The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922 (94 page)

BOOK: The Letters of T. S. Eliot, Volume 1: 1898-1922
6.99Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

1–Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson (1862–1932) – affectionately known as ‘Goldie’ – Fellow of King’s College, Cambridge; author, and advocate of a league of nations. His writings include
Letters from John Chinaman
(1901),
A Modern Symposium
(1905), and
The International Anarchy, 1904–1914
(1926). See E.M. Forster,
Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
(1973), and
The autobiography of G. Lowes Dickinson and other unpublished writings
, ed. Dennis Proctor (1973). VW wrote in her diary on 5 Dec., ‘Eliot & Goldie [Lowes Dickinson] dined here t’other night – a successful party’; and she remarked of TSE that he was ‘all caught, pressed, inhibited; but great driving power some where – & my word what concentration of the eye when he argues!’ (
Diary
, II, 77).

2–Maurice Hewlett (1861–1923), English novelist and poet; his poetry includes the wellregarded
The Song of the Plow
(1916).

3–Thomas Sturge Moore (1870–1944): English poet, playwright, author, engraver.

4–This impromptu speech was probably akin to ‘The Possibility of a Poetic Drama’.

5–‘The Thin Red Line’ was the title of a famous 1881 painting by Robert Gibb ra depicting a noted action by the British Army’s 93rd (Highland) Regiment at the Battle of Balaclava on 25 Oct. 1854, during the Crimean War. Frederick W. O. Ward wrote a poem with the title, in
English Roses
(1899). The anonymous lady’s poem is unknown.

6–Arthur Clutton-Brock,
Essays on Books
(1920).

7–JMM,
The Evolution of an Intellectual
(1920).

 
TO
Sydney Schiff
 

MS
BL

 

6 December 1920

9 Clarence Gate Gdns

My dear Sydney,

I had not heard of Lynd’s article until I got your letter, and I have procured the
Nation
today. I am not so affected by Lynd’s hostility as I am by your act of friendship – for whether your opinion of the book is modified by friendship or not, the public expression of your opinion is an act of friendship, which I value.
1

It is curious that I should have reviewed a book of Lynd’s essays last year, and damned it, I believe, by quoting from it.
2
His combination of slovenly journalese and parsonical zeal 3
of dullness> was particularly depressing as an example of some of the things about the contemporary degeneracy that one loathes.

We
hope to hear
that Violet is progressing, and that weather at Eastbourne is favourable. She must have been very discouraged. Vivien’s father has progressed, and has even been lifted into a chair for an hour – but there is a long anxious time still ahead. I may run over to Paris on Saturday – I have a week’s holiday due me – I have been trying to write a little and find my brain quite numb, and Vivien wants me to have a change. I am only afraid of the absence of artificial heat in Paris.

Always affectionately,
T.S.E.

TO
Edgar Jepson
 

TS
Beinecke

 

8 December 1920

9 Clarence Gate Gdns

My dear Jepson,

I am returning your tickets with many regrets. I should not have failed to come to hear you, but I am taking a long deferred week of my holiday on Saturday, and if nothing prevents I shall be in Paris on the date of your lecture. But should anything detain me in London, I should certainly turn up at your lecture and buy my own ticket.

I should very much have liked to come, and I am disappointed. I have, however, promised to take the chair for you at the Tomorrow Club I think in March, and I shall look forward to that. I hope I shall see you and extract from you what you are going to talk about, long before that. I have promised to address that institution myself, and if I had not already engaged myself to chair for you, I should have asked you to do it for me.

I have moved to this address, hence the delay in replying.

Sincerely yours
T. S. Eliot

Miss Ana M. BERRY, I believe, is the person
.1
She is found, or was found – for I have heard nothing of or from her since the summer – at the Arts League of Service, 24 Adelphi Terrace House, Robert Street, Adelphi; and I can’t remember the address of her flat. It is in Sloane Court, Sloane Street, I think.

TO
R. C. Trevelyan
1
 

TS
Trinity College, Cambridge

 

10 December 1920

9 Clarence Gate Gdns

Dear Trevelyan,

It is a great pleasure to receive such a letter as yours – a greater pleasure than the most flattering review. All human feeling seems to desert a reviewer, whether he be favourably disposed or the reverse.

