Establishing a Text: The Emily Dickinson
Papers
by
Thomas H. Johnson
[*]
It was fifteen years ago this month that I first saw the
manuscript volume which Edward Taylor had assembled during his long
life as pastor in Westfield, Massachusetts. He had labeled it his
"Poetical Works," and bequeathed it at the time of his death in
1729 to his descendants with the injunction that the poems should
never be published. At the time, I thought the problems ahead were
very challenging. And so, no doubt, they were. First of all, would
scholars and lay critics share my belief that Taylor deserved to be
published? Would the Corporation of Yale University—the legal
heirs—grant permission in the light of Taylor's prohibition?
Could one learn to read Taylor's handwriting? Most important, would
the pattern of a poet emerge? As I say, this was several years ago,
and seems at this remove, when all the questions are answered, a
simple story. For there was but one heir: a notable institution
that seeks advancement of learning. There was but one manuscript:
a 400-page volume assembled by the author in orderly fashion. The
handwriting was never, or almost never, an obstacle. And there was
no copyright problem at all.
With Emily Dickinson I again feel challenged, and all the
problems seem even more complicated. Perhaps they are. Or perhaps
I'm beginning again. In either event, I accept the challenge and
enjoy the fun. Though Dickinson never requested that her poetry
remain unpublished, the fact is that at the time of her death in
1886 her poems were still in manuscript. The mere handful published
before then either were issued surreptitiously or were anonymous.
She bequeathed them, along with her other effects, to her sister
Lavinia, who with passionate singleness of purpose determined that
they should be known, since to her, at least, Emily was a poet. Had
the poems been left untouched until 1950, then to be transferred
intact to a
learned institution, the parallel with Taylor would be reasonably
obvious. At this point the analogy breaks down.
All who have had access to material touching upon Emily
Dickinson's life and writing agree—I think without
exception—that she knew during her twenties that she was
uncommonly gifted; that by the time she was thirty-one, when she
sought advice from Thomas Wentworth Higginson in the now famous
letters written in April, 1862, she did indeed crave assurance
regarding a talent which at times literally overwhelmed her. "Alone
I cannot be," she wrote at this time in a remarkable poem:
Alone I cannot be;
The hosts do visit me,
Recordless company
Who baffle key.
How was this gift to be shared? She must have been somewhat
prepared to accept Higginson's hesitation to advise publication,
for it matched the opinion of other writers and critics whom she
knew and respected, gentlemen who knew something of her writing,
notably Samuel Bowles and Josiah Gilbert Holland. She should delay
submitting any letters to the world, they all told her in effect,
until she had learned "control." Since she could no more "control"
the quality of the hosts who visited her than she could alter her
wren-like size, she must therefore, in her own lifetime at any
rate, sublimate her desire for public recognition, however
compelling the wish for it may have been. That the longing was
present seems beyond doubt. In the first place, it was within the
months just preceding her first letter to Higginson that she began
to make copies of her poems, presumably from original drafts that
were then destroyed.
These early original drafts do not now exist and there is no record
that they survived her. Perhaps she disposed of them as, one by
one, she transcribed them into packets or fascicles.
Written fair, these assemblages of anywhere from ten to twenty
transcribed verses are the gatherings, threaded loosely at the
spine, which she laid away in her cherry bureau. The number of
poems so transcribed during the years 1861-62-63 is very large
indeed. On the evidence of stationery and of handwriting—and much
will be said about both later—this large body of verse, fully
half of all her extant poems, belongs in these three years. A
packet or two may have been completed as early as 1858, but there
are none at all for the years preceding. In fact there is not to my
knowledge a single poem which in its present transcription can be
safely assigned an earlier date.
