The Works of George Santayana

Author: David Spiech Page 257 of 283

Letters in Limbo ~ May 26, 1931

Aristotle_Altemps_Inv8575To Benjamin Apthorp Gould Fuller
C/o Brown Shipley & Co 123 Pall Mall
Rome. May 25/6, 1931

After I had finished the proofs of your Aristotle, the two volumes arrived, and I have now read the Socrates and Plato. I am partly reconciled to your intentional American and jocular medium; for I see that really you are not writing a history of Greek Philosophy at all, but a review of what the professors—chiefly English or Scottish—now say about it. You might have carried the joke out, and composed a perfect satire on all these controversies, on the theme which you indicate in several places, that the two and seventy sects come out by the same door wherein they went. And this is always the back door. All these professors are outsiders and interlopers, and the first thing to do if you had wished to study the ancients themselves should have been to become a believer in them, and to have let all these modern egotistical critics lie buried in their own dust. Plato and Aristotle speak for themselves, if you trust them, and if you want guidance, you have it, within the school and its living traditions, in the Neo Platonists, the Arabians, and the Scholastics.

From The Letters of George Santayana:  Book Four, 1928-1932.  Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2003.
Location of manuscript: The Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge MA

Letters in Limbo ~ May 25, 1927

N005_stablesTo Charles Augustus Strong
Hotel Bristol
Rome. May 25, 1927

Thank you for your card. I am glad you liked Cory—not that I altogether like him myself—but he is going to make himself useful in clearing my Augean stables, and it is as well that he shouldn’t be disagreeable to my friends.

From The Letters of George Santayana:  Book Three, 1921-1927.  Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2002.
Location of manuscript: Rockefeller Archive Center, Sleepy Hollow NY

Letters in Limbo ~ May 24, 1949

Talisman_-Mathilde_Kschessinska_-Niriti_-1909_-4To Allison Delarue
Via Santo Stefano Rotondo, 6
Rome. May 24, 1949.

Dear Mr. Delarue,
Your kind note and Eugene Berman’s designs make me think of Paris and the Russian Ballet of fifty years ago rather than of Italy where I live pleasantly but far from all artists and festive shows.

They also make me think of an old friend who I understand has become a sort of patron empressario for ballets in New York, George de Cuevas.  His wife is the daughter of Charles Strong, with whom I had my pied-â-terre in Paris for many years; and I took his place (he being at a sanatorium in Switzerland) at his daughter’s marriage. You see how modern the existence of an old recluse may become in this “age-of-troubles”.

The Russian ballet was, of all modern novelties, the one that seemed to me to set the arts really on the highway again. But have they kept to it?

Yours sincerely,
G Santayana

From The Letters of George Santayana:  Book Eight, 1948-1952.  Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2008.
Location of manuscript: Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton University Libraries, Princeton NJ

Letters in Limbo ~ May 23, 1931

Republique-allegorieTo George Sturgis
Rome. May 23, 1931

I am not in sympathy with Spanish republicans; but things probably will have to be much worse before they begin to be better. The dictatorship in Spain had the misfortune of being associated with military, royal, aristocratic, and clerical interests—all Fascism is not. It therefore couldn’t attract the popular and socialistic currents, which can’t be safely ignored. They have now overflowed; but there may not be much left except mud when they subside. Provincial independence may survive: and that may be a good thing morally.

From The Letters of George Santayana:  Book Four, 1928-1932.  Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2003.
Location of manuscript: The Houghton Library, Harvard University, Cambridge MA

Letters in Limbo ~ May 21, 1948

george-santayana-4To Daniel MacGhie Cory
Via Santo Stefano Rotondo, 6
Rome. May 21, 1948

I also had a new admirer in Texas, named Dick Lyon, who prefers “Normal Madness” to all my writings, is 21 years old and threatens to come to see me! I am made happy by things like that; and that British philosophers dislike me is perfectly natural. I belong to a different phase of reflexion, and glad rather than grieved at not being in the spirit of my times. Toynbee, however, seems to me my contemporary in history. In philosophy he is simply a time-server.

From The Letters of George Santayana:  Book Eight, 1948-1952.  Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2008.
Location of manuscript: Butler Library, Columbia University, New York NY

Page 257 of 283

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén