LAWRENCE WRITES TO HIS COUSIN FROM INDIA AND TALKS ABOUT THEIR FRIENDS THE HARDY’S
LAWRENCE
(T.[homas] E.[dward] 1888-1935, ‘Lawrence of Arabia’ British soldier, scholar and author of ‘The Seven Pillars of Wisdom’)
Superb long Autograph Letter Signed (‘T. E. Shaw’) to his cousin Milicent Lilian Teresa FETHERSTONEHAUGH
(1894-1971, his cousin and a friend of Thomas and Emma Hardy) saying that it “was nice to think of Dorset again, as I read your letter. Miramshah is the Clouds' Hill only in that we burn wood for fuel. Otherwise it is a tiny brick fort, all ringed with barbed wire, in which 25 R.A.F. and 700 India troops live very shut up and peaceful lives. They will not let us go beyond the barbed wire and the aerodrome: so when I want fresh air, I take it in the air, literally! We are 3000 feet up, and it is cold. The mountains all about us are snow-dressed for their top 4000 feet. in the hollow, with us, there is no snow and very little frost: but it is cold enough to make an excuse for wood fires: and they are very luxurious. Afghanistan is only ten miles away. The newspapers in England seem to have had a burst of curiosity about me lately, and to have put me in all sorts of queer places. Only they haven't said Miramshah. Yet Miramshah is quite a queer place. I hope to come home in 1930. The delay is for a film about me to be produced and forgotten: and the film-magnate who proposed to do it has turned coy: probably he is short of money. I hope so, for perhaps he'll give it up: and that will be a great relief to me. I'm glad you see Mrs Hardy. She must have felt very unrooted when T. H. went: almost worse than you and Okers Wood, for T.H. must have been a great experience, as a house-mate: and the shadow of his reputation will be very heavy on her while she lives. Her first volume on T.H., is, I see, out: I've read bits of it. If you see her, will you say that I was delighted with the way they ran? It struck me, as once before, that it was as good as another book by the old man. I do wish people didn't die. He was worth going round the world just to see for five minutes: and now it's all over. A stupid little letter this: but I'd defy Samuel Pepys to fill a diary at Miramshah. It's like being in cold storage. My regards to B and the Morris! Yours, T. E. Shaw'...”, 4 sides 8vo., with original autograph envelope, 338171 A/C Shaw R.A.F., Miramshah Fort, Waziristan, India, 11th November
Item Date:
1928
Stock No:
41759
£17500
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LE GALLIENNE
(Richard, 1866-1947, Writer)
Autograph letter signed to Mr Bloom
thanking him for his "kind letter about my article on Grand Allen. It was a very friendly thought of yours and I am exceedingly glad to think that the article pleased so near a friend of a man, who, I think was the best friend I ever had, and who was certainly, all round, the most beautiful nature I ever encountered ..." and saying that when he is next in Salisbury he will "not forget that I have a kind friend there ...", 2 sides 8vo., The Old Manor, Chiddingford, March, no year
Item Date:
0
Stock No:
38787
£175
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LE GALLIENNE
(Richard, 1866-1947, Writer)
Fine signature on a card
on the back of Miss Twyman's calling card with an address in Chicago, 3¼" x 2¼", no place, no date
Item Date:
0
Stock No:
41434
£35
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LE QUEUX
(Wiliam Tufnell, 1864-1927, Novelist, Traveller and Journalist)
Signature and subscription from the foot of a Typed Letter Signed,
no place, no date, c.
Item Date:
1910
Stock No:
17733
£15
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LEE
(Sir Sidney, 1859-1926, Shakespearian Scholar)
Autograph note in the third person
sending compliments and a request for a receipt for his cheque, 1 side 8vo., 108a Lexham Gardens, Kensington, 17th June
Item Date:
1907
Stock No:
1692
£15
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