A Great Unrecorded History: A New Life of E. M. Forster (64 page)

Read A Great Unrecorded History: A New Life of E. M. Forster Online

Authors: Wendy Moffat

Tags: #Biography, #British, #Literary

BOOK: A Great Unrecorded History: A New Life of E. M. Forster
6.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

212
“If you want a permanent”:
EMF to JRA, April 9, 1928, HRC.

212
“uncle in the clothes trade”:
Furbank,
E. M. Forster
, II:186.

212
“I was 250 years old”:
EMF to JRA, early Aug. 1929, HRC.

213
“is slowly dispatching him”:
Virginia Woolf to Vanessa Bell, May 19, 1926; Nicholson and Trautmann, eds.,
The Letters of Virginia Woolf
, 266.

213
“T. E. liked to meet people”:
Forster, “T. E. Lawrence,” in A. W. Lawrence, ed.,
T. E. Lawrence by His Friends
, 247.

213
“I wanted to read”:
TEL to EMF, Sept. 8, 1927, in Malcolm Brown, ed.,
T. E. Lawrence: The Selected Letters
, 368.

214
“an awful tease”:
Forster, “T. E. Lawrence,” in A. W. Lawrence, ed.,
T. E. Lawrence by His Friends
, 247.

214
“did not like being touched”:
Ibid., 248.

214
“forthcoming volume of stories”:
EMF to TEL, Dec. 16, 1927, KCC.

214
“promises to be [my] last”:
Ibid.

214
“the frail house of old”:
Ibid.

214
“hanker at all after”:
Ibid.

215
“intellectually null”:
F. R. Leavis to Oliver Stallybrass, quoted in Furbank,
E. M. Forster
, II:144.

215
“Give us also the right”:
Hall,
The Well of Loneliness
, 506.

215
“[the novel] is a seductive”: Sunday Express
, Aug. 19, 1928.

216
“defendants have it in mind”:
Home Office to Sir Archibald Bodkin, Oct. 22, 1928, National Archives DPP 1/92.

216
“sodomy & sapphism”: The Diaries of Virginia Woolf
, III:193, Aug. 31, 1928.

216
“Soon we were telephoning”:
Virginia Woolf to Vita Sackville-West, Aug. 30, 1928; Nicholson and Trautmann, eds.,
The Letters of Virginia Woolf
, III:520.

216
“Radclyffe scolds him”:
Ibid.

216
“meritorious dull book”: The Diaries of Virginia Woolf
, III:193, Aug. 31, 1928.

216
“disgusting: partly from conventions”:
Ibid.

217
Hall’s book embraced:
Ibid.

217
“Would you like to be converted”:
Ibid.

217
“comic little letter”:
Virginia Woolf to Vita Sackville-West, Sept. 8, 1928; Nicholson and Trautmann, eds.,
The Letters of Virginia Woolf
, III:530; Forster, “The New Censorship,”
The Nation and Athenaeum
, Sept. 1, 1928.

217
“What with being blackmailed”:
EMF to Sprott, n.d., Nov. 1928, KCC.

217
“She swears I shan’t be”:
EMF to JRA, Nov. 16, 1928, HRC.

218
“summoned for advice and sympathy”:
EMF to Sprott, n.d., Nov. 1928, KCC.

218
“read the wrong book”:
Ibid.

218
“I calmed down rather quickly”:
Ibid.

218
“was always frightened”:
Daley to Furbank, date obscured, 1968.

218
“‘Love’ seems hardly the right”:
Daley,
This Small Cloud
, 135.

219
“I feel sickish”:
EMF to JRA, Nov. 13, 1930, HRC.

219
“I don’t blame you”:
EMF to JRA, Feb. 14, 1931, HRC.

219
“On Harry it is as easy”:
EMF to JRA, Jan. 3, 1928, HRC.

219
“Hammersmith is a complete”:
EMF to JRA, Jan. 5, 1928, HRC.

219
“I am so glad you are”:
EMF to JRA, n.d., August [?] 1926, HRC.

219
“rather unhappy”:
Carrington to Sprott, early March 1929, in Garnett, ed.,
Carrington
, 405.

220
“something of . . . Mae West”:
Ackerley,
My Father and Myself
, 20.

10: “A LITTLE LIKE BEING MARRIED”

221
“not really a reading man”:
Daley to Furbank, April 12, 1968.

221
“amused protective kindness”:
Daley to Furbank, date obscured, late March 1968.

222
“I must re-emphasise the need”:
EMF to JRA, Jan. 14, 1931, HRC.

222
“I am quite sure”:
EMF to Sprott, July 16, 1931; Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:105.

222
“fallen very violently”:
Ibid.

222
“fayish”:
LS to Roger Senhouse, April 21, 1931; Levy, ed.,
The Letters of Lytton Strachey
, 642.

222
“a spiritual feeling”:
EMF to Sprott, July 16, 1931; Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:105.

222
“Mr. Bucknam”:
Furbank,
E. M. Forster
, II:167.

