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Henry James

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Autographs Start Price:NA Estimated At:2,500.00 - 3,500.00 USD
Henry James

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Auction Date:2018 Dec 05 @ 18:00 (UTC-5 : EST/CDT)
Location:236 Commercial St., Suite 100, Boston, Massachusetts, 02109, United States
ALS - Autograph Letter Signed
ANS - Autograph Note Signed
AQS - Autograph Quotation Signed
AMQS - Autograph Musical Quotation Signed
DS - Document Signed
FDC - First Day Cover
Inscribed - “Personalized”
ISP - Inscribed Signed Photograph
LS - Letter Signed
SP - Signed Photograph
TLS - Typed Letter Signed
Significant collection of seven ALSs and one TLS from Henry James, signed “H. J.,” “H. James,” or “Henry James,” 27 total pages, dated between 1895 and 1915, addressed to friends and family members with content documenting important events in history. Highlights include:

One letter, April 16, 1912, written to his brother’s wife Alice, in part: “Just a word, late tonight, to thank you for your good letter, & Bill for his note about his coming up on Thursday. Kindly say to him for me that I count on his lunching with me on Thursday…This black horror of the Titanic almost crushes one with the tragedy of it. It haunts & dismays, sickens & overwhelms. I knew but one of the victims, dear Frank Millet, yet it is too horrible.” Frank Millet was a sculptor and painter.

Another letter, dated April 29, 1912, addressed to his brother “Bill,” in part: “I have your good note, as I had a dear genial letter from Alice on Saturday & I shall tenderly welcome you tomorrow. Your mother’s letter is a blessing as always, though she does want you to go furniture-hunting in bleak Lancashire or Yorkshire or wherever it is.”

On August 20, 1915, James writes to George Russell, in part: “I ought before this—much before—to have thanked you for your greeting, but I have had such a high tide of warm friendliness to breast—great is the luxury of being kept so afloat, or made so to feel that one will be fished up again if one sinks! It was extraordinary that there was still so much of me left outstanding to be absorbed, but I feel absolutely engulfed and assimilated now.” James’s letter is evidently in reply to Russell’s letter of welcome and congratulation upon his becoming a naturalized British subject in July 1915.

A TLS written by James on May 29, 1915, addressed to Alice and commenting on German aggression at sea, in part: “My impression is that I lost nothing in the way of correspondence by the Lusitania horror…Of course we are at my present writing as much in the dark here about Germany’s possible black designs upon the U.S. as you were twelve days ago, and even this new assault, the apparent torpedoing of the Nebraskan, of such recent occurrence, does as yet little to illuminate. If it shall truly appear, on complete investigation, that it is really the atrocious torpedo act that it seems, it will be conclusive to my poor mind that those blackguards do wish to drag us into the War by planned outrage, in order to impair the tremendous financial solvency that we enjoy and the sight of which, in her own virtually bankrupt state, fills her with rage and hate, as representing a command of the situation on our part at the conclusion of things (if they ever do conclude) and that she has therefore conceived the design of diminishing so far as possible. However; these next days will show something, and odious, verily hideous, as it may be to have up to a certain point to temporize with the brutes, I can’t but be considerably affected by what I believe to be true here, viz: the fact that the Allies really for their own sakes want America to keep out far more than they want her to come in, believing that she can so, for months to come, help them much more. It is all very dark and mixed and portentous—but part of it will be ancient history by the time you get this.”

The 1895 ALS to Arthur C. Benson is housed in a custom-made folder. Included with the collection are two letters from James's housekeeper Burgess Noakes, dated May 21 and 28, 1915, which offer a vivid account of fighting in the trenches and of Noakes’s wounding and subsequent hospitalization. In overall fine condition. Accompanied by seven original mailing envelopes, six of which are addressed in James’s own hand.