The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922 (48 page)

BOOK: The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922
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TO
Julian Huxley
 

MS
Fondren

 

16 January 1918
1

18 Crawford Mansions

Dear Huxley,

I am writing this to you, as I feared that Aldous might possibly have returned to Eton. I did not get his letter, unfortunately, in time to let him know that I could not come on Saturday, and was leaving for the weekend. Since then I have been hoping to find time but have not.

Can we not fix some evening next week? I am always away weekends now (I hope you will come and visit us at Marlow when we are settled). Would
Tuesday
do?

I shall be disappointed if Aldous has already gone. If he is still here but going shortly tell him to drop in if he can tomorrow evening (or both of you). If he has left I will write at once to Eton.

Yours
T. S. Eliot

Or lunch tomorrow at the George and Vulture,
2
if either of you should be in the city by 12. If he is going this week I hope he can manage either lunch or evening –

1–Dated ‘16. i. 17’ by TSE.

2–The George and Vulture pub was in George Street. 

 
TO
His Mother
 

MS
Houghton

 

17 January 1918

[London]

Dearest Mother,

I am writing this after hours, and hope to get it posted in time to reach Saturday’s boat. I have not written for a fortnight, I think. Nothing of 
much moment has happened in that time. I have ordered my suit – of course they are more expensive now, and I have to pay £5 – but I think it will be a good one. Also at Vivien’s earnest solicitation, I am laying in a light overcoat, as an investment. The prices are rising so and material getting so scarce that I may get a spring suit this year, though I should not wear it at all. This £5 suit would have been £3 10s three years ago. I am buying a pair of shoes too. Then I shall feel well supplied for the future.

I am lecturing again, and the attendance keeps up well. As I started earlier this year, the classes will be over by Easter, which will be welcome. As it is, I can do nothing but these and the Egoist and occasional philosophy for Jourdain. There is a very flattering article on me by May Sinclair in the last Little
Review
.
1
I must write and thank her. She was going to try to get it into the
Fortnightly Review
as well. I had to write most of the Henry James number of the
Egoist
myself.

The weather has been frightfully cold for England, and we both suffer from chilblains, and V. from neuralgia in this weather.

I must cut this short or I will not get to the post by 5.30. Everyone has gone and the cleaners want to get into my room.

Your devoted son
Tom.

1–May Sinclair, ‘
Prufrock: And Other Observations
: A Criticism’,
Little Review
4: 8 (Dec. 1917), 8–14. Sinclair’s piece did not appear in the
Fortnightly Review

 
TO
His Mother
 

MS
Houghton

 

6 February 1918

18 Crawford Mansions

My dearest Mother,

I have not written to you for so long that I am cabling to let you know that nothing is wrong. The weeks rush by, and at every mail I have felt so tired that I want to wait for the next and write a really good letter, but the really good letter never is written, and this is all I do – but it is at least an affectionate one! Your letters are always a great pleasure and comfort to me, though often a week goes by and two come together. I have not only been very busy and tired, but a slight touch of influenza made it impossible for me to do anything for several days. But I was well nursed through it, and I think am none the worse. It was largely the end of the winter exhaustion, come a bit earlier than usual.

Your beautiful muffler came the other day, and it is just what I wanted. It is wonderfully soft and warm, and much nicer than any one could buy at any price. With this and the sweater and a new suit and overcoat I am quite set up. I only need a new pair of shoes, which are fearfully expensive now. I shall always think of all the work you put into it whenever I wear it, and wonder when and where you did any particular stitch. My new suit is very nice, very dark gray, almost black.

We get along as everyone else does. I suppose food is a serious problem even in America. It is very hard on anyone who is delicate, and cannot digest many of the things that most people fall back on. Vivien was best off some years ago when a doctor put her on a diet of meat and milk puddings alone, so you can see the difficulty. It would be nice to have a little Orange Pekoe, or a box of Gorton’s Boneless Cod!

I have had a great deal to do. Lately I have been at a point in my lectures where the material was unfamiliar to me: I have had to get up the Brontës for one course and Stevenson for the other. Of course I have developed a knack of acquiring superficial information at short notice, and they think me a prodigy of information. But some of the old ladies are extraordinarily learned, and know all sorts of things about the private life of worthies, where they went to school, and why their elder brother failed in business, which I have never bothered my head about. But I am looking forward to lecturing on Dickens. I found
J
ane Eyre
and
Wuthering Heights
amazingly good stuff, but I cannot endure George Eliot.