The conclusion therefore is inevitable either that she wrote
verses at white heat for a period of three or four years at the
turn of the decade as
she passed her thirtieth year, or that the packets assembled at
that time represent fair copies made from drafts which had been
accumulating for the previous eight or ten years, roughly from the
time she was twenty. Unless the originals, which certainly must
have existed, are recoverable—and there is no reason to think
they are—the issue can never be resolved by direct evidence. It
is outside the province of this paper to try conclusions, and the
process of editing the Dickinson papers has not yet advanced to the
point where final speculations are warranted. I cite the problem,
however, as a major example of the nature of the work involved in
establishing a provenance of Emily Dickinson's poetry and the order
of its composition. The task is further complicated by the fact
that she seems to have had no discoverable design in the order of
the packets or of the poems within a packet,
and that since her death the packets have been handled, separated,
and reassembled by several hands. The possibility of confusing the
original order—if one did in fact exist—has been multiplied
by
each handling. If these packets represent Emily Dickinson's copying
of her earlier drafts, and if the earlier drafts are irrecoverable,
then an exact chronology of actual composition can never be
established. A
terminus ad quem date must therefore,
certainly for the most part, be all that we can expect for the
poems which we conjecture she composed in her twenties.
So far I have emphasized Emily Dickinson's compulsion to write
poetry and to preserve it as she wrote it, with its half-rimes,
broken stanzas, unexpected figures, even though the advisers she
consulted counseled greater smoothness and regularity, with fewer
oddities of thought. I have pointed out the difficulties that beset
an editor of her poems who attempts to establish chronology, at
least down to 1863 when she seems to have been convinced that
publication in her own lifetime was out of the question. At about
this time she began to develop a new medium for her verse, and a
way of sharing it with her friends. She incorporated whole poems or
parts of them in almost every letter she wrote. Such had not been
markedly true earlier. She had always been a notable letter writer,
from the time that her earliest extant letter, written to her
brother Austin when she was eleven, shadowed forth the sensitive
perceptiveness and originality which are her special genius.
By the time she was thirty her contact with the world, except for
the few members of her immediate family, was almost solely through
correspondence. This she now freighted with poetry. Complete poems
might thus be conveyed. Or it might be but two lines, or a quatrain
from some longer poem recently transcribed into a packet, but here
adapted by the change of a pronoun to apply to a particular
recipient or situation. Sometimes the poems are archly disguised as
prose.
From an editorial point of view such readings must be treated as
variants. Often a letter is solely a poem; it usually is without
salutation, but is signed "Emily." The text of one such was
recently acquired by the Library of Congress. It consists of two
quatrains, and the handwriting as well as the content suggest that
it was inspired by a homesick mood during her enforced stay in
Cambridge where in 1864 she underwent eye treatment. It is written
in pencil, because during these months the physician forbade her to
use a pen.
Away from Home are Some and I—
An Emigrant to be
In a Metropolis of Homes
Is easy, possibly—
The Habit of a Foreign Sky
We—difficult—acquire
As Children, who remain in Face
The more their Feet retire.
Emily.
The poem was first published in the 1894 edition of the
Letters among those, Mrs. Todd notes, "sent to the Hollands
at various times." Presumably all the Holland letters published in
1894 were returned to Mrs. Holland and subsequently destroyed, but
the poem as it appears in the 1931 edition of the Letters is
printed as two quatrains (not as in 1894 as a single eight-line
stanza), and offers an alternative reading for the fourth line.
Presumably therefore Mrs. Todd had seen another version before she
brought out the 1931 edition.
She sent this letter-poem to some member of her family in
Amherst, probably to Sue, her brother Austin's wife. It presents a
textual problem that is not unusual, and one that is especially
interesting because it may never be satisfactorily solved. The
Library of Congress holograph is the only manuscript version I know
to be extant. It differs from the published versions chiefly in its
fourth line which reads "Is easy, possibly." ("An Emigrant to be /
In a Metropolis of Homes / Is easy, possibly"—not "Is common
possibility.") And it offers no alternative reading.
At this point an editorial footnote is demanded, and unless
further information alters the conclusion, it will go something
like this: "The letters to Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Holland, published in
1894, were returned to Mrs. Holland after they were transcribed,
and presumably were destroyed. Access to a second manuscript, with
an alternate reading offered for the fourth line, must have
occurred before 1931. The single-stanza version Dickinson sent the
Hollands probably substituted common for
easy, and
may have shown no stanza division. Such variants in
wording and stanzaic form are not exceptional when the same
letter-poem is written to more than one correspondent. Unless the
hypothetical second manuscript proves to be extant, and can confirm
the reading of the 1931 text, one queries the substitution of
possibility for
possibly. Is it a copyist's or
printer's error? It renders the line meaningless and destroys the
meter."
