Emily Hale to Willard Thorp
Andover,
Massachusetts
In both a small way, and a very large way, this letter to you, washes the shores of the literary future beyond our imaginings.
Yes, you have probably guessed already. I am referring to the disposition of my Eliot letters; after chewing on the cud so to speak of all you and M. filled my mind with at Christmas, I have assembled all the letters I can find (and that is a many many [sic] for a future editor to go through) and in the autumn will send them to Princeton in your custody.
ThisPrinceton Universityand EH's bequest;e8 disposal is with the knowledge of T.S.E.; at least I asked him this spring if he had any preference for the deposit of the correspondence, and he said no. So, my friend, you can lick your whiskers metaphorically, that Princeton is to receive the collection; naturally you will realize this decision is due mainly to my years of friendship with you both.
Now as I am not accustomed to making such gifts, I shall depend upon you to tell me the technicalities for this gift; do I write a formal note to the University, the Librarian, or both? Do I also appoint you as my representative, so to speak, to attend to details? of one provision you will wholly understand I am sure, the gift cannot be made public until after both of us have left this-so-curious-into-private-lives-world. And all to whom you have to speak of this will keep this strictly confidential of course.
And if I make terms for the future opening of the letters, those not to be printed at discretion of the editors etc, do I need a legally witnessed letter to this effect and shall I come to Princeton for some of these details officially (which of course would be pleasant for me personally)[.]
This involves a good deal for you to do for me, Willard, but I do not think under the circumstances you will be too reluctant!1
Wishing I could be present to see your face and hear you, when you read this,
1.‘In a separate note, Hale specified that the letters were to be “under auspices of Professor Willard Thorp, as executor of my wishes in regard to them; not to be looked through or published [until] 25 years after my death”’ (Don Skemer, ‘Sealed Treasure: T. S. Eliot Letters to Emily Hale’, PUL Manuscript News, posted May 16, 2017: https://blogs.princeton.edu/manuscripts/2017/05/16/sealed-treasure-t-s-eliot-letters-to-emily-hale/). Don C. Skemer is former Curator of Manuscripts, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library.
1.Margaret Thorp, née Farrand (1891–1970), contemporary and close friend of EH; noted author and biographer. WillardThorp, Willard Thorp (1899–1990) was a Professor of English at Princeton University. See Biographical Register. See further Lyndall Gordon, Hyacinth Girl, 126–8, 158–9.