I admit that I had several motives in saying what little I said, in passing, about Milton.
2
First I find him,
on the whole
, antipathetic. Dante seems to
me so immeasurably greater in every way, even in control of language, that I amoften irritated by Milton’s admirers. Then I have certain specific charges to bring against Milton. As I did not have occasion to discuss them at length, I introduced them in a way which I hoped might stimulate the reflective, and which I was not unwilling should vex the thoughtless. I have no great desire to write about him, and I think it is wisest – for me at least – only to write about subjects in connection with which I have strong convictions or enthusiasm about or on behalf of something. The only way I feel at present any desire to write about Milton is in connection with the history of blank verse; and I have been intending, when I had leisure, to do that.

But I was not writing to expatiate upon my intentions, but to thank you for your letter, which gave me, as I said, very keen pleasure.

Sincerely yours,
T. S. Eliot

1–R. C. Trevelyan (1872–1951), poet, translator, playwright; son of the historian and statesman Sir George Macaulay Trevelyan (1838–1928) and brother of G. M. Trevelyan (1876–1962).  

2–Writing on 7 Dec., Trevelyan described
SW
as ‘the most helpful literary criticism of our time’, and proposed: ‘I wish you would come into the open a little more about Milton. What you implied, rather than stated, seems to be of great importance, and I think the whole book would have gained a great deal if you had boldly said what you felt. Some day any how, you should write a history of English blank verse, if only in 20 pages. That would give you your opportunity.

       ‘I was fascinated by what you said about “rhetoric”. Rhetoric is out of fashion just now, and no doubt imitative and stupid rhetoric is about the worst of poetic vices. But after all, in a work of any scale, like a play or long poem, something, or rather a number of things have to be done to keep things alive and in movement, and to prevent the design falling flat and dead; and the sum of these things may as well be called rhetoric as anything else’ (Houghton).

       In ‘Notes on the Blank Verse of Christopher Marlowe’, TSE contended that ‘after the erection of the Chinese Wall of Milton, blank verse has suffered not only arrest but retrogression’ (
SW
, 87). Returning to the term ‘rhetoric’ (‘Milton I’, 1936;
OPP, 1957
), TSE stated that it was ‘not meant to be derogatory’.

TO
Leonard Woolf
 

TS
Berg

 

26 December 1920

9 Clarence Gate Gdns

My dear Woolf,

I read your review
1
when I got back from Paris, and I should have written to you before to thank you, but simply that I have not had the leisure.

I need hardly say that I should feel sufficiently flattered merely by the fact that my book suggested Aristotle to your mind. But it is a much more delicate flattery to feel that you have got, I think, what I am after, whether I have succeeded or not. I feel that there is much in the book which ought to have been completely rewritten, which is unnecessarily difficult or obscure. What I should like would be to have an opportunity of discussing with you, not so much the book, as the general questions of critical method which your article provokes. I hope that may be soon.

We were very disappointed to learn that you are at Rodmell, and cannot come to dinner this week. I trust that we can arrange it soon after you return. Meanwhile, I am sorry to say, my wife’s father has only last night taken a turn very much for the worse, and we fear that it is merely a matter of a few days; I am very anxious for my wife’s health in consequence.

With best wishes for the new year to both of you,

Sincerely,
T. S. Eliot

1921
 
TO
Scofield Thayer
 

TS
Beinecke

 

1 January 1921 [misdated 1920]

9 Clarence Gate Gdns,
LONDON
N.W.1

Dear Scofield,

Wishing you all the compliments of the season:

I have your letter of the 11th and your letter of the 15th ultimo, and thank you, first, for your amiability and mansuetude in not reproaching me for the ‘London Letter’. Had I been able to do any writing in the past two months, this would have taken precedence over everything else; and for the present and future it will, as I intend to get it done in the course of the coming week. The fact that Vivien’s father has been at the point of death for ten weeks has interfered with every plan that has or could have been made; and a number of difficulties, partly issuing therefrom and partly quite independent, have further embarrassed my activity to a point unknown even in the last five years.

I hope to post you this ‘London Letter’ in a week.

Now for the other matter. I have turned over in my mind what there is to be done, with a view to seeing what part of it I could compass; for I think it would be quite obvious to you if you were here that the job itself is wholly beyond my powers. I am very desirous that it should be done, but for me it is physically impossible. For one thing, you need a man who can get about, call on merchants and printers etc. and also lunch with the valuable people. As I have to be at an office six days a week, and my hours are 9.30 to 5, you see it is impossible for me to do anything during the day; and for seeing friends and acquaintances, doing my personal business, writing letters, accounts, and finally my reading and writing, I have to divide my evenings and my Sundays among these as best I can. You certainly need a man who can devote a good half of his time for several weeks, merely to obtain the preliminary information; and it is true that the most of this can only be done by personal interviews. If you like, until you can send or find here someone else, I will try to see Mr Ratcliffe; but
if I promised to try to do what you need I should simply delay you indefinitely.

