Letter from Mitchell Kennerley to R. H. Hathaway, January 27, 1920 : a machine-readable transcription.


Author: Kennerley, Mitchell, 1878-1950

Creation of machine-readable version:
Susan L. Stein, University of Alberta Libraries
Creation of digital images:
Jennifer Jeffries, University of New Brunswick Libraries, Electronic Text Centre and Patti Auld, University of New Brunswick Libraries, Archives and Special Collections.
Conversion to TEI.2-conformant markup:
Susan L. Stein, University of Alberta Libraries
kilobytes
University of New Brunswick Libraries.
Fredericton, N.B. ke200127

Publicly-accessible

URL: http://www.unb.ca/Texts/Special_Collections/Hathaway.html


1997, August

Illustrations have been included from the manuscript version.

About the original source:

Letter from Mitchell Kennerley to R. H. Hathaway, January 27, 1920.


Author: Mitchell Kennerley

1 p.



The Rufus Hathaway collection of Canadian literature. Vertical file. Folder 629.


This document is imprinted with the University of New Brunswick Library stamp.

Prepared for the University of New Brunswick Libraries Electronic Text Centre.

Keywords in the header are a local Electronic Text Centre scheme to aid in establishing analytical groupings.

Library of Congress Subject Headings



1920-01-27
English non-fiction; prose LCSH 24-bit colour; 300-400 dpi.

Letter from Mitchell Kennerley to R. H. Hathaway, January 27, 1920

Page Image

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THE ANDERSON GALLERIES
[INCORPORATED]
PARK AVENUE & FIFTY-NINTH STREET
NEW YORK
January 27, 1920.
Mr. R. H.
Hathaway,
258 Garden Avenue,
Toronto, Canada.
Dear Mr. Hathaway:

I received your letter of January 8 and forwarded it to
Mrs. King, who, I understand, has written you fully on the subject. I had
a letter this morning from
Carman and he says he is getting along very
nicely. My own impression is that he will live some years, and I see no
reason why all possible money shall not be collected to keep him in comfort and peace. Carman is one of the few people who ever lived about
whom there can be no misunderstanding on this point.

I have no definite knowledge of any of Carman's poems that may have
been set to music. I have written him asking about it and will let you
know what he replies.

Yours faithfully, Mitchell Kennerley
Sherman sold his collection last week.