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gri_2003_m_46_b01_f05_010

Transcribers

  1. 65314329 - det4
  2. WINNER - 65317422 - mroone6
  3. 65319444 - AnnaTee
  4. 65352765 - k8mielke
  5. 65354636 - AmateurGeorge

65314329 - det4

Your reflections on absence are very
logical but I hope that this time, on the
18th, it won't be difficult for you. As
you know I swoon with pleasure at the mere
sight of you. What I think I shall try
and do is send an encouraging poem to you
on the 17th. I am so happy that you en-
joyed my last poems. As soon as I had read your
letter this morning I wrote the poem which
accompanies this letter; inspiration is
thus simply, exactly, equated with you.
I adore your letters and have re-read many recently but think that some of your
last letters are the most expressive, the
most precious. But to go back to the theme
I started this paragraph with: much as I
miss you (see so many of my letters in the
past) I have achieved a compromise by con-
sidering your letters part of you. Not the
fullest part, but important, covetable,
stimulating, full of echoes and shadows of
your self. Since some kind of arrangement
had to be made, this is it, and each meet-
ing anew is not totally a new meeting, just
a filling out of what you have written, and
of what I remember. I move that we try
and strike the word absence from our letters.

Glad your Italian visit is working out
and dates are settling into place. I talked
with Johnson on the phone on Monday evening
and he stressed the frequency of his conver-
stations with Mother on the phone. He thinks
she is the kind of person he would 'rather

WINNER - 65317422 - mroone6

Your reflections on absence are very
logical but I hope that this time, on the
18th, it won't be difficult for you. As
you know I swoon with pleasure at the mere
sight of you. What I think I shall try
and do is send an encouraging poem to you
on the 17th. I am so happy that you en-
joyed my last poems. As soon as I had read your
letter this morning I wrote the poem which
accompanies this letter; inspiration is
thus simply, exactly, equated with you.
I adore your letters and have re-read many
recently but think that some of your
last letters are the most expressive, the
most precious. But to go back to the theme
I started this paragraph with: much as I
miss you (see so many of my letters in the
past) I have achieved a compromise by con-
sidering your letters part of you. Not the
fullest part, but important, covetable,
stimulating, full of echoes and shadows of
your self. Since some kind of arrangement
had to be made, this is it, and each meet-
ing anew is not totally a new meeting, just
a filling out of what you have written, and
of what I remember. I move that we try
and strike the word absence from our letters.

Glad your Italian visit is working out
and dates are settling into place. I talked
with Johnson on the phone on Monday evening
and he stressed the frequency of his conver-
sations with Mother on the phone. He thinks
she is the kind of person he would 'rather

65319444 - AnnaTee

Your reflections on the absence are very
logical but I hope that this time, on the
18th, it won't be difficult for you. As
you know I swoon with pleasure at the mere
sight of you. What I think I shall try
and do is send an encouraging poem to you
on the 17th. I am so happy that you en-
joyed my last poems. As soon as I had read your
letter this morning I wrote the poem which
accompanies this letter; inspiration is
thus simply, exactly, equated with you.
I adore your letters and have re-read many
recently but think that some of your
last letters are the most expressive, the
most precious. But to go back to the theme
I started this paragraph with: much as I
miss you (see so many of my letters in the
past) I have achieved a compromise by con-
siding your letters as part of you. Not the
fullest part, but important, covetable,
stimulating, full of echoes and shadows of
your self. Since some kind of arrangement
had to be made, this is it, and each meet-
ing anew is not totally a new meeting, just
a filling out of what you have written, and
of what I remember. I move that we try
and strike the word absence from our letters.

Glad your Italian visit is working out
and dates are settling into place. I talked
with Johnson on the phone on Monday evening
and he stressed the frequency of his conver-
nations with Mother on the phone. He thinks
she is the kind of person he would rather

65352765 - k8mielke

Your reflections on absence are very logical but I hope that this time, on the 18th, it won't be difficult for you. As you know I swoon with pleasure at the mere sight of you. What I think I shall try and do is send an encouraging poem to you on the 17th. I am so happy that you enjoyed my last poems. As soon as I had read your letter this morning I wrote the poem which accompanies this letter; inspiration is thus simply, exactly, equated with you. I adore your letters and have re-read many recently but think that some of your last letters are the most expressive, the most precious. But to go back to the theme I started this paragraph with: much as I miss you (see so many of my letters in the past) I have achieved a compromise by considering your letters a part of you. Not the fullest part, but important, covetable, stimulating, full of echoes and shadows of your self. Since some kind of arrangement has to be made, this is it, and each meeting anew is not totally a new meeting, just a filling out of what you have written, and of what I remember. I move that we try and strike the word absence from our letters.
Glad your Italian visit is working out and dates are settling into place. I talked with Johnson on the phone on Monday evening and he stressed the frequency of his conversations with Mother on the phone. He thinks she is the kind of person he would 'rather

65354636 - AmateurGeorge

Your reflections on absence are very
logical but I hope that this time, on the
18th, it won't be difficult for you. As
you know I swoon with pleasure at the mere
sight of you. What I think I shall try
and do is send an encouraging poem to you
on the 17th. I am so happy the you en-
joyed my last poems. As soon as I had read your
letter this morning I wrote the poem which
accompanies this letter; inspiration is
thus simply, exactly, equated with you.
I adore your letters and have re-read many
recently but think that some of your last letters are the most expressive, the
most precious. But to go back to the theme
I started this paragraph with: much as I
miss you (see so many of my letters in the
past) I have acheived a compromise by con-
sidering your letters part of you. Not the
fullest part, but important, covetable,
stimulation, full of echoes and shadows of
your self. Since some kind of arrangement
had to be made, this is it, and each meet-
ing anew is not totally a new meeting, just
a filling out of what you have written, and
of what I remember. I move that we try
and strike the word absence from our letters.

Glad your Italian visit is working out
and dates are settling into place. I talked
with Johnson on the phone on Monday evening
and he stressed the frequency of his conver-
sations with Mother on the phone. He thinks
she is the kind of person he would rather

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