The purpose of any editorial task is to establish as definitive
a text as possible, and to give it a chronology. For Emily
Dickinson, it will be to edit all poems and letters known to exist,
to give them order, and to place in context, as far as possible,
those which, once published, were ultimately destroyed. Of the near
2000 poems known to have been written—most of them already
published—a very large number exist in holograph. Of the some
1200 letters, a much greater percentage are still unpublished; and
of those in print, a great many were lost or destroyed subsequent
to publication. For example, Emily Dickinson's correspondence with
her cousins, Fanny and Lou Norcross, was fairly voluminous. It
covered many years and was particularly intimate on a domestic
level. The spinster cousins, shy by nature, permitted use of the
letters for the 1894 edition with the proviso that every personal
allusion to them or to others be deleted.
On that basis the letters appeared, so blue-penciled as at times to
be fairly uninterpretable. They were then returned to the sisters,
and in the manner deemed proper for families of their status, were
destroyed at the time of their death. Much that would help
interpret other letters, or give better insight into Emily herself,
is thus irrecoverable. The Norcross letters, and others which
suffered a like fate, will continue to tantalize, never explain.
But the large number of letters that do still exist are not only
intrinsically important (for Emily Dickinson takes rank as a letter
writer) but are of tremendous importance in understanding her verse
and helping to give it a chronology.
Probably no part of the editing of the Dickinson papers is more
exacting than that which involves establishing chronology. Emily
dated nothing after 1850, and after her death Lavinia with
characteristic thoroughness burned all letters written to
Emily. Three possibilities are open for assigning dates to the
letters. First there is internal evidence. If it is direct, it is
conclusive: "Father died a year ago today." But it often is
circumstantial. "Perhaps the flowers wilted," she says in a letter
written presumably in late summer, 1880, "because they did not like
the Pelham water." The Amherst water supply was first piped in from
Pelham earlier in that summer. Second, there is the handwriting.
And finally there is the paper that she used. The degree to which
these latter two possibilities can be effective is proportionate to
the mass of manuscripts which can be studied. For Dickinson the
volume is large. I do not hesitate to conjecture
that her manuscripts can be dated within a twelvemonth, when the
handwriting is checked against the evidence of the paper groups. I
will shortly discuss paper groups. Let me say something here about
Emily Dickinson's handwriting.
A scholar's first reaction to placing dependence upon
handwriting as a guide to dating a manuscript is apprehensive
skepticism. Of course handwriting changes, but can the changes be
interpreted in a chronology? I knew at the start that I would be
compelled to seek an answer to the question, but I began with no
assurance I would be led to conclusions which could be accepted.
There are too many human factors. People are subject to moods which
handwriting reflects. You write one way when you are rested, or
another when you are in haste. The size of letters may vary with
the size of the sheet written on, depending on how much you wish to
say in a given space. The form and shape of the characters depend
also upon the implement you use, as well as the quality of the
stationery. A sharp, stiff pen gives results very different from
those formed by a stubby pencil. A glossy ledger sheet permits a
movement of arm, hand, and fingers that rough, resistant linen will
not allow.
Absorbent foolscap is something different still. Finally, I
thought, let anyone allow a manuscript of his own, which he has no
recollection of ever writing, to be placed before him for dating
solely on the basis of the calligraphy; how close can he come?
Within five years? within ten? Perhaps not even that. And if not,
the use of handwriting will be more of a hazard than a help in
attempting to establish a chronology for a poet, where the purpose
is no less than to discover the growth of an artist.
Yet when I had begun the task, which I knew was necessary to
undertake even though the results after many tedious and
discouraging hours might only lead into a blind alley, I found
trustworthy patterns emerging. And now, after a year of intensive
study of the Dickinson handwriting, covering the span of her years,
I feel confident that great reliability can be placed upon a
chronology that derives from it. Bear in mind that we are not
working in a vacuum. Though no poem is ever dated, and no letter
dated after 1850, there are many, many letters that can be assigned
exact dates, either on a given day, or within a week or a month.
