[35A School St., Andover, Mass.]
ThankcheeseEH sends TSE for Christmas;b5 you very much for your letter of the 23d, received yesterday. It makes me wonder, first of all, whether I thanked you for the delectable cheese which arrived safely in good time for Christmas. If not, please forgive me: there have been so many other things on my mind. I do thank you for it, and for the trouble involved in ordering it. INason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine;d2 have been pretty remiss about Christmas gifts: I am ashamed to say that I owe Meg a present for last Christmas as well as this.
AndHearsey, Dr Marguerite Capen;a6 I am delighted to know that your nativity play went off so well. You have certainly had a brilliant success with your plays, and I hope that Mrs. Crane is more duly appreciative than Miss Hersey [sic] was.
I also was pleased with your Christmas card and verses.
ThankDix, William Shepherd;a9 you very much for the way in which you allude to thePrinceton Universityand EH's bequest;e8 gift of letters to Princeton. I am sorry to have misunderstood Mr. Dix’s statement, though I still cannot see how I could have interpreted his letter otherwise. However, I trust that all is now well; I have no doubt that Mr. Dix’s statement will be satisfactory, and there should, as you say, be no need to refer to the matter again.
Ittravels, trips and plansTSE's 1956 Geneva rest cure;j1illness during;a5 is curious that there should have been a rumour that I should have flown from Geneva to Paris this summer. What happened was that I was suffering from an abscess on my hip while I was in Geneva (I thought I had mentioned this) and then got a slight attack of tachycardia. I flew back to London as usual (it was my doctor, who had been in Geneva to see another patient, who saw me off and then flew to Paris himself) and my doctor arranged that I should be taken off in a wheel chair at London airport and sent in an ambulance to the clinic, from which I was discharged in a week. No one was told about the tachycardia, and the newspapers never got wind of the matter at all. After my experience on landing from the Queen Mary I am always very anxious to avoid the attentions of the press and its photographers.
TheTime;a3 photograph in ‘Time’, and any information, was left over from the ‘cover number’ they did of me in 1948.2
It35 School Street, Andover, Massachusetts;a6 distresses me to think of you having to move away from that lovely little home in Andover. I hope, in your retirement, you will have sufficient means to live comfortably, at least? I am worried about this.
Yes. I have never been so alarmed, distressed, depressed about world affairs, and the future of Britain, as I am now. I have a low opinion of both the British and the American governments.
I shall be writing again, before very long.
1.EH wrote ‘Ack Jan 14’ at the top of this letter.
2.The ‘cover number’ of Time magazine, captioned ‘No middle way out of the waste land?’, appeared on 6 Mar. 1950.
1.WilliamDix, William Shepherd Shepherd Dix (1910–78): Librarian, Princeton University, 1953–75. Having gained first degrees (BA and MA) at the University of Virginia, he earned a doctorate in American literature at the University of Chicago. After working first as a teacher and English instructor, he became Associate Professor of English and Librarian of Rice Institute, Houston, Texas (now Rice University), 1947–53. Resolutely opposed to censorship and intellectual constraint, he served as chair of the Intellectual Freedom Committee of the American Library Association (ALA), 1951–3; chair of the International Relations Committee, 1955–60; and President of the ALA, 1969–70. In addition, he was Executive Secretary, 1957–9, and President, 1962–3, of the Association of Research Libraries. Recognised as one of the topmost figures in librarianship, he was honoured by the American Library Association with the Dewey Medal, 1969, and the Lippincott Award, 1971.
1.DrHearsey, Dr Marguerite Capen Marguerite Capen Hearsey (1893–1990) was 14th Principal of Abbot Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, 1936–55. Educated at Hollins College, Roanoke, Virginia, and at Radcliffe College, she taught French and English at Georgetown College in Kentucky; and English at both Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, and Wellesley College, 1924–5, 1927–9. In 1929 she earned a PhD at Yale, where she was a Sterling Fellow and specialised in Elizabethan literature; she studied too at the Sorbonne. Before moving on to Andover, she taught at Hollins, 1929–36. She served, too, as President of the National Association of Principals of Schools for Girls.
1.MargaretNason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine (Meg) Geraldine Nason (1900–86), proprietor of the Bindery tea rooms, Broadway, Worcestershire, whom TSE and EH befriended on visits to Chipping Campden.