The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922 (5 page)

BOOK: The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922
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PERIODICALS AND PUBLISHERS
A.
The Athenaeum
(see also
N&A
)
C.
The Criterion
F&G
Faber & Gwyer (publishers)
F&F
Faber & Faber (publishers)
IJE
International Journal of Ethics
N.
The Nation
N&A
The Nation & The Athenaeum
NC
New Criterion
NRF
La Nouvelle Revue Française
NS
New Statesman
TLS
Times Literary Supplement
 
 
               
PERSONS
AH
Aldous Huxley
BD
Bonamy Dobrée
BR
Bertrand Russell
CW
Charles Whibley
CWE
Charlotte Ware Eliot, TSE’s mother
DHL
D. H. Lawrence
EP
Ezra Pound
EVE
(Esmé) Valerie Eliot
GCF
Geoffrey (Cust) Faber
HR
Herbert Read
HWE
Henry Ware Eliot (TSE’s brother)
IPF
Irene Pearl Fassett (TSE’s secretary)
JDH
John Davy Hayward
JJ
James Joyce
JMM
John Middleton Murry
LW
Leonard Woolf
MH
Mary Hutchinson
OM
Ottoline Morrell
RA
Richard Aldington
RC-S
Richard Cobden-Sanderson
SS
Sydney Schiff
TSE
T. S. Eliot
VHE
Vivien Haigh Eliot
VW
Virginia Woolf
WBY
W. B. Yeats
 
 
           
ARCHIVE COLLECTIONS
Arkansas
Special Collections, University Libraries, University of Arkansas
BL
British Library, London
Beinecke
The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University
Berg
Henry W. and Albert A. Berg Collection of English and American Literature, New York Public Library
Bodleian
The Bodleian Library, Oxford University
Bonn
Universitäts und Landesbibliothek, Bonn University
Buffalo
Lockwood Memorial Library, State University of New York at Buffalo
Bundesarchiv
German Federal Archives, Koblenz
Chicago
Special Collections, The Joseph Regenstein Library, University of Chicago
Cornell
Department of Rare Books, Olin Library, Cornell University
Fondren
Fondren Library, Woodson Research Center, Rice University
Gallup
Donald Gallup Papers, The Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University
Gardner Museum
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, Massachusetts
Harvard
University Archives, Harvard University
Hornbake
Hornbake Library, University of Maryland
Houghton
The Houghton Library, Harvard University
Huntington
Huntington Library, California
King’s
Modern Archive Centre, King’s College, Cambridge
Lilly
Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington
LSE
British Library of Political and Economic Science, London School of Economics
McMaster
Mills Memorial Library, McMaster University. Hamilton, Ontario
Milton Academy
Milton, Massachusetts
MIT
The Weiner Papers Institute Archives, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.
Reed College
Portland, Oregon
Mugar
Mugar Memorial Library, Boston University
NYPL (MS)
New York Public Library (Manuscripts Division)
Northwestern
Special Collections, Northwestern University Library, Evanston, Illinois
Princeton
Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Library
Rosenbach
Rosenbach Museum and Library, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Texas
The Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas at Austin
Tulsa
Department of Special Collections, McFarlin Library, University of Tulsa, Oklahoma
UCLA
University of California at Los Angeles
Vichy
Bibliothèque Municipale, Vichy
Victoria
Special Collections, McPherson Library, University of Victoria, British Columbia
Virginia
Alderman Library, University of Virginia Library
Washington
Washington University Library, St Louis, Missouri
Williams College
Williamstown, Massachusetts
 
 
EDITORIAL NOTES
 

The source of each letter is indicated at the top right.
CC
indicates a carbon copy. Where no other source is shown it may be assumed that the original or a carbon copy is in the Valerie Eliot collection or at the Faber and Faber Archive.

del
.
deleted
 
MS
manuscript
 
n. d.
no date
 
PC
postcard
 
SC.
scilicet
: namely
 
TS
typescript
 
< >
indicates a word or words brought in from another part of the letter.
 

Place of publication is London, unless otherwise stated.

 

Ampersands and squiggles have been replaced by ‘and’, except where they occur in correspondence with Ezra Pound.

 

Some obvious typing or manuscript errors have been silently corrected.

 

Dates have been standardised.

 

Some words and figures which were abbreviated have been expanded.

 

Punctuation has occasionally been adjusted.

 

Editorial insertions are indicated by square brackets.

 

Words both italicised and underlined signify double underlining in the original copy.

 

Where possible a biographical note accompanies the first letter to or from a correspondent. Where appropriate, this brief initial note will also refer the reader to the Glossary of Names at the end of the text.

 

Vivienne Eliot liked her husband and friends to spell her name Vivien; but as there is no consistency, it is printed as written.

 
 
 

26 September 1888

St Louis, Missouri

‘Young Thomas (Stearns for his Grandfather) came forth at 7.45 this a.m. I like the name for your sake, and shall always feel as though
that
part of it was for you, though the prime cause was the other …’
1

13 April 1943

Cambridge, Massachusetts

‘When you were a tiny boy, learning to talk, you used to sound the rhythm of sentences without shaping words – the ups and downs of the thing you were trying to say. I used to answer you in kind, saying nothing yet conversing with you as we sat side by side on the stairs at 2635 Locust Street. And now you think the rhythm before the words in a new poem! … Such a dear little boy!’
2

1–Henry Ware Eliot to his elder brother, the Reverend Thomas Lamb Eliot (ms Houghton).

2–Ada Eliot Sheffield (1869–1943), the first-born, in her last letter to TSE, written while she was dying of cancer (
MS
Valerie Eliot). She and TSE were intellectually close; he described her as the Mycroft to his Sherlock Holmes. She has in mind
The Music of Poetry
(1942): ‘I know that a poem, or a passage of a poem, may tend to realize itself first as a particular rhythm before it reaches expression in words, and that this rhythm may bring to birth the idea and the image.’ 

 
THE LETTERS
1898–1922
 
 
 
 
1898
 
TO
His Father
1
 

MS
Houghton

 

Thurs. 23–24 June 1898

Gloucester
2
[Massachusetts]

Dear Papa,

It is very cool here when we get up – that is, indoors, outdoors it is just right. We have no sunflowers, there were two in the rosebed, and Marion weeded them up. I found the things in the upper tray of my trunk all knocked about. A microscope was broken and a box of butterflies and a spider.

Charlotte and I hunt for birds. She found a
empty
nest yesterday (23d). Marion, Margret (?) & Henry are going to Class-day.
3

Yours Truly,
Tom.

1–Henry Ware Eliot; the other family members referred to are Marion, the fourth child and TSE’s favourite sister; Charlotte, the third child; Margaret, the second child; and Henry, the fifth child and TSE’s only brother, who was nine years his senior. See Glossary of Names.

2–From 1896 the family spent their summers in the house built by Henry Ware Eliot on land originally purchased in 1890 at Eastern Point, overlooking Gloucester Harbor. On earlier visits they had stayed at the Hawthorne Inn.

3–When ceremonies are held in schools or colleges to mark the graduation of the senior class.

BOOK: The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922
13.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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