Typed letter signed : [New York], to Mina Curtiss, [1960 May 21].

ArchivalResource

Typed letter signed : [New York], to Mina Curtiss, [1960 May 21].

Thanking her for a "truly sympathetic & really cheering letter," noting that it is rare he receives an "epistle" to which those adjectives can be honestly applied. Noting that he sometimes feels "a twinge of nearguilt" at the thought of her suffering on account of Marion and himself, but that he soon recalls that "one glorious country moment may knock a whole season of urban soidisant sunshine into the proverbial cocked hat." Describing the arrival of her gift of lilacs, and thanking her, stating: "words, my dear Mina, fail to begin to express my consort's & my farmorethangratitude."

1 item (1 p.) ; 27.9 cm. + envelope.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7559234

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Curtiss, Mina Kirstein, 1896-1985

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w69z93fr (person)

Mina Stein Curtiss was born on October 13, 1896, in Boston, Massachusetts. She graduated from Smith College in 1918, received a M.A. in English from Columbia University in 1920, and returned to Smith, where she was an associate professor until 1934. She was a research assistant for the Mercury Theater from 1935 to 1938, and she worked for the Office of War Information during World War II. She taught at Smith from 1940 to 1941. In 1942, Curtiss wrote and produced a local radio program in Des Moin...

Morehouse, Marion, 1906-1969

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6vq3wxt (person)

Cummings, E.E. (Edward Estlin), 1894-1962

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6p55qkz (person)

E. E. (Edward Estlin) Cummings was born in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1894. While at Harvard, he delivered a daring commencement address on modernist artistic innovations, thus announcing the direction his own work would take. In 1917, after working briefly for a mail-order publishing company, the only regular employment in his career, Cummings volunteered to serve in the Norton-Harjes Ambulance group in France. Here he and a friend were imprisoned (on false grounds) for three months in a Frenc...