William S. Dix to Emily Hale
ItHale, Emilycorrespondence with TSE;w3EH deposits further material with Princeton;j9 was very good indeed to hear from you again and to receive the two poems of Mr Eliot, with your identifying notes, as well as the photograph of a charming lady. I suggest we simply hold them as a deposit for the moment. I have asked the dealer who appraised the other letters, a most discreet as well as reliable person, to make an appraisal of them for gift purposes. You understand, I think, that it is standard practice for an appraisal of this sort to represent a considerably higher figure than the items would actually bring if offered for sale to a dealer. When I have this figure, I shall write to you, and you can then decide whether you wish to present the typescript poems to Princeton or to offer us an opportunity to buy them from you.
Jane and I have thought with pleasure many times of the pleasant breakfast you gave us in your apart. I can see it in my mind’s eye as somehow especially high, bright, and full of good will. Jane joins me in warm regards.
[copiedClark, Alexander P.;a2 to WillardThorp, Willard;d5 Thorp and Alexander Clark]
1.AlexanderClark, Alexander P. P. Clark, Curator of Manuscripts, Princeton University Library.
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.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.