I have three philosophy books on hand for the
New Statesman
which I have not touched, and Bertie’s new book
Mysticism and Logic
for the
Nation
.
1
And when I have finished this letter I must do my article for the
Egoist
, on two collections of recent verse.
2
As some of the worst of it is by friends of mine the article will be rather difficult. I shall be glad when Easter comes, and both courses of lectures are over.

I must go to work now. This has at least been words on paper, if not a letter. I hope I can write a better one on Sunday!

With much love to both of you

Your devoted son
Tom

1–TSE, unsigned rev. of BR,
Mysticism and Logic, N
. 22 (Mar. 1918), 768–9.

2–T. S. Apteryx (TSE), ‘Verse Pleasant and Unpleasant’ – on
Georgian Poetry
1916–1917,
ed. Edward Marsh, and
Wheels 1917
:
A Second Cycle
, ed. Edith Sitwell –
Egoist
5: 3 (Mar. 1918)

 
TO
His Mother
 

MS
Houghton

 

14 February 1918

[London]

My dearest Mother,

I hope this will be legible by the time it reaches you. I am writing in business hours which accounts for the form of my letter. There is very little to do today, and I see no reason why I should not take some of my spare time to write to you. I am still very tired and feeling the effect of a spring season two months too early – the weather has been very warm and muggy. I count [the] days until Easter. I did not have time to do anything for the Egoist this month – the first time that has happened. I should like to get B. R.’s new book
Mysticism and Logic
reviewed, but I cannot see my way to it for several days.

I was glad to get the American papers, though I have not had time to more than look at them yet. They are the first I have seen for a very long time, and they seemed very strange and also wasteful of paper on an infinity of trivial matters. The part that usually interests me the most is the sporting news. I am thinking of sending you a paper called
Common
Sense
1
from time to time, as I do not suppose that you see any English news.

I must get back to my work now as some has just turned up. I don’t know whether I shall have time to write any more so I will close this off and perhaps make a postscript later.

Always your devoted son
Tom.

1
–Common Sense
was published weekly from Oct. 1916 to June 1921, when it was incorporated into the
Manchester Guardian Commercial

 
TO
His Mother
 

TS
Houghton

 

4 March 1918

18 Crawford Mansions

Dearest mother,

The last few days have been very cold again, after a warm spell which brought all the buds out; but I do not think that anything has been frostbitten. Today clouded over, after several bright cold days, and tonight it has begun to rain, and may turn to snow. Vivien and indeed most English people suffer in such weather, but I find it rather bracing – at least out of doors, for English houses have not the heating or close-fitted doors that 
ours have. Today (Sunday) I have not been out, but have worked all day for the
Egoist
. You know that I was too tired to do anything for the February number, so I have done more than usual for this. An article on two anthologies of poetry, one mostly by some young friends of mine [the Sitwells], two young Guards officers with literary aspirations; an article on a very foolish book by Amy Lowell,
1
sister of Lawrence Lowell, and one on a literary lawsuit
2
in New York. I am becoming quite adept at reviewing books by people I know – a difficult art.

I have been cramming George Eliot for the last two weeks in preparation for a lecture on her on last Friday. I was surprised to enjoy her so much. Of course there is a great deal of endless prosing, and I think my memory of pleasure is based chiefly on one story –
Amos Barton
– which struck me as far and away ahead of the rest. I read the
Mill on the Floss, Scenes of Clerical Life, Adam Bede
and
Romola
in preparation for this one lecture. This week is Meredith, whom I have lectured on before. The attendance keeps up pretty well, considering the conditions, nine or ten each evening, but it would not at all surprise me if there were no lectures at all given next year.

I appreciate the papers father sends, and hope he will continue. And I must thank you very much for the little parcel of tea you sent; it was very welcome, and helped out our small store very much. I think that it loses a little flavour on the way, still it is Orange Pekoe, and I had not had any for a long time.

Everything looks more black and dismal than ever, I think. The whole world simply lives from day to day; I haven’t any idea of what I shall be doing in a year, and one can make no plans. The only thing is to try to fill one’s mind with the things in which one is interested.

I must stop now.

Always your very loving and devoted son

Tom

1–TSE, ‘Disjecta Membra’, a review of Amy Lowell,
Tendencies in Modern American Poetry
(1917), in
Egoist
5: 4 (Apr. 1918).

