<

Browse Items (151 total)

MSS083-I-1-a-JM-to-Daryl-Hine-19690117.jpg
James Merrill letter to Daryl Hine including Merrill's realization that he's using psychoanalytic thinking as a tool for enchantment rather than demystification, making life and art even more intertwined (see also "Under Libra" draft).

Series_I-1-a_JM_to_Daryl_Hine_Nov_17_1964-001.jpg
James Merrill letter to Daryl Hine describing his and David Jackson's latest sexual partner. Merrill mentions his new relationship with Strato Mouflouzelis and also complains of spiritual and historical debates with Tony Harwood.

See also Journal…

MSS083_I_1_b_Mona_Van_Duyn_to_Merrill_19640624.jpg
Mona Van Duyn letter to James Merrill in which Van Duyn requests on behalf of Washington University Libraries to start collecting Merrill's literary papers at Washington University. Van Duyn’s personal inquiry persuaded Merrill to accept the…

Series_I-1-b_Kimon_Friar_to_JM_Jun_14_1962-001.jpg
Kimon Friar letter to James Merrill, airing his grievances and declaring simple friendship between them is impossible, coming after a decade of a "stiff, formal relationship" for the former lovers.

JM_to_David_Jackson_Sep_1962-001.jpg
James Merrill letter to David Jackson with a poem, drawings, and a photo Merrill made for Jackson's 40th birthday.

Harry-Ford-to-Lawrence-Condon-Mar_4_1962_001.jpg
Photostat copy of Harry Ford letter to Lawrence Condon announcing that year's Ingram Merrill Foundation awards. Recipients included Daryl Hine and Derek Walcott.

MSS083-I-2-a-i-JM-to-HIP-19550902-001.jpg
Typed letter from James Merrill to his mother Hellen Ingram Plummer, explaining the spirit Ephraim and what Merrill is learning about patrons, representatives, and other topics.

JM_to_David_Jackson_1953-001.jpg
This James Merrill postcard to David Jackson is one of the first mentions of Jackson in Merrill's Papers. The postcard was written shortly after they first met, and Merrill is wondering when he will see Jackson again.

JM_to_Hellen_Ingram_Merrill-032.jpg
James Merrill letter to Hellen Ingram Merrill with a poem draft inspired by Hans Lodeizen, shortly after his death. This later turned into "The Country of a Thousand Years of Peace," a pastoral elegy that imagined a world "under the world."

Series_I-1-b_Hans_Lodeizen_silhouette_with_correspondence_from_HL_to_JM_on_verso_Oct._14_1949_003.jpg
Hans Lodeizen silhouette with correspondence from Lodeizen to James Merrill on verso. The silhouette sat in Merrill's study for many years.
Output Formats

atom, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-json, omeka-xml, rss2