Emily Hale to T. S. Eliot
I am writing en route by train from Boston after one of many recent trips to 1100 Beacon St. to help dismantle my aunt’s apartment. No, she has not been released from this mortal life of illness and unhappiness, but a week ago was moved to a Nursing Home in Newton Centre (Mass) 929 Beacon St, The Van der Klish Home (a Dutch name). The decision to make this drastic change in my poor aunt’s life has been slowly but surely coming to a head -; then a sudden vacancy occurred in this home which already I knew of thro’ my friend Mrs Baiss in Andover – whose mother – far less handicapped than my aunt has been in the Home two years. Mrs Van der Klish is herself the chief reason for the security of confidence her patients’ relatives can feel, since she is a very fine, human, understanding little woman (she is small and looks about thirty years of age). My aunt’s room is pleasantly [illegible word] three large windows, her own bath, and a few of her most familiar pieces of furniture, pictures etc. Expenses however are still very great, as she still has to have a day and part time night nurse of her own – but other insecurities and anxieties are wholly cared for now by others than myself, Miss Cummings and the devoted staff who have attended her these many years. We have cleared
[…] sellingHale, Emilyfinances;w5;b4 a great deal – in case we can sublet for the time left till her lease expires on May 1st. She has accepted the great change better than we all feared, and probably in the long run will be less troubled herself over the maintaining of the personal home with so much difficulty.
TheAbbot Academy, Andover, MassachusettsEH's wish to leave;b8 decisions & all the many details which have [illegible words] are very wearing of course, and I have my own future to think of, as my term at Abbot ends this June, and I cannot afford to ‘retire’ for my aunt’s sake as well as my own, so must try to find a position with good salary. I can stay in these rooms if I should earn a living near Boston. Forgive the mixture of pen and pencil, please.1
A line from you to my aunt would be very welcome, of course.
1.Sara Fitzgerald, ‘Reconsidering Emily Hale’, 53: ‘Hale’s students from that time recalled that in her final semester, she did not display any emotional turmoil as she performed her job.’