Lot Closed
December 8, 05:15 PM GMT
Estimate
7,000 - 10,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Hemingway, Ernest
Autograph lett🍷er signed ("Lovingly, Ernest"), to h༺is sister Marcelline Hemingway ("Dear Marc") at Nantucket, Massachusetts
One page (202 x 127 mm) on blue-ruled tablet paper, [Oak Park, Illinois], 9 June [1909], docketed in upper right margin "From Ernest Hemingway—1909—Oak Park Ill" and on the verso "Keep this 1st letter of Ernests to me, which is Marcelline" and "Ernie was almost 10 …," accompanied by an autograph letter signed by Dr. Clarence Hemingway ("Your Papa—Clarencඣe") to Marcelline, 4 pages (163 x 1🐬32 mm) on a bifolium of his monogrammed stationery, Oak Park, 18 June 1909, and with the original envelope in the hand of Clarence Hemingway with the later docket "Enclosing letter from Ernest age 10—re School—to Marc—June 9, 1909."
One of the earliest known letters from the future giant of modern literature: nine-year-old Ernest Hemingway to his eleven-year-old sister. The ongoing Cambridge University Press edition of The Letters of Ernest Hemingway prints only three letters and one postcard with an earlier date of composition, all of which were sent to either his father or mother. The present letter was written when Ernest was at home with his father and two younger sisters in Oak Park, while Marcelline was vacationing with their mother in Nantucket: "Wed June 9. Dear Marc, Our room won in the field day against Miss Koontz room. Al Bersham knocked two oꩲf Cha♒ndlers teeth out in a scrap and your dear gentle Miss hood had Mr. smith hold him while she lickt him with a raw hide strap. Lovingly, Ernest." As the late Hemingway specialist Bart Auerbach observed, "Already the fourth-grader shows an ability to handle irony and a penchant for writing about violent action." Mary L. Hood was the principal of the Oliver Wendell Holmes Elementary School in Oak Park; Flora Koontz and Warren R. Smith were teachers at the school
Dr. Hemingway's letter to Marcelline provides family news mostly having to do with Sunday School. He reports that seven-year-old Ursula Hemingway "spoke her piece very nicely" at the Children's Day observance—"a combination church and Sunday School service" during which Ernest was allowed to stay home. He closes by wishing God's blessings for Marcelline and his wife, "Gracie darl💞ing," and looking forward to the family soon being together at Windemere, the summer cottage he built on the shore of Michigan's Walloon Lake—and which was to play a large role in Hemingway's development as a man and a writer.
Marcelline Hemingway (1898–1963), the recipient of the letters in this and the following lots, was the oldest of the six Hemingway children. Though eighteen months older than Ernest, she was held back from entering grade school so she and her brother could be together in the same grade; they both graduated from high school in June 1917. Although they moved apart later in life—as demonstrated by Hemingway's July 1937 letter (see lot 33)—the two were inseparable throughout their early years. Marcelline wrote about the Hemingway family and growing up with Ernest in her memoir At the Hemingways: A Family Portrait, first published in 1962, a year after her brother’s death. It covers the period up to their father’s suicide in 1928. An expanded edition, which adds the Ernest-Marcelline correspondence, was issued by the University of Idaho Press in 1999. Displaying a nice way with irony herself, Marcel🗹line described the memoir as "the simple story of what life was like in our happy home when we were children and growing up."
REFERENCE:
Letters, ed. Spanier, et al., 1:5; At the Hemingways, p. 261
PROVENANCE:
Marcelline Hemingway (recipient; by ꧃descent to her son) — John Edmonds Sanford (Sotheby's New York, 10 December 2003, lot 89)