[No surviving envelope]
I shall not be able to write you the long letter which I promised myself to write over the weekend. I arrived on Friday morning from Buffallo [sc. Buffalo] – several hours ahead of your letter, which came by the afternoon post – IHale, EmilyTSE fears accident befalling;b5 was very anxious until it came, as my mind dwells upon the possibility of motor accidents – you posted it in Pasadena, I wonder if you had driven yourself there. Unluckilytravels, trips and plansTSE's 1933 westward tour to Scripps;a8TSE's return from;b1, after getting through all the rest of the journey successfully, I caught cold during the night as the weather in Massachusetts was appreciably colder than it had been in Buffallo – I found masses of letters, both here and at Ada’s – theSpencer, Theodore;a9 weather was wet and snowy – yesterday Ted Spencer put me to bed with a low temperature, lemons, whisky, cough lozenges and aspirin; IAmericaBaltimore, Maryland;c6;a3 expect to be allright to travel to Baltimore tonight, but it was unfortunate, as I have much to do. Presently I must get up, pack, send two wires etc; and I shan’t be able to write fully and account for the last fortnight, until my return on Saturday next. And it is possible that you may receive a telephone call from me upon my return – about 9 p.m. your time but don’t wait for it as I cannot be sure whether it will be Saturday or Sunday night – I shall ask to begin with whether you are alone – if you should not be in I can just ring up the following night. YouHale, Emilyphotographs of;w7in deck-chair;b1 are no doubt aware that the new photograph of you in the deck-chair is perfectly lovely – and when you have taken all the prints you want I must have the FILM – not that I shall be giving away any – but I should like [to] think that I could paper my walls with prints of it! Thank you again for our two dear letters. IUniversity of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)but is well paid;a4 shallUniversity of California, Berkeleyand is well paid for;a3 have much to say – the lectures went off well I think – I have banked $1050 and imagine that my profits will work out at about four to five hundred. Thetravels, trips and plansTSE's 1933 westward tour to Scripps;a8TSE reflects on;a9 one glorious ten days of my life is a period which hangs suspended between heaven and earth – it seems to belong to a different time-order than the rest of dull life. MissGalitzi, Dr Christinein line for Ariel poem;a1 Galitzi’s charming note gave me much pleasure, you may tell her,1 and I shall answer it when I can – andEyre, Mary B.for which she receives Ariel poem;a3 shall also remember her andAriel Poems;a2 the others you mention (Miss Eyre) with Ariel poems – but I expect I shall have to get them from London, so it may take some time. It is a great happiness to me to look back upon all the kindness and appreciation that I received. I shall have my hands very full next week – all the more so because I have been able to do nothing over this weekend; butPerkinses, the;c2 I shall try to see Dr. & Mrs. Perkins at once and report to them. IAmericaBoston, Massachusetts;d1as a substitute for EH's company;b6 shall be glad – as I cannot be in your company – to be settled here again; and withEliot, Vivien (TSE's first wife, née Haigh-Wood)separation from;f1contemplated;a6 the new year my mind begins to turn more towards the next practical steps that I must take before I return to London – difficult and disagreeable no doubt. IHale, EmilyTSE's love for;x2defiled by possessiveness and anger;b7 am happiest at those rare moments when I can think of you without the interfering ache of thwarted possessiveness – and when, furthermore, I have not the other more unselfish torment of raging against the way life has treated you – quite apart from my personal interest – happiest at those moments when I can just regard you contemplatively and rejoice in the mere fact that there is the person named Emily in the world. And I think that I do understand the pain and tragedy of your life better now; and my visit to Claremont has only increased my understanding admiration and devotion to the person you are – I was not disappointed in the tiniest respect – you are all that I had thought you were and more. God bless you, my dear Bird; I must stop now until Saturday.
1.DrGalitzi, Dr Christine Christine Galitzi (b. 1899), Assistant Professor of French and Sociology, Scripps College. Born in Greece and educated in Romania, and at the Sorbonne and Columbia University, New York, she was author of Romanians in the USA: A Study of Assimilation among the Romanians in the USA (New York, 1968), as well as authoritative articles in the journal Sociologie româneascu. In 1938–9 she was to be secretary of the committee for the 14th International Congress of Sociology due to be held in Bucharest. Her husband (date of marriage unknown) was to be a Romanian military officer named Constantin Bratescu (1892–1971).
3.MaryEyre, Mary B. B. Eyre, Professor of Psychology, lived in a pretty frame house on College Avenue, Claremont, where TSE stayed during his visit to EH at Scripps College.
1.DrGalitzi, Dr Christine Christine Galitzi (b. 1899), Assistant Professor of French and Sociology, Scripps College. Born in Greece and educated in Romania, and at the Sorbonne and Columbia University, New York, she was author of Romanians in the USA: A Study of Assimilation among the Romanians in the USA (New York, 1968), as well as authoritative articles in the journal Sociologie româneascu. In 1938–9 she was to be secretary of the committee for the 14th International Congress of Sociology due to be held in Bucharest. Her husband (date of marriage unknown) was to be a Romanian military officer named Constantin Bratescu (1892–1971).
2.TheodoreSpencer, Theodore Spencer (1902–48), writer, poet and critic, taught at Harvard, 1927–49: see Biographical Register.