Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (Bose, Aamalendu)
Scope & Content:
Correspondence: Tambimuttu to Bose (22 March, 1948); Bose to Tambimuttu (manuscript, Dacca, Eastern Pakistan, 10 May, 1948); Bose to Tambimuttu (manuscript, Dacca, 22 May, 1948); Tambimuttu to Bose (31 May, 1948).
Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (Bowra, C M)
Scope & Content:
Correspondence: Tambimuttu to Bowra (13 April, 1948); Bowra to Tambimuttu (manuscript, Oxford, 14 April [1948]): 'I fear I have nothing to say. So I must refuse.'
Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (Browne, E Martin)
Scope & Content:
Letters from Tambimuttu and from March to Browne: 10 March, 23 March, 19 April, 28 April, and 9 July, 1948. Letters from Browne (manuscript, London) to Tambimuttu and to March: 13 March (written by Vincent Pearmain on behalf of Browne), 23 March, 24 April, 8 July, 10 July, and 23 October, 1948.
Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (Coghill, Nevill)
Scope & Content:
Letters from Tambimuttu (13 April) and from March (4 May, 1948) to Coghill. Letters from Coghill (manuscript, Oxford) to Tambimuttu and to March: 14 April, 3 May, 8 May, 11 July, and (typescript) 22 October, 1948.
Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (Curtius, Ernst Robert)
Scope & Content:
Contribution from Curtius in German ('T S Eliot und Deutschland') and as translated into English by Richard March, with the following correspondence: March to Curtius (25 February, 1948); Curtius to [March] (manuscript, Bonn, 1 March, 1948); March to Curtius (9 March, 1948); March to Curtius (1...
Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (De la Mare, Walter)
Scope & Content:
Correspondence with De la Mare, who is unable to contribute ('I have been ill for some months…'): [Tambimuttu] to De la Mare (8 March, 1948); De la Mare to Tambimuttu (manuscript, Penn, 15 March, 1948); [Tambimuttu] to De la Mare (18 March, 1948).
Richard March: T S Eliot: A Symposium (Demant, The Rev Dr V A)
Scope & Content:
Correspondence: March to Demant (3 March, 1948); Demant to March (manuscript, London, 4 March, 1948), declining on the grounds of 'knowing his religious position to be of so delicate a poise that anything said about it by me would be impertinent, misleading and irreverent'.