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AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED (ALS) to His Mother

AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED (ALS) to His Mother

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AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED (ALS) to His Mother

by CRANE, Hart

  • Used
  • Signed
  • first
Condition
Creases from folding, otherwise about Fine
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Fleetwood, Pennsylvania, United States
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About This Item

Columbia Hts [New York], 16 November 1924. Letter. Creases from folding, otherwise about Fine. Very scarce, closely written two-page AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED with superb content two years before the publication of his first book, WHITE BUILDINGS, to his mother, addressed as "Dear Grace." In part: "Another very active week. Luncheon with someone different every day, -- and nearly always someone to take up the evening. But I have been so interested in several incompleted poems that I've sat up very late working on them, and so by the advent of Saturday felt pretty tuckered out. There's no stopping for rest, however, when one is the 'current' of creation, so to speak, and so I've spent all of today at one or two stubborn(?) lines. My work's becoming known for its formal perfection and hard glowing polish, but most of those qualities, I'm afraid, are due to a great deal of labor and patience on my part. Besides working on part of my BRIDGE I'm engaged in writing a series of six sea poems called VOYAGES (they are also love poems) and one of these you will soon see published in '1924,' a magazine published at Woodstock and which I think I told you about heretofore." Crane than writes a poetic paragraph describing the weather and the river before talking about Eugene O'Neill: "O'Neil [sic] has a new play at the Greenwich Village Theatre -- a tragedy called DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS which I'll see sometime this week. He and Agnes were in town for the premiere and I called on them at their rooms in the Lafayette one evening.... He seems to have Europe in applause more than America. That's true of Waldo Frank's work in France, also, where he has been much translated and more seriously considered, far more so, than here at home. The American public is still strangely unprepared for its men of higher talents, while Europe looks more and more to America for the renascence of a creative spirit." Crane is happy to get his mother's letters and rejoices in her having "a lyric evening," dancing and drinking. "I still like to think of those five o'clock booze parties we had in the office and how giddily I sometimes came home for dinner. You were very charming and sensible about it all, too, and I thank my stars that while you are naturally an inbred Puritan you also know and appreciate the harmless gambols of an exuberant nature like my own. It all goes to promise that we shall have many merry times together later sometime when we're a little closer geographically." He concludes: "My -- but how the wind is blowing. Rain, too, on the window now! There was a wonderful fog for about 18 hours last week. One couldn't even see the garden close behind the house -- to say nothing of the piers. All night long there were distant tinklings, buoy bells and siren warnings from river craft. It was like wakening into a dream land in the early dawn -- one wondered where one was with only a milky light in the window and that vague music from a hidden world. Next morning while I dressed it was clear and glittering as usual. Like champagne, or a cold [?] to look it. Such a world! Love, as always, your Hart." With the envelope hand-addressed by Crane to "Grace Hart Crane" and SIGNED by him with his address. Also with a 1964 invoice and letter from bookseller Henry W. Wenning. An especially significant piece of Crane's extensive family correspondence, this letter has often been reprinted, appearing specifically in Thomas S. W. Lewis (editor), LETTERS OF HART CRANE AND HIS FAMILY (NY: Columbia UP, 1974), on pages 371-373. And while Lewis's Calendar of Letters indicates that the original is owned by Columbia, recent correspondence with Columbia reveals that that published claim is incorrect: this letter somehow escaped Columbia's acquisition of the Crane archive in the 1950s. A key item of Crane's that has been off the market for nearly 60 years. For the four years preceding Crane's suicide in 1932, Grace Crane had not spoken to her son. She nevertheless became his literary executor and devoted her life to promoting his work.

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Details

Seller
Charles Agvent US (US)
Seller's Inventory #
021418
Title
AUTOGRAPH LETTER SIGNED (ALS) to His Mother
Author
CRANE, Hart
Format/Binding
Letter
Book Condition
Used - Creases from folding, otherwise about Fine
Quantity Available
1
Place of Publication
Columbia Hts [New York]
Date Published
16 November 1924
Keywords
Signed, Autograph Letter, Association, Modern First Editions, Hart Crane, Modern Poetry, 20th Century American Literature

Terms of Sale

Charles Agvent

All books subject to prior sale. Payment with order; institutions may be billed. Postage additional: $11.00 for the first book, $6.00 each thereafter. Overseas postage billed at approximate cost. Pennsylvania residents must add 6% sales tax. Mastercard, Visa, and American Express accepted. We are also open to reasonable payment terms. A book may be returned within 7 days of receipt for any reason provided it is in the same condition as sent and prior notice is given. Please insure returns for their full value.

About the Seller

Charles Agvent

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2003
Fleetwood, Pennsylvania

About Charles Agvent

We carry a diverse and select stock with major specialties including Modern and 19th Century Literary First Editions, Signed Books & Autographs (especially Presidential and Literary), and Limited Editions Club books. We have been in business since 1987 and are proud to be members of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America (ABAA) and the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers (ILAB).

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