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IAmericaMinneapolis;f7TSE lectures in;a2 was glad to get your letter, in Minneapolis, though your news was unhappy. With these difficulties so early in the Spring, I am afraid you will be very tired indeed before the end of term. I shall see you soon – I go tomorrow to New York, & on Tuesday to Washington & Cambridge the following Monday. MinneapolisUniversity of MinneapolisGideon D. Seymour Memorial Lecture;a1 went'Frontiers of Criticism, The'as delivered;a4 off well, [I] think, in spite of the absurdly large audience.1 ChicagoBell, Bernard IddingsTSE gives reading for;b7 more fatiguing – I had to give a reading at the Cathedral, for my old friend Canon Bell – one can’t refuse a blind man. Washington should be more restful in some ways, – if it is warmer there! Will spring never come? I look forward to telephoning week after next, & coming out on the first opportunity.
1.TSE’s lecture ‘The Frontiers of Criticism’, delivered in the Williams Arena of the University of Minnesota on 30 Apr., attracted a reported audience of 13,523. The fee was $2,000. See CProse 8, 121–38.
3.BernardBell, Bernard Iddings Iddings Bell, DD (1886–1958), American Episcopal priest, author and cultural commentator; Warden of Bard College, 1919–33. In his last years he was made Canon of the Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul, Chicago, and a William Vaughn Lecturer at the University of Chicago.