[5 Clement Circle, Cambridge, Mass.]
I have your sweet letter of the 29th, andSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister);g4 I am distressed to think that you should have heard of the date of my arrival from Ada before hearing from me. I don’t know how this happened; I hope no letter has got lost, for – what with your changes of time-table – I have been constantly writing to the wrong address. NowAmericaCataumet, Massachusetts;d7EH holidays in;a1 it seems to me safer to continue to write to Clement Circle, although I trust you are at Cataumet, and leading a relaxed and more restful life basking on a beach under a hot sun. I am afraid my correspondence is going to be rather scrappy for most of the rest of the time. As you know, I like to sit down after dinner with a whole evening free to do nothing but write to you: and the more happens, the less time to tell about it. Not that anything very interesting has happened: for instance, this week, ILewis, Wyndham;a7 went on Monday evening to see Wyndham Lewis, who has been ill as usual, onCamerons, the;a4 Tuesday to dinner with the Camerons’ (I discovered that in the hurly-burly of the Fabers’ party last week, and havingBonham-Carter, Lady Helen Violetplagues TSE at party;a2 beenCohen, Harriet;a1 drivenHenderson, J. F.;a2 to distraction by the successive conversations of Lady Bonham-Carter, Harriett Cohen the pianist,1 and Mr. Henderson of the Home Office, who is very eccentric)2 I had promised the Camerons to dine on Tuesday), lastSmith, Theodora ('Dodo') Eliot (TSE's niece)1936 visit to England;b6ballet outing;a3 night I took Dodo to the ballet successfully (she is more talkative than she used to be) wentWoolfs, thehave TSE for tea;c7 to tea with the Woolfs on Tuesday (theWoolf, Virginiaafter 'long illness';c6 first time I have seen her since her long illness) tonightBussys, the;a5Bussy, Dorothy (née Strachey)
Adatravels, trips and plansTSE's 1936 American trip;c4coordinating with Eliot Randolph holiday;b3 isAmericaRandolph, New Hampshire;g9the Eliot siblings return to;a2 anxious to fit in the Randolph visit (didEliot, Marion Cushing (TSE's sister);c9 I say that Marion is coming, butEliots, the Henrymove to Cambridge, Mass.;a5 probably not Henry and Theresa, as they will be in process of moving to Cambridge, whereEliot, Henry Ware, Jr. (TSE's brother)Peabody Museum employ as research associate;d2 Henry is in future to work at the Archaeological Museum3 – he doesn’t get any pay, at first at least, but we are all delighted that he should have some regular occupation of this sort) to suit whatever plans you can make, withElsmith, Dorothy Olcottissues invitation to Woods Hole;a1 theAmericaWoods Hole, Falmouth, Massachusetts;i2TSE and EH arrange holiday at;a1 Ellsmiths [sc. Elsmiths] (that sounds very pleasant) or elsewhere.4 But if as you suggest, we could both be in Cambridge for the first week, and I in Randolph the second, and we together at the Ellsmiths the third, that would be very good. I should be bitterly disappointed if it was just Cambridge. (And if you please, my lamb, my birthday is not the 28th but the 26th September!) And I should like above all things to spend the birthday with you – I wish it might be yours too: that would be allright with Ada, but the others especially Margaret who never forgets an anniversary, might expect a family party – but could I not see you somehow for part of that day?
So I write ‘very calmly’, do I ma’am, about my coming? If you choose to think I feel placidly about it, I shall be at no pains to disabuse you until my arrival. From one point of view, I should like to think that you might meet me on my arrival (one never knows whether from Montreal it will be evening or morning, until the boat docks) and from another I know that I should be too excited. I shall send you a wire from Montreal, and I should like the first time to see you at least for the first few minutes and then to say goodnight (if it is evening) alone; and if you are at Clement Circle perhaps I might be allowed to step round?
1.HarrietCohen, Harriet Cohen (1895–1967), distinguished, well-connected and influential British pianist.
2.J. F. Henderson, Home Office, had advised TSE and Frank Morley in Jan. 1934 about the perils that could ensue if F&F were to publish Ulysses.
3.Henry Eliot became a research associate in Near Eastern Archaeology at the Peabody Museum, Harvard, where his principal publication was to be a discussion of the prehistoric chronology of Northern Mesopotamia,
4.TSEElsmiths, theseminal Woods Hole stay with;a1Elsmith, Dorothy Olcott
1.HarrietCohen, Harriet Cohen (1895–1967), distinguished, well-connected and influential British pianist.
3.HenryEliot, Henry Ware, Jr. (TSE's brother) Ware Eliot (1879–1947), TSE’s older brother: see Biographical Register.
1.Marian/MarionEliot, Marion Cushing (TSE's sister) Cushing Eliot (1877–1964), fourth child of Henry Ware Eliot and Charlotte Eliot: see Biographical Register.
4.TSEElsmiths, theseminal Woods Hole stay with;a1Elsmith, Dorothy Olcott
2.J. F. HendersonHenderson, J. F., Home Office, was to advise TSE and Frank Morley in Jan. 1934 about the perils that could be incurred if F&F were to publish Ulysses. See National Archives, Kew: HO 144/20071.
7.WyndhamLewis, Wyndham Lewis (1882–1957), painter, novelist, philosopher, critic: see Biographical Register.
8.JosephOldham, Joseph (‘Joe’) Houldsworth Oldham (1874–1969), missionary, adviser, organiser: see Biographical Register.
2.AdaSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister) Eliot Sheffield (1869–1943), eldest of the seven Eliot children; author of The Social Case History: Its Construction and Content (1920) and Social Insight in Case Situations (1937): see Biographical Register.
2.TheodoraSmith, Theodora ('Dodo') Eliot (TSE's niece) Eliot Smith (1904–92) – ‘Dodo’ – daughter of George Lawrence and Charlotte E. Smith: see Biographical Register. Theodora’sSmith, Charlotte ('Chardy') Stearns (TSE's niece) sister was Charlotte Stearns Smith (b. 1911), known as ‘Chardy’.
1.VirginiaWoolf, Virginia Woolf (1882–1941), novelist, essayist and critic: see Biographical Register.