[c/o MissAmericaWest Rindge, New Hampshire;h9EH holidays at;a1 Ware, West Rindge, New Hampshire]
I am hoping to catch you with this before you leave Rindge, primarilyNoyeses, the;a8Noyes, James Atkins
YourWare, Mary LeeTSE detained from visiting;c4 notetravels, trips and plansTSE's 1936 American trip;c4TSE's itinerary;b1 from Rindge came this morning. I am glad that the country is so beautiful, and I was touched by Miss Ware’s Union Jack. I am all the more sorry that I could not come, and hope that you have been able to make it clear to her that I should have liked to, and should have been glad to see the farm and to meet her again, and that I appreciate her asking me, and that my returning to Cambridge was entirely diplomatic and prudential. IClement, James;a4 haveLittles, the Leon;a7Little, Eleanor (née Wheeler)
I have a lot of business notes to work off, and then must dash out to buy my ticket to New York. I am not a bit surprised at your feeling that the ground is not solid under your feet; it seems to me the most natural thing during this strange period, and until you get settled. Dearest, I shall write much about last week later; I only want to remind you at the moment that I am very happy in you as always, and that we have a great deal to do in living for each other’s sake.
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.
12.PenelopeNoyes, Penelope Barker Barker Noyes (1891–1977), who was descended from settlers of the Plymouth Colony, lived in a historic colonial house (built in 1894 for her father James Atkins Noyes) at 1 Highland Street, Cambridge, MA. Unitarian. She was a close friend of EH.
3.MaryWare, Mary Lee Lee Ware (1858–1937), independently wealthy Bostonian, friend and landlady of EH at 41 Brimmer Street: see Biographical Register.