[No surviving envelope]
IHale, Emilybirthdays, presents and love-tokens;w2two rings bought for EH;a7 have to write to explain the gewgaw (according to my promise last January) which has just been despatched by registered post. The one with green jade is almost Woolworth’s – why I put it in was because the stone was big and I thought it might perhaps be effective on some occasion on the stage. It is only intended for the stage, and is not good enough for any occasion on which it will be looked at close to. It isn’t even gold. The other is just respectable enough to wear in private life sometimes. Any jewellery which I considered really fit for You to wear wd. be far beyond my means at any time – but this, indeed, is far below what I could afford to pay: I thought that perhaps you would accept the present more light-heartedly if you knew how humble it was; though there was something at four times the price that I preferred, and ached to get. But I am worried about it; I chose it because I liked it better than any others that I saw at the price; but I am doubtful whether it will go with your colouring, perhaps it wd. be better for a darker skin. With this I was also thinking of possible dramatic use. I wanted a blue stone, about that size. But could not find any at this shop which was recommended to me. But furthermore, it is not of enough value to regret, if you find it does not suit. I think the other will, for its limited purposes; but I am no connaisseur [sic] of jewellery – if they are both no good, give them away. I dare say I might have done better, in time, in London or Paris; but I wanted to have it for you before I left; and I do not know how the customs regulations would be managed. Anyway, the next birthday present (no, I know exactly how far ahead your Birthday is) I give will be a little better, and so on; by the time I am 70 you may get something that you need not be ashamed of.
MyPhilosophical ClubTSE gives paper to;a1 last two days have been a grind: TuesdayDunster HouseTSE gives paper at;a1 night a paper to the Philosophical Club and last night a paper to Dunster House. Dunster House came continuously after my last teaparty (which was quite a jam, about twenty, and only twelve cups); I had to go straight on to dine with a party at Dunster, and then read a paper, and after the paper a discussion went on and on and on, andElliott, William Yandell;a2 thenThomas, Thomas Headdrinks beer with TSE;a5 I had to go to the chairman’s room and drink beer with him and Tom Thomas and W. Y. Elliott;1 so I was on the go talking from 4:30 to 11. NowAnglo-Catholic Congress, Elizabeth, New JerseyTSE speaks at;a1 I must try to compose my address for the Oxford Centenary Celebration at Elizabeth N.J. inMatthiessen, Francis Otto ('F. O.')sojourn in Maine with;a3 timeProfessor William Ellery Sedgwicks, theaccompany TSE to Maine;a2Sedgwick, Professor William Ellery
IAmericaCalifornia;d3TSE dreads its effect on EH;a8 cannot help wishing, now that I am going back to England, that you might be coming back to Boston to live. I am terrified by space and also by climate: I had rather you were living in a place I knew and was fond of, and the people of which I knew and understood. What is California going to do to you? IdogsBlue Bedlington Terrier;b6TSE wishes EH might have;a4 wish that the Perkins could live about here, in a house where you could have That Dog, the Bedlington one. But I am glad I am going. EveryAmericaits horrors;c2the whistle of its locomotives;b4 time I hear an American locomotive whistle, it seems to be taking me that dreadful journey away from California. English locomotives don’t make that noise, anyway. APike's Farm;a1 lodgingtravels, trips and plansTSE's 1932–3 year in America;a7TSE's return from;b5 has been found for me in Surrey, andHouse of the Resurrection, Mirfield;a1 I hope to pay several visits during the summer: toUnderhill, Revd Francis, Bishop of Bath and Wellsand TSE's 1933 return;b6 the Dean of Rochester, andWoolfs, the;a7 theSelwyn, Revd Edward Gordon, Dean of Winchesteron TSE's 1933 homecoming itinerary;a2 Dean of Winchester, and the Woolfs, and possibly Hickleton and Mirfield.
I will write a better letter than this before I go to Elizabeth N.J. ByGalitzi, Dr Christine;a6 the way, Miss Galitzi likes to think that she has been very discrete, so please don’t let on that I have told you she told me, unless you have done. Her letters are so full of metaphorical flowers of speech that they are not easy to grasp. I would have done it if I [had] known the date and occasion; but as you know I was entirely ignorant of what was going on you couldn’t have supposed that they really came from me.
1.William Yandell Elliott (1896–1979), historian, taught at Harvard for 41 years; he worked too as a political advisor to six US presidents.
2.Matthiessen’s summer retreat at Kittery, Maine.
3.CharlesCurtis, Charles P. P. Curtis (1891–1959), distinguished Boston lawyer and author; publications include Lions Under the Throne (Boston, 1947) and The Oppenheimer Case (Boston, 1955).
3.CharlesCurtis, Charles P. P. Curtis (1891–1959), distinguished Boston lawyer and author; publications include Lions Under the Throne (Boston, 1947) and The Oppenheimer Case (Boston, 1955).
5.WilliamElliott, William Yandell Yandell Elliott (1896–1979), historian, taught at Harvard for 41 years; he also worked as a political advisor to six US presidents.
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).
1.JohnLowes, John Livingston Livingston Lowes (1867–1945), American scholar of English literature – author of the seminal study of Coleridge’s sources, The Road to Xanadu: A Study in the Ways of the Imagination (1927) – taught for some years, 1909–18, at Washington University, St. Louis, where he was known to TSE’s family. He later taught at Harvard, 1918–39.
7.F. O. MatthiessenMatthiessen, Francis Otto ('F. O.') (1902–50) taught for 21 years in the English Department at Harvard, where he specialised in American literature and Shakespeare, becoming Professor of History and Literature in 1942. The first Senior Tutor at Eliot House, he was a Resident Tutor, 1933–9. Works include The Achievement of T. S. Eliot (1935) and American Renaissance (1941).
9.RevdSelwyn, Revd Edward Gordon, Dean of Winchester Edward Gordon Selwyn (1885–1959), editor of Theology: A Monthly Journal of Historic Christianity, 1920–33. Educated at Eton and King’s College, Cambridge (Newcastle Scholar; Porson Scholar and Prizeman; Waddington Scholar; Browne’s Medallist; 2nd Chancellor’s Medallist), he was Rector of Redhill, Havant, 1919–30; Provost in Convocation, 1921–31; Dean of Winchester, 1931–58. Works include The Approach to Christianity (1925); Essays Catholic & Critical by Members of the Anglican Communion (ed., 1926). In 1910, he married Phyllis Eleanor Hoskyns, daughter of E. C. Hoskyns (then Bishop of Southwell).
2.Revd Francis UnderhillUnderhill, Revd Francis, Bishop of Bath and Wells, DD (1878–1943), TSE’s spiritual counsellor: see Biographical Register.