222
“found Policeman Bob”:
Carrington to Sprott, summer 1931, KCC.

223
“completely unlike”:
Forster, “Notes on
Maurice
,” in
Maurice
, 216.

223
“Bob was the man”:
Daley to Furbank, March 21, 1968.

223
“lover and beloved”:
EMF to Sprott, Oct. 4, 1932; Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:112.

223
“Bob, aged 5”:
These entries, both from the Locked Diary, are undated, added to the verso sides of entries in 1909 and 1915.

224
“Olive”:
Alexander,
William Plomer
, 231.

224
“unguardeed moment”:
Furbank,
E. M. Forster
, II:178.

225
“John Lehmann is back”:
EMF to Sprott, Sept. 21, 1933, KCC.

225
“At Duncan [Grant]’s show”:
“Lilies,” VW to Quentin Bell, Dec. 21, 1933; Nicholson and Trautmann, eds.,
The Letters of Virginia Woolf
, V:262; “Bugger Boys,”
The Diaries of Virginia Woolf
, V:120, Nov. 30, 1937.

225
“youthful interest in everything”:
Forster,
Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
(Abinger), 196.

225
“unreal”:
Ibid., 197.

225
“chiefly occupied in saving”:
Ibid.

225
“Mrs. Newman his bedmaker”:
EMF to Malcolm Darling, Aug. 24, 1932, HRC.

226
“If he fails me”:
EMF to JRA, Nov. 10, 1932, HRC.

226
“He must be made”:
EMF to Sprott, Oct. 4, 1932, Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:112; EMF to Sprott, July 16, 1931, Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:105.

226
“We’ve got to go”:
EMF to Sprott, Oct. 11, 1932, KCC.

226
“Yesterday when I went”:
Ibid.

227
“When I cannot ‘get’”:
EMF to Sprott, Oct. 4, 1932, Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:112.

227
“the greatest imaginative novelist”:
Forster, “D. H. Lawrence,”
Nation and Athenaeum
, March 29, 1930.

227
“I have had such a shock”:
EMF to Frieda Lawrence, March 4, 1930, Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:91.

228
“I continue to read”:
EMF to JRA, Feb. 12, 1933, HRC.

228
“I wish I could”:
EMF to JRA, Jan. 10, 1933, HRC.

228
“in the hope that”:
Proctor, ed., “Introduction” to
The Autobiography of Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
, 9.

228
“My present feeling”:
GLD to EMF, July 10, 1932, KCC.

229
“Unlike the green bird”:
Forster,
A Passage to India
, 85.

229
“Although he was never”:
Forster,
Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
, 47.

229
“Devoted to [Ferdinand] Schiller”:
Ibid., 63.

229
“I have seldom been”:
Ibid., 56.

229
“I think that few”:
Ibid., 58.

230
“Mephistopheles . . . puts his head”:
Ibid., 199.

230
“rested on the constancy”:
Forster on Carpenter, in Beith, ed.,
Edward Carpenter
, 81.

230
“interest . . . the next generation”: The Diaries of Virginia Woolf
, V:314, Sept. 2, 1940.

230
“Bob’s son born”:
EMF, Locked Diary, April 21, 1933, KCC.

230
“I nearly dropped in”:
EMF to BB, Sunday [early June 1933], Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:117.

231
“Harry . . . is always yapping”:
EMF, Locked Diary, Dec. 26, 1933, KCC.

231
“I now know that”:
May Buckingham, “Some Reminiscences,” reprinted in J. H. Stape, ed.,
E. M. Forster: Interviews and Recollections
, 77.

231
“The happiest hours”:
EMF to BB, Sunday [early June 1933], Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:117.

232
“Bob met me”:
EMF to FB, July 4, 1932, KCC.

232
“I have sometime thought”:
EMF to CI, Aug. 28, 1938, Huntington; Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:158.

232
“I have been happy”:
Gardner, ed.,
Commonplace Book
(1932), 94.

233
“Yes, if the pendulum”:
EMF to CI, July 16, 1933, Huntington; Lago and Furbank, eds.,
Selected Letters
, II:118–19.

233
“put on the next”:
Parker,
Christopher Isherwood
, 277.

234
“Delighted!”:
Humphrey Carpenter,
W. H. Auden
, 176.

234
“What are buggers for?”:
Allen,
As I Walked Down New Grub Street
, 56.

234
“It’s on Thomas Mann”:
Ibid., 58.

234
“a line of affection”:
EMF to Sassoon, Nov. 6, 1933, quoted in Furbank,
E. M. Forster
, II:181.

234
“Your news, though I accept”:
EMF to Sassoon, Nov. 8, 1933, quoted ibid.

235
“he seemed quite genuine”:
EMF to JRA, Dec. 1, 1933, HRC.

Other books

The Wooden Nickel by William Carpenter
Bewitching the Werewolf by Caroline Hanson
Something Might Happen by Julie Myerson
The Death Catchers by Jennifer Anne Kogler
Pull by Kevin Waltman