Skip to main content

Items between C300 and C349, 1937 - 1940

 File
Reference Code: GBR/0272/EMF/28/1/7

Scope and Contents

(C300) E. M. Forster Looks At London, The . . . [sic] CITY OF ODD SURPRISES. Reynolds News, 9 May 1937, p. 8. Reprinted as: London Is A Muddle, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C301) A Smack for Russia? Listener, 12 May 1937, p. 943. Review of Back from the U.S.S.R., by André Gide, translated by Dorothy Busy.
(C302) Eccentric Englishwomen: VII. Luckie Buchan Spectator, 28 May 1937, pp. 986-987. Based on The Buchanites from First to Last, by Joseph Train, Blackwood, 1846. One of a series of articles by various authors.
(C304) A Conversation. Spectator, 13 August 1937, pp. 269-270. Reprinted as: Entretien in Paris, Living Age, October 1937, Vol. 353, pp. 171-173.
(C305) More Browning Letters. Listener, 13 October 1937, Supplement, No. 36, p. xv. Review of Robert Browning and Julia Wedgward, edited by Richard Curle. Reprinted as: ‘Snow’ Wedgward, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951
(C307) The Last Parade. New Writing, Autumn 1937, No. 4, pp. 1-5, . Published in November. On the Paris exhibition. Reprinted, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C308) Ducal Reminisces. The Listener, 8 December 1937, Supplement, No. 38, p. xix., review of Men, Women and Things, by the Duke of Portland. Reprinted as: A Duke Remembers, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C310) Books of the Year: From a Talk Broadcast […] On December 30. Listener, 5 January 1938, pp. 41-42.
(C313) The Rev. James Gatliff. New Statesman and Nation (London), N. S. , 9 April 1938, pp. 620, 622.
(C314) A Mediterranean Problem. Spectator, 22 April 1938, pp. 701-702. Review of D’Annunzio, by Tom Antongini. Reprinted as: A Whiff of D’Annunzio, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C315) Trees— and Peace, Manchester Evening News, 15 July 1938, p. 12.
(C316) Credo, London Mercury, Sept. 1938?
(C316) [Living Philosophies—] Two Cheers for Democracy. Nation, New York, 16 July 1938, pp. 65-68. The first essay in a series entitled ‘Living Philosophies’. Reprinted (with additions) as: Credo, London Mercury, September 1938, Vol. 38, pp. 397-404. What I Believe, Hogarth Press, 1939. What I Believe, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951
(C317) The Feast Of Tongues. Spectator, 29 July 1938, pp. 194-195. Review of Oscar Wilde, by Frank Harris, with a preface by Bernard Shaw.
(C319) Clouds Hill. Listener, 1 September 1938, pp. 426-427. Broadcast talk on the home of T. E. Lawrence. Reprinted: Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C322) The Ivory Tower. London Mercury, December 1938, Vol. 39, pp. 119-130. Reprinted: Atlantic Monthly, January 1939, Vol. 163, pp. 51-58.
(C322) The Ivory Tower. The Atlantic Monthly, January 1939, Vol. 163, pp. 51-58.
(C323) The Long Run. New Statesman and Nation, N. S., 10 December 1938, pp. 971-972. Review of Studies in a Dying Culture, by Christopher Caudwell.
(C324) The Books Of 1938: Reviewed by E. M. Forster At The Microphone On December 26. Listener, 29 December 1938, pp. 1422-1423.
(C325) Here’s Wishing! Messages Broadcast On December 26, I : E. M. Forster. Listener, 5 January 1939, p. 18. The other speakers were James Stephens, Walter de la Mare, and John Masefield.
(C326) Comment and Dream: Jew-Consciousness. New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 7 January 1939, pp. 7-8. Reprinted as: Jew-consciousness, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C327) Comment and Dream: On A Deputation. New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 14 January 1939, pp. 43-44. Reprinted: Our Deputation, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C328) How I Listen To Music— I: By E. M. Forster. Listener, 19 January 1939, p. 173. First of a series of broadcasts, the other speakers being R. H. Wilenski, P. de Lande Long, Robert Nichols, and M.D. Calvocoressi. Reprinted as: Not Listening To Music, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C329) Notes On The Way. Time and Tide, 18 March 1939, pp. 335-336. Reprinted (omitting the last paragraph on a performance of the Antigone at Cambridge) as: Racial Exercise, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951. See also (C271), (C287).
(C331) Henry Thornton (1760-1815). New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 1 April 1939, pp. 491-492. Reprinted as: Henry Thornton, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C332) Woodlanders On Devi. New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 6 May 1939, pp. 679-680.
(C333) Freedom For What? Listener, 1 June 1939, p. 1177. Review of A Handbook of Freedom, edited by Jack Lindsay and Edgell Rickword.
(C334) The 1939 State. New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 10 June 1939, pp. 888-889. Reprinted as: Post-Munich, Two Cheers for Democracy, 1951.
(C334.1) Tolerance. Picture Post, 8 July 1939
(C335) Not Looking At Art. The New Statesman And Nation, N.S., 15 July 1939, pp. 82-83. Reprinted as: Not Looking At Pictures, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C336) Books In General. New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 19 August 1939, pp. 282-283. See also (C385). [Note: Two Archival copies of this text exist in the King’s College Library]
(C337) The Trigger. Listener, 14 September 1939, p. 542. Review of Pain, Sex, and Time, by Gerald Heard. Reprinted as: Gerald Heard, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C339) They Hold Their Tongues. New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 30 September 1939, p. 453.
(C341) The Top Drawer But One. The New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 4 November 1939, p. 648. Review of Mrs Miniver, by Jan Struther. Reprinted as: Mrs Miniver, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C342) Homage To William Barnes. The New Statesman and Nation, N.S., 9 December 1939, pp.819-820. Reprinted as: William Barnes, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C343) Luncheon At Pretoria. Abinger Chronicle, January 1940, Vol. 1, pp. 15-18. Reprinted: Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C345) The Freedom of the Artist: A Discussion Between E. M. Forster and H. V. Hodson. Listener, 28 March 1940, pp. 636-637. Tenth in a series of broadcasts entitled ‘This Freedom’.
(C346) Nazism and Morals: Dangers of “Gestapo” Methods. Daily Telegraph and Morning Post, 16 April 1940, p. 6. Letter.
(C347) Blind Oak Gate. Abinger Chronicle, June 1940, Vol. 1, pp. 63-65. Incorporated (with omissions) in: The Last of Abinger, Two Cheers For Democracy, 1951.
(C348) [Review of] Diamonds To Sit On, by Ilya Ilf and Eugene Petrov, translated by Elizabeth Hill and Doris Mudie, Labour Book Service, 1940. Labour Book Service Bulletin, July 1940, No. 6, p. 3. E. M. Forster, by Rex Warner, revised by John Morris, Longmans, Green, 1960, p. 35, records that this edition of Diamonds To Sit On contains an introduction by E. M. Forster; there is no introduction to this edition or to that published by Methuen in 1930.
(C349) These “Lost Leaders”. Spectator, 5 July 1940, p. 12. Letter. See also C350.








































Dates

  • Creation: 1937 - 1940

Creator

Extent

2 envelope(s) : paper

Language of Materials

English

Finding aid date

2003-03-21 10:41:14+00:00

Repository Details

Part of the Archive Centre, King's College, Cambridge Repository

Contact:
Archivist
King's College
Cambridge CB2 1ST United Kingdom
+44 (0)1223 331444