Offhand, I can only say that I know the cost of paper and labour to have increased enormously here since five years; I cannot say how it compares, taking into account the rate of exchange, with costs in America. The papers here at all comparable to the
Dial
sell at higher prices; the
London Mercury
, for example, is now 3s, and has no illustrations; but perhaps all these papers aim at a larger profit per copy than the
Dial
does.

Then as to the possibility of working up a subscription list in England. This, I think, will take considerable time. Undoubtedly Americans can make better magazines than the English can, but it takes time to persuade the English, as the fact must be made softly to penetrate their
un
consciousness.
Vogue
, for example, is far better than anything they do themselves in that line, and they know it, but in the first place
Vogue
is not a literary paper, and in the second place it is not conspicuously an importation. There seem to be two things to do: to aim at a circulation only among the sufficiently intelligent, which would be in time three or four hundred; or to produce an English edition, with English theatrical, musical etc. notes instead of American. Perhaps, as the latter is a very big undertaking, the first is more feasible.

I should of course have been very glad to fling myself into this work, even without the fee which you suggest: it is not, however – to return to what I said before – a question of its interfering with what I am doing; it would prevent me from doing
anything
else, and at that it wouldn’t, it couldn’t possibly,
get done!

In writing such a long letter as this I am compelled to leap about from one point to another as they occur to me, or I would not get it done at all. There is this: English people, with very few exceptions, are unused to
subscribing
to anything. They either buy things as they see them on bookstalls, or at most they order them from a bookseller, and pay his bill once a quarter. At one time I got quite tired of hearing people say that they ‘had been meaning to’ subscribe to the
Little Review
. They never did, even when pretending to be very much excited by
Ulysses
. If you want more than the 300 or 400 readers (and that would take time to get) you must have your future manager here arrange for the paper to be visible and handy on every bookstall, at every tube station.

You would have, for your 4000 readers whom you have in mind, to cut the throat of the
Mercury
and perhaps also the
English
Review
. I imagine you pay considerably better, but as I have never contributed to either of these I cannot say for certain. I can find out from others. It is not simply, however, a matter of paying more, to get their best contributors away,
but of having some busy person on the spot to overcome the inertia of the elder writers. When you are, for example, no longer in a position to
share
an article by Robert Bridges or Conrad or Hardy with the
Mercury
, these people must be persuaded that the
Dial
is more respectable company to appear in.

Another point I have been requested to mention, unrelated to the above. I took a deferred six days holiday in Paris a fortnight ago, and saw Fritz Vanderpyl. He complains of receiving communications from various people on the
Dial
who do not appear to be working quite in concert. He says that he was sent some copies to dispose of on the impression that he had a bookshop, then when he explained he received an apology, but later the enclosed invoice which he asked me to send you. As I do not know the full facts, and am not sure that Vanderpyl is capable of giving them, I pass this on without comment. I thought his article on Vlaminck rather poor journalese,
1
but perhaps that sort of thing goes down. He showed me some poems which were certainly much better than that, and which seemed to me quite good, and I will tell him to send them on unless you are choked up with material at present.

Has, if I may mention it, the question of a more cheerful cover (I dont mean a Christy Girl
2
but something as bright as the
Nouvelle Revue Française
) ever been raised? I think for an English edition a cover whichmade more prominent some of the names familiar to this public might be well.  

The
Dial
is undoubtedly better than any English literary paper I know, and the book reviewing in it far less dull.  

If you had someone over here who could fly about, I might be able to make myself useful to him, or even if you nominated some native inhabitant for this preliminary exploration. I understand from Pound that what prevents you from coming at present is that your colleague is temporarily incapacitated from full activity by the labours of a medical degree, in other words taking some examinations. If this is so I suppose you will not be able to come before the summer.  

I wish I could give more helpful suggestions, but I am now exhausted by such a long letter. I will write you again in sending the ‘Letter’, if I can by that time suggest anyone here who would be suitable for your purpose.  

Yours ever
T.S.E.  

I have not mentioned this matter to anyone.

Other books

Dark Enchantment by Janine Ashbless
Backstage Pass: V.I.P. by Elizabeth Nelson
The Cowboy Takes a Bride by Debra Clopton
Island Intrigue by Wendy Howell Mills
The Good, the Bad & the Beagle by Catherine Lloyd Burns
Christmas Fairy by Titania Woods