[Grace Toll Hall, Scripps College, Claremont]
I have been rather remiss I fear, having written only once this week (I have only had your letter of the 16th, and should have liked a line of truth later in the week just about your health, which is all that matters for the moment) butHutchinson, Josephinemeets TSE;a1 have had a hard week of which I will write you more on Monday, includingLe Gallienne, EvaTSE meets;a3 Eva Le Gallienne and Josephine Hutchinson1 – andHinkley, Eleanor Holmes (TSE's first cousin)takes TSE to football match;b3 to-day I must go to the football match with Eleanor, and speak to the Graduate Students of Philosophy in the evening; andClement, James;a1 tomorrow I must spend the day with Jim Clement2 and his family in Wayland; furthermorePerkinses, theenjoyable dinner at the Ludlow with;b1 I postponed the short letter that I might have written on Thursday or Friday, so as to write immediately after seeing the Perkins’s, with whom I dined last night at the Ludlow. They were very kind to me, and I enjoyed being with them – the only enjoyable event of the week. It is difficult to report on the appearance of health of people whom I only saw briefly and under what were to me rather feverish conditions, eight years ago – but they seemed to be very well; but you surely know more about that than I do. It was exciting and disturbing, to me, to be with people who are so very close to you – and with your photograph (the profile) in front of me. I had not faced the fact, until too late to ask you for instruction, that I do not know how much they know about me; and I regretted this, as I felt that I could have got further in establishing some kind of relations with them had I known just what my ground was. YouThorp, Margaret (née Farrand)one of EH's few confidants;a8 mentionedKrauss, Sophie M.one of EH's few confidants;a2 threeMrs Hardingone of EH's few confidants;a1 people – Margaret Thorp, Mrs. Krauss, and Mrs. Harding, as having pretty full information; I did not know what part of it was known to Mrs. Perkins; so I felt that beyond the ordinary normal enquiries I had better leave any initiative to her. I thought that perhaps she might ask if I had recent news of you, or refer to your illness, and I wondered whether you had concealed it from her or not. She mentioned at the end that she understood that I was going west – this in connexion with someone she knew in San Francisco who might be writing to me to suggest a lecture there. I should like very much to go to see them again, if you think I might, in a reasonable time, after learning from you just how much I may talk of you.
I will write directly I return from the Clements, and account for the past week, and answer your questions as best I can. I am very impatient for a letter – if none by Monday I shall be quite justified in wiring again. Guéris-toi et assouvis les inquiètudes de ton fidéle3
Itravels, trips and plansTSE's 1933 westward tour to Scripps;a8TSE's itinerary;a4 am taking January 5th as my pivot, and wish to know whether you approve of my arriving a few days before. Will you be extremely busy for the first few days of term? Then I could take probably the next week or so after the 6th for other lectures in Southern California to pay my way.
1.JosephineHutchinson, Josephine Hutchinson (1903–98), stage and screen actor.
2.JamesClement, James Clement (1889–1973), Harvard Class of 1911, marriedClement, Margot Marguerite C. Burrel (who was Swiss by birth) in 1913. In later years, TSE liked visiting them at their home in Geneva.
3.‘Heal yourself, and satisfy the worries of your faithful’.
2.JamesClement, James Clement (1889–1973), Harvard Class of 1911, marriedClement, Margot Marguerite C. Burrel (who was Swiss by birth) in 1913. In later years, TSE liked visiting them at their home in Geneva.
2.JamesClement, James Clement (1889–1973), Harvard Class of 1911, marriedClement, Margot Marguerite C. Burrel (who was Swiss by birth) in 1913. In later years, TSE liked visiting them at their home in Geneva.
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.
1.JosephineHutchinson, Josephine Hutchinson (1903–98), stage and screen actor.
1.SophieKrauss, Sophie M. M. Krauss (b. 1891), wife of Arthur Jeffrey Krauss (1884–1947), Episcopalian, who had resided in Seattle since 1921. Arthur Krauss ran the Krauss Brothers Lumber Company and was to retire in 1938 when the business was wound up in the area. They lived at 128 40th Avenue N., Seattle, with Lillie Cook (49) and Lucy Williams (28) – presumably their servants. See too Lyndall Gordon, The Hyacinth Girl, 183.
7.EvaLe Gallienne, Eva Le Gallienne (1899–1991), British-born American actor, director, producer; director of the Civic Repertory Company, New York. In 1932 Le Gallienne staged Eleanor Holmes Hinkley’s Dear Jane, with an intimate friend, Josephine Hutchinson, playing Jane Austen.
16.MargaretThorp, Margaret (née Farrand) Farrand (1891–1970), author and journalist – see Margaret Thorp in Biographical Register.