[c/o Revd J. C. Perkins, D.D., 90 Commonwealth Ave., Boston]
Letter 32.
As I thought might happen, a letter from Tryon has followed the letter from Boston, but there still seems to be a gap, for in this letter you say you are just leaving, and say nothing further about your stay there, since the letter written after you first arrived. So I still don’t know whether you found it so unsatisfactory that you had to leave sooner than expected. I was rather fearful of your returning North from that climate so early, but your letter from Boston, of March 29, which has followed hard on the one from Tryon, is fairly reassuring about health. But remember, please, that the decision to lead a ‘normal’ life, without thinking too much of health, is not to mean an ‘abnormal’ life of overdoing yourself! But I am glad to know of your plans for Petersham,1 and for Wilton (I do not know where that is)2 and perhaps for Grand Manan for the summer. TheHale, Emilyphotographs of;w7;e4 little photograph fell out as I opened the letter. I shall treasure it. I thought at first that it was quite recent – then I decided that your costume was that of a not very recent fashion – then I looked at the back. This shall go into my pocket book with the little oval portrait.
ThankSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister);j1 you again for going to see Ada, and for your second report. It really sounds as if the time was very short indeed: I do not see how anyone can linger very long in such constant pain and utter discomfort. What you say of her is what I should expect of her. ISheffield, Alfred Dwight ('Shef' or 'Sheff')writes touchingly;b2 had a very touching letter from Sheff, whose devotion is very great: I am so very glad that you like him, and he likes you I am sure. IEliot, Theresa Garrett (TSE's sister-in-law)more agreeable than an Eliot;c2 am glad also whenever you see Theresa: she is a dear – and much easier to get on with than Eliots are!
I had a tiring week – the conference at Oxford, thenBritish–Norwegian Institute;a2 my'Social Function of Poetry, The'as received by the Norwegians;a6 lecture to the Norwegians in London the next day, followed by dinner with four Norwegians and a man I know in the Foreign Office – extremely nice men, and very appreciative – they made me feel that the trouble was worth taking. Intravels, trips and plansTSE's 1943 trip to Edinburgh;e8;a4 consequence, I have taken things rather easy this weekend, in preparation for my visit to Edinburgh – writingVirgil Society, TheTSE made inaugural president;a1 some letters and drafting an announcement for the Virgilian Society, of which I was, unwillingly, made the first president.3 Edinburgh isSitwell, Edithdragoons TSE into poetry reading;b2 toReading by Famous Poets, Aeolian Hall;a1 be preceded by Edith Sitwell’s collective poetry reading on behalf of the Free French at the Aeolian Hall on Wednesday:4 allMasefield, Johnroped into Sitwell poetry reading;a3 thede la Mare, Walterroped into Edith Sitwell poetry-reading;a3 old timers are to read, including Masefield, De la Mare, and myself, with probably a fashionable and therefore obtuse audience – looking at us, no doubt, rather than listening. ByFaber and Faber (F&F)fire-watching duties at;e6 having my fire watch on Wednesday nights and therefore having to be at the office from 8 o’clock, I escape a cocktail party and dinner given to the performers by Lady Crewe. I don’t like reading to society audiences; they are not very appreciative, and they seem to think that they have done something generous in taking tickets, without reflecting that the performers are being generous in giving their time and energy. Edinburgh means a poetry reading to the French on Friday (that will be an odd experience); aBritish Councilhonours TSE with Edinburgh reception;a2 reception in my honour by the British Council for the intellectual society of the northern capital (I can’t think why I should have to have a reception) and a lecture (the same as to the Norwegians) to the Czechs on Monday evening. InBlakes, thevisited at Dollar;a2 between, however, I go to the Blakes at Dollar (that pleasant little town) from Saturday night till Monday, so it is not all work. I return to Shamley for Easter.
InHale, Emilyshares details of will;p4 the same letter with your news of Ada, your testamentary dispositions of your furniture gave me a dolorous feeling. I can’t decide whether, in these circumstances which God forfend, I should take more comfort or distress in living with your furniture. The portrait by Miss Richardson5 I should certainly love to have; but with that, as with any other possessions or family belongings, the question arises, what would I do for its care after my death? Not that it would not be of vast interest to people in the future – but meanwhile, who would be worthy to hold it? Indeed, I think that I had rather you gave me (since we are on such matters) a life interest in it, indicating some younger person in America whom you think would be worthy to look after it after that. ThereHayward, John;l4 is really nobody I know to whom I would trust it, except perhaps John Hayward, and he expects, in the normal course (though I have made him my literary executor, with instructions to suppress, rather than to publish, the maximum of my scattered literary remains) to die before me. IHayward, Johnpossible post-war housemate;l5 think by the way, of sharing a small house or large flat with him after the war: we should both want complete privacy – separate rooms and separate meals and separate visitors, and also he is a person to whom I think I might be of use – I could trundle him out etc.
Iflowers and florabluebells;a4in Shamley Wood;a1 wish that you could see the bluebells coming out in the woods. But I had rather be with you in New Hampshire. Thank you for a very dear letter.
So I shall not be able to write until Good Friday.
1.Petersham: a town in the western part of Worcester County, Massachusetts.
2.Wilton: a town in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, at the confluence of Stony Brook and the Souhegan River.
3.TSE served as the first president of the Virgil Society, 1943–4. See CProse 6, 386–7.
4.The Poetry Reading at the Aeolian Hall, on 14 Apr. 1943, was organised by the Sitwells, and attended by the Queen and princesses. To Edwin Muir, 15 Mar.: ‘I have been dragooned by Edith Sitwell into a poetry reading, collective, for the Fighting French in London …’
5.Margaret Foster Richardson (1881–1945), reputed portrait painter who was active during EH’s younger years. See Gordon, Eliot’s New Life, 10, for the ‘presentation portrait’: Gordon credits Clara E. Dexter Morse for her photograph of the painting (my thanks to Sara Fitzgerald). Reportedly depicting EH at the age of seventeen, the portrait is thought to have been commissioned by the Revd John Carroll Perkins and his wife, and must have been kept at their home for many years. Richardson, who spent her first years in Illinois, studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and graduated in 1905 from the Normal Art School.
4.Walterde la Mare, Walter de la Mare (1873–1956), poet, novelist, short story writer, worked for the Statistics Department of the Anglo-American Oil Company, 1890–1908, before being freed to become a freelance writer by a £200 royal bounty negotiated by Henry Newbolt. He wrote many popular works: poetry including The Listeners (1912) and Peacock Pie (1913); novels including Henry Brocken (1904) and Memoirs of a Midget (1921); anthologies including Come Hither (1923). Appointed OM, 1953; CH, 1948. F&F brought out several of his books including Collected Rhymes and Verses (1942) and Collected Poems (1948); and TSE wrote ‘To Walter de la Mare’ for A Tribute to Walter de la Mare (1948). See further Theresa Whistler, Imagination of the Heart: The Life of Walter de la Mare (1993).
11.JohnHayward, John Davy Hayward (1905–65), editor and critic: 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.
8.AlfredSheffield, Alfred Dwight ('Shef' or 'Sheff') Dwight Sheffield (1871–1961) – ‘Shef’ or ‘Sheff’ – husband of TSE’s eldest sister, taught English at University School, Cleveland, Ohio, and was an English instructor, later Professor, of Group Work at Wellesley College. His publications include Lectures on the Harvard Classics: Confucianism (1909) and Grammar and Thinking: a study of the working conceptions in syntax (1912).
2.EdithSitwell, Edith Sitwell (1887–1964), poet, biographer, anthologist, novelist: see Biographical Register.