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T. E. Lawrence to C. M. Doughty
14 Barton Street,
Westminster
23. 3. 22
Dear Mr. Doughty,
I did write to you
too soon. The group last night sent me a final offer of only £400. There
is precedent for this figure in the case of another living poet: and
that has outweighed my arguments for £500. If I could have used the
argument that you really needed the money they would have given the
five: it is the price paid for nice feeling. I'm very sorry for the
false expectation. In your yesterday's letter you hope they are not your
friends. I have seen five of them. One says he once met you, but he can
advance no details, and I think flatters himself. The others know only
your work. They are an informal group, like the Amis du Louvre, and
acquired e.g. the MS. of The Dynasts, a long poem by Hardy, for
the Museum. The principals each assume responsibility for a fraction of
the price. Perhaps they pay it themselves, perhaps they ask friends to
help them. Anyway they do not tell, and I'm not supposed to mention even
their names. The objects are put in the Museum labelled 'from a body of
subscribers'. I do not think you need fear their making appeals to
anyone not very able to pay.
Of course the
transaction is not possible to class commercially. The manuscript is
unique, and made rarer by the destruction of most of your others. It is
worth as little as you will sell it for: as much as anyone will give:
only in this case you preferred the British Museum as the repository,
and that limited competition. The offer made is an act of faith, or a
gamble, as you look on it. They estimate that the eventual popular
reputation of your poetry will be what their expert opinion now thinks
it. Work merely good does not always prevail, and no one on earth can
say what your manuscripts will be worth fifty years hence: possibly much
more than £400 put out at compound interest: possibly less.
Will you let me have
your reply, if possible this week? If you agree to sell (and in spite of
that missed hundred I think it a fairly good offer) I'll tell the
people. They say they will send me the money in a week after, and I
could bring it down in one of my tea-time excursions to Eastbourne, and
carry off the book when I go.
People I meet are
delighted at the Observer article. Hogarth should take a leaf out
of my bad book, and ask you to let him use it as a preface to the second
edition of his history, which will probably be one of its results!
I hope Mrs. Doughty
continues to improve.
Yours sincerely
T E Lawrence
We can discuss other
ways of making money when we meet. It is rather fun. If I had been
appointed your press-agent about 1900 I'd have grown fat on my
commission long ago!
TEL.
Note. Learning that Doughty was in financial
difficulties, Lawrence had organised the purchase of the MS for the
British Museum (now the British Library). It is thought that he
contributed much of the money himself.
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