[Grace Toll Hall, Scripps College, Claremont]
AEliot HouseTSE moved to B-11;a6 brief note tonight to explain that I shall not settle in Eliot House for another two days or so. They have found me a quieter set of rooms, and I shall go there as soon as the furniture is moved, though I shall probably come here (to Ada’s) oftenSheffields, the;a3 – probably regular nights – forHarvard UniversityAnnenberg Hall disparaged;a5 dinner, as the actual dinner in the magnificent hall is rather like a Lyons’ restaurant. ThenWellesley CollegeOctober 1932 poetry reading at;a1 ICharles Eliot Norton Lectures (afterwards The Use of Poetry and the Use of Criticism);b1 shall settle to work at once to prepare my lectures, including some of the odd ones: I have a reading to give at Wellesley, andRadcliffe Club, Wellesley College;a1 an'Experience of Poetry, The'at Wellesley;a1 address to the Radcliffe Club, before King’s Chapel comes; and I dare say other engagements in the neighbourhood will appear.
NowHale, Emilycorrespondence with TSE;w3TSE hopes to telephone;b5 that I have a telephone in my room in privacy, I want the telephone number which you promised me! I believe your time is three hours earlier than time here – will you confirm that – and then I shall wire for an appointment to ring you up.
I hope that you got my wire from the North Station.
IHinkleys, thetheir company makes TSE feel wary;c2 lunched with the Hinkleys – twice in fact: I cannot remember whether I lunched with them before I wrote to you last; yesterday I had to lunch with them to meet Barbara (senior). I do find not only that their interests are extremely limited, but (as Ada remarked to me) that they are very self-centred, so that their world is a very tiny one indeed, though they seem to think it a pretty fair size. I am quite sure that there is no question of my ever taking them into my confidence about any intimate matter; indeed I feel that they do not desire it – do not desire, I mean, to have to bother about other people’s troubles! in spite of their kindliness and generosity. I shall avoid their Sunday evenings as much as possible. IHinkley, Susan Heywood (TSE's aunt, née Stearns)possibly more perceptive than Eleanor;a7 wonder whetherHinkley, Eleanor Holmes (TSE's first cousin)less perceptive than her mother;a7 Aunt Susie is not more perceptive than Eleanor, who never seems to me to observe anything. I must stop now as I believe supper is ready.
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.