2–The Oct. 1917 issue of
Little Review
had been suppressed because it carried WL’s story ‘Cantleman’s Spring-Mate’. John Quinn appeared for the defence, but the case went against the magazine. TSE, in ‘Literature and the American Courts’, lamented that as a result of the ruling, ‘In America the small number of people who are sensitive to good literature are now forbidden to read one of the finest pieces of prose in the language’ (
Egoist
5: 3, Mar. 1918).

 
TO
John Quinn
1
 

TS
NYPL (MS)

 

4 March 1918

18 Crawford Mansions

Dear Mr Quinn,

I am told by Pound that you expressed satisfaction with the brochure on his work.
2
I am very glad if this is so, because I wrote it under considerable pressure of time, and was very much aware of its shortcomings; I lamented not being able to have sight of the proofs. I only hope that it will serve the desired purpose, and shall be very glad if it induces any one unacquainted with Pound’s stuff to buy and read his books.

I wish more particularly to express my gratitude to you for your activity on my behalf against the Pirates.
3
I appreciated it the more because I knew you had recently undergone a serious operation: I do not think that there are many people who under such conditions would bestir themselves so actively even for personal friends, still less for a man who was personally unknown to them.

I cannot see how these publishers can find a leg to stand on. As most of the poems have been published in America, they could be within their rights only in printing the ‘Rhapsody on a Windy Night’, and the ‘Preludes’ – hardly sufficient for a profitable volume.

I wish that I had enough material for a volume of suitable size for the American public.
4
I am afraid that it will be some time before I have
enough material to double the size of my small book. I have only written half a dozen small poems in the last year, and the last I have been unable to finish. I regret still more that I have been unable to do anything this winter for
The Little Review
. The cause has been chiefly the simple reason of lack of time, and in the second place I have been too tired to do any original work. I spend a sufficiently fatiguing day in a Bank, and during this winter have supplemented my income by giving two lectures a week, involving considerable preparation, in the evenings to working people. Then also I have
The Egoist
to look after; having an official connection with it I must perform my share each month. At about Easter my courses of lectures will be finished, and I hope then to find time and energy to write. I have been very keenly interested in the success of
The Little Review
, and Pound’s enthusiasm on the subject is infectious. I hope to continue my dialogue
5
(not that I was at all satisfied with the first two parts), and if I do any verse Pound shall have it.

Pound showed me a letter a few days ago which he had from Miss Monroe declining his last poems.
6
Although I knew that she had shown herself obtuse on the subject of the
Cantos
I was very much surprised; her tone was offensively patronising. I had gone over these poems carefully before Pound sent them; and had applauded them. The Provençal stuff was amazingly well done, and in two or three of the modern poems I was sure that he had gone some distance beyond the modern poems in
Lustra
[1915]. Anyway, they were first-rate, and it never occurred to me that Harriet would be able to find any excuse for rejecting them. I suppose there were mixed motives, but probably she was jealous of the attention Pound was giving to
The Little Review.
7

I am really very glad the crisis occurred. Personally, I cannot forget the length of time that elapsed before Pound succeeded in persuading Miss Monroe to print ‘Prufrock’ for me, nor do I forget that [in
Poetry
, Sept. 1916] she expunged, in another poem, a whole line containing the word ‘foetus’
8
without asking my permission. But what is the important point is that Pound is I think very glad to feel no further responsibility toward Poetry. He is deprived of the price of his rent, I believe, but I think that he is delighted at being able to devote all his attention to
The Little Review
. I saw him a few days ago, in very good spirits, and I think morally sustained and stimulated by the subsidy which you have assembled. It will be a great thing to get
all
his serious prose and verse for the
L.R.
from now on.

You see I value his verse far higher than that of any other living poet. And he and Wyndham Lewis are the only men in England of my acquaintance, I believe, who have not in any respect allowed the war to demoralise them.

I am putting a short notice of the Cantleman trial in this month’s
Egoist
. I think the typical American attitude in such matters is like that of Miss Amy Lowell, who is always decrying abstract Puritanism, but who when faced with some particular work of art offensive to Puritan taste curls up like a hedgehog. The American Liberal Varnish. I am sure that everyone who knows about the case here is very grateful to you for your part in it.

Again with thanks for your action against Boni, and best wishes for your rapid convalescence, I am

Sincerely yours
T. S. Eliot

BOOK: The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922
8.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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