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LAWRENCE Thomas Edward (1888-1935).
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LAWRENCE Thomas Edward (1888-1935).
L.A.S. "T. E. Shaw," Southampton, May 3, 1934, addressed to "F. V.".2 pages in-8 (creases). In English.
Letter written to the editor of Faber and Faber thanking him for sending books.
"Next time please explain to me the subtle distinction between "U.S.A." and "U.S.A. origin" in your list of directors. I now suspect something but hope I am wrong. Thanks for the books. The math is terrible. With an origin, heritage, and example like these, you have done very well indeed. From our extinct beings to higher things. Excellent. I proudly add this to my "Chamber of Horrors" shelf, where it will sit between Roy Campbell's autobiography and the life of Alice B. Toklas. Don't flatter your ancestor with the idea that the "Room of H" shelf has three ancestors. They represent the still nascent products of 1934. Or does Alice B. T. date from 1933? I forget. [Robinson] Jeffers I had lost track of since "Cawdor," who disappointed me a few years ago. He doesn't want to move forward, in this one: and as you say, a poet who doesn't move forward regresses. I guess Jeffers is over 30 and doesn't know it yet. Do you know that Alfred Noyes never felt new? I apologize for the ink. Bourgeois ink is the only carbon ink that can be used in a fountain pen: you can only buy it at Reeve's down the Charing Cross Road. I have emptied my bottle and I have nothing left but dregs that are too thick: I cannot ask for more by mail: but as soon as the R.A.F. pays for my trip to London for a day's work, I will go to the store to buy some to refill my excellent pen. Personally, only carbon ink works for me. Patience. I need to see London again but cannot afford a personal visit. In a postscript he adds: In reading all this, however, I must add that Jeffers is an honest and talented poet, unlike Noyes. I only used Noyes as an absurd reduction - a phrase from advanced mathematics that means very little. Lawrence probably thanks the mathematician, Frank Vigor Morley for sending him his book, The Geometric Inversion. Lawrence continues his letter by commenting on the poet, Robinson Jeffers, and comparing him in unfavorable terms to Alfred Noyes.
L.A.S. "T. E. Shaw," Southampton, May 3, 1934, addressed to "F. V.".2 pages in-8 (creases). In English.
Letter written to the editor of Faber and Faber thanking him for sending books.
"Next time please explain to me the subtle distinction between "U.S.A." and "U.S.A. origin" in your list of directors. I now suspect something but hope I am wrong. Thanks for the books. The math is terrible. With an origin, heritage, and example like these, you have done very well indeed. From our extinct beings to higher things. Excellent. I proudly add this to my "Chamber of Horrors" shelf, where it will sit between Roy Campbell's autobiography and the life of Alice B. Toklas. Don't flatter your ancestor with the idea that the "Room of H" shelf has three ancestors. They represent the still nascent products of 1934. Or does Alice B. T. date from 1933? I forget. [Robinson] Jeffers I had lost track of since "Cawdor," who disappointed me a few years ago. He doesn't want to move forward, in this one: and as you say, a poet who doesn't move forward regresses. I guess Jeffers is over 30 and doesn't know it yet. Do you know that Alfred Noyes never felt new? I apologize for the ink. Bourgeois ink is the only carbon ink that can be used in a fountain pen: you can only buy it at Reeve's down the Charing Cross Road. I have emptied my bottle and I have nothing left but dregs that are too thick: I cannot ask for more by mail: but as soon as the R.A.F. pays for my trip to London for a day's work, I will go to the store to buy some to refill my excellent pen. Personally, only carbon ink works for me. Patience. I need to see London again but cannot afford a personal visit. In a postscript he adds: In reading all this, however, I must add that Jeffers is an honest and talented poet, unlike Noyes. I only used Noyes as an absurd reduction - a phrase from advanced mathematics that means very little. Lawrence probably thanks the mathematician, Frank Vigor Morley for sending him his book, The Geometric Inversion. Lawrence continues his letter by commenting on the poet, Robinson Jeffers, and comparing him in unfavorable terms to Alfred Noyes.
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