[No surviving envelope]
This is just a hasty note to tell you that I am now at home, and have been for a week. Now I am just beginning to go [to] my office for a few hours a day. I have never felt so weak after an illness at this time, but am stronger every day. At first I could not sit upright for more than a few minutes without my back aching.
AsHayward, John;o4 the pencilled note to you was the only letter I wrote to anyone (MarianEliot, Marion Cushing (TSE's sister);h7 andEliot, Theresa Garrett (TSE's sister-in-law);h1 TheresaTrevelyan, Mary;b3 heard about me from Mary Trevelyan who got her information from John Hayward, who got his from the doctor) you’ll understand that I have plenty of arrears to work off. And'Frontiers of Criticism, The';a2 at the same time trying to get a lecture written – which I had intended to write during the month of February – for Minneapolis.1 Thetravels, trips and plansTSE's 1956 visit to America;i9itinerary;a2 doctor says that he sees no reason why I should not carry out my visit. That means that I sail on the Queen Mary on April 19. I spend a couple of nights in New York and then go to Minneapolis, come back by way of Chicago and perhaps pay a brief visit to Washington, and then have between two and three weeks in Cambridge. So I should be in Cambridge about the middle of May.
Now I must be off to the dentist (stopping came out of one of my three teeth, while in the Clinic) and then to see the doctor.
I was glad you were able to say that your doctor thought you in good condition. IPerkins, Edith (EH's aunt);o3 imagine that No. 90 becomes increasingly difficult. She wrote to me about the death of Miss Anderson. That is one of the letters that I must answer quickly.
1.‘The Frontiers of Criticism’: CProse 8, 121–38.
1.Marian/MarionEliot, Marion Cushing (TSE's sister) Cushing Eliot (1877–1964), fourth child of Henry Ware Eliot and Charlotte Eliot: see Biographical Register.
11.JohnHayward, John Davy Hayward (1905–65), editor and critic: see Biographical Register.
2.MaryTrevelyan, Mary Trevelyan (1897–1983), Warden of Student Movement House, worked devotedly to support the needs of overseas students in London (her institution was based at 32 Russell Square, close to the offices of F&F; later at 103 Gower Street); founder and first governor of International Students House, London. Trevelyan left an unpublished memoir of her friendship with TSE – ‘The Pope of Russell Square’ – whom she long desired to marry. See further Biographical Register.