Emily Hale to Valerie Eliot
Massachusetts 01742
Our mutually dear friend (and your cousin) Eleanor Hinkley has been anxious for a long while that I should get in touch with you. This I am very happy to do; I have wanted always to know you, when Tom was with you, and since I am sure you will remember I wrote you when the news of your marriage to him, came to me, so that I trust in these years you have realized I was your friend, as well as his. I cared for him, as you know, and he cared for me through many years before and after his first marriage. We had many happy experiences together, especially in the summers when my aunt, uncle and I were in Campden, England.
Tom’s natural reserve, and my own, kept the public, and even some of our friends, unaware of the closer relationship between us, when certain hopes I had could not be fulfilled. I tried always to be loyal and very much the friend he could trust.
Since his marriage to you, and his death, this reserve about the past I have scrupulously kept for all our sakes. The general public – especially in these days of making any hay out of any grass, the avid publicity seekers are attempting, I have played the role as I felt was the only one, for his sake, & yours – if not my own – giving no chance to anyone to act against any of our wishes.
NowHinkley, Eleanor Holmes (TSE's first cousin);g1, I like to feel that the next time you come to this country, I may know you, so that at first hand I can appreciate you as do Eleanor and others who know you – who think much of you. The devoted care you gave Tom, and your living for his every wish must give you the strong comfort and reassurance of how life can be lived on a high plane of fine-ness.
5.EleanorHinkley, Eleanor Holmes (TSE's first cousin) Holmes Hinkley (1891–1971), playwright; TSE’s first cousin; daughter of Susan Heywood Stearns – TSE’s maternal aunt – and Holmes Hinkley: see Biographical Register.