
1.GildaDahlberg, Gilda Dahlberg, née Rebecca Krieger (1902–79), American actor: she was to appear in Federico Fellini’s film 8½ (1963).
1.DrEliot, Dr Martha May (TSE's cousin) Martha May Eliot (1891–1978), pediatrician: see Biographical Register.
3.BenHuebsch, Ben Huebsch (1876–1964), American publisher, first with his own imprint and then, from 1925, with Viking Press.