Emily Hale to T. S. Eliot
ItPrinceton Universityand EH's bequest;e8 is difficult to break the silence which has existed between us for the last several years, but you would be the first to admit I think that the changing circumstances of our lives and increasing years necessitate that we both face certain facts and problems with courage and objectiveness.
MyHale, Emilycorrespondence with TSE;w3EH renews plea to shorten moratorium;k2 special reason for writing you is this; as you know, I have given your letters to me, with very few exceptions, to the Princeton University Library. ThisThorps, the;f6 last July I visited the Thorps briefly to attend to certain further details about the letters; WillardThorp, Willardseeks again to shorten moratorium;d7 Thorp asDix, William Shepherdpushes again for shorter moratorium;b6 well as the librarian, Mr. Dix (who could not be more considerate and careful about this gift) asked me to ask you if you cannot reconsider the time limit set by you for public access to the letters to a much shorter period than the one you have already named. I concur wholly to this request myself.
Each of these men feels that your importance in the world of letters in the twentieth century and for many years to come should persuade you to give scholars, biographers, etc. as early an access to the collection as possible.
CloselyBodleian Library, Oxfordletters which EH asks after;a2 connected to the disposition of the Princeton letters are my letters to you which long ago you planned to place in the Bodleian at Oxford. The question has also been asked in Princeton if these two collections should not be under the same roof – and I assure you the Princeton Library Building is one of the finest in its care of all such collections physically and appreciatively so to speak. It would seem to me if you are still preserving my letters, that your consent to placing them in this country would be the only correct practical solution don’t you think? And do you or I have legal claim upon them?
Remembering your scrupulous attention and care in all legal aspects relating to literary material, writer’s rights, etc. I am sure I can count upon you to leave specific directions in all matters regarding our past correspondence which assumes very different implications today than earlier. I think you will be aware that for me to consider my life as important because of its relationship to you – a noted world figure – is very difficult. I must as now act impersonally for the sake of the future in raising these questions, equally difficult for both of us but wholly professionally and historically correct. I do hope you will accept what is thrust upon us – shall we say – because you are you.
Further, I hope your health is better than I know it has been lately. I learn of you from time to time from the Cambridge relatives.
In the thought of past friendship,
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.