Letter from E.M.Forster to Alec Randall, January 28, 1932

Public

Part of a collection of letters written by E.M. Forster to Sir Alec Randall. They concern, firstly, his trip to Rumania, where he stayed with the Randalls; a tour in France in 1928; and his journey home. Later letters include references to such literary people as Herbert Read, Harold Monro and T.S. Eliot, plus a mention of reading James Joyce's "Ulysses". He also refers to his visit to Africa and his sentiments about the Spanish Civil War and W.W.II. Most of the later letters are signed "Morgan". E. M. Forster was born in London. He is principally known as a novelist and was associated with the Bloomsbury Group, which included Virginia Woolf. Among his best known works are "A Room With A View" (1911) and "A Passage To India" (1924). Many of his novels have been dramatized. He also wrote short stories, drama, non-fiction and criticism. He died at King's College, Cambridge, where he had resided since the mid 1940s. His friend, Sir Alec Randall was with the British legation in Bucharest, Rumania, and was later appointed to serve in Rome. Herbert Read and T.S. Eliot are mentioned.

In Collection:
Creator Contributor Subject Language Identifier
  • EMF 8-9
Date created Resource type Rights statement Extent
  • 2 pages ; 17.5 x 22.7 cm
Geographic coverage Coordinates
  • 51.2166, -0.4329
Additional physical characteristics
  • Handwritten in black ink.
Physical repository Collection
  • E.M. Forester Collection
Provider Genre Archival item identifier
  • Accession Number: 1976-003
Fonds title Fonds identifier Is referenced by Date digitized
  • October 22, 2021
Technical note
  • Scanned on Epson Expression 10000XL at 600 DPI, images cropped & resized for Vault to be under 35MB by PD. Metadata by SC.
Rights
  • Use of this material is permitted for research and private study purposes only. For all other uses, contact University of Victoria Special Collections and University Archives.
DOI

This page supports the Zotero and Mendeley browser extensions simply click on the extension widget in your browser to save the objects citation.