For our purposes, that must be considered as close as we can ever
get. Next, there is always the check we can apply by arranging
manuscripts into paper groups. For the undated documents these
three forms of evidence are the only possible ones which can be
used. In many instances,
that is, where no internal evidence is possible and where the paper
is unidentifiable, the handwriting alone must furnish the clue. In
such cases the degree of reliability is lessened. Yet it often
happens that a poem, identifiable only by handwriting, is exactly
duplicated in
another manuscript that can be precisely dated. These cross-checks
appear with enough frequency to buttress the confidence I have in
our procedure. Let me now explain the way the Dickinson handwriting
can be made to tell its story.
First of all, I repeat that the effectiveness with which any
handwriting can be used is proportionate to the mass and coverage
available. We have both here. And obviously one proceeds from the
known to the unknown. Setting the poetry aside to begin with, let
us consider only the letters to which dates can be assigned through
internal evidence. (And here may I digress long enough to say that
photostatic reproductions for such work are essential. They are
expendable. They can be handled, arranged, cut, and pasted onto
charts for purposes of comparing formation of letter, line slants,
the length of ascenders and descenders of g's, f's, p's, and so on;
and in Emily Dickinson's case they tellingly reveal the story of
her linked and unlinked letters.)
My preliminary conclusion, reached after a tentative examination
of all datable letters, is one I still hold: That it will be
possible to assign a given year to any manuscript of sufficient
length from evidence of handwriting alone. Such a calendar year
must be assumed to extend a few months backward or forward. But
with those reservations in mind, a chronology is possible within
fairly limited periods in which manuscripts—and this is
important—may be given their relative association. The
second conclusion was that all writing in ink could be judged by
commonly applicable rules, but that another set of rules applies to
the writing in pencil. I prepared a loose-leaf notebook which would
allow incorporation of specimens of four pieces of writing from
each year of undated material—from 1850 to 1886. The plan was to
place a photostat of two handwriting samples in ink and two in
pencil,
each representative of different periods in each year, chosen
always from manuscripts that could be dated by internal evidence.
The more samples per page the better, for thus one could determine
whether variations were trivial or significant. Some pages still
remain blank. For instance, there are several samples in pencil of
writing in the latter part of the year 1864 and early 1865, but
none in ink. Since these are the months she was under orders not to
use a pen, it is unlikely that she would have done so. By
extension, and because I believe she followed her doctor's orders,
I doubt whether any document in ink will be found in that period.
Similarly for the period after 1878. Why this abrupt
adaptation?
One cannot pursue a study of the handwriting without considering
the problem of her eyes and the general state of her health. Why
did the character of the letters balloon so in the 'seventies, and
the letters unlink? Emily Dickinson's death was due to some form of
nephritis. It may
never be possible to establish the exact nature of the affliction,
though it was then diagnosed simply as Bright's disease. But there
are hypotheses that cannot be overlooked, even though they may
ultimately remain suggestive only, for lack of sufficient proof.
One not uncommon cause of a fatal nephritis is now known to be a
deepseated streptococcic infection that becomes recurrent. The
evidence for such in Emily Dickinson's case is striking. She was
withdrawn from Mount Holyoke very suddenly and against her wish in
the spring of 1848 by her parents, who sent Austin to fetch her
home quite unceremoniously. They had heard indirectly that she was
suffering from a severe throat infection that her letters home had
tried to belittle. The recurrences were so continual through the
next spring and summer that the family effectively prevailed in
their demand that she give up thought of returning to the seminary.
The letters she wrote during the 'fifties indicate her
susceptibility to nose and throat colds. Injury to the kidneys was
perhaps begun, though probably not known. It happens that this
could have a great deal to do with her handwriting.
Such organic injury, where it does exist, can in its early
stages produce a partial blindness or periods of visual aberration
that doom the victim to impaired sight. With Emily Dickinson it
certainly had progressed far enough by 1864 to compel her trips to
Boston, to doctor's orders that she use a soft pencil in place of
a fine-pointed pen, and to an acceptance—later modified—of
darkened rooms. As years pass, her neuroticism becomes clear
enough, but the degree of its basis in a physical handicap is not
clear and may never be established. By 1867 her writing certainly
has increased in size and the letters within words are broken to a
point that one reckons, not in terms of linked words or syllables,
but in terms of those that are unlinked, so general has become the
separation of letters. The process was so steadily continuous that
by 1875 only an occasional of, th, or Mr.
remained fastened. She was still writing most of her letters in
ink, however. In this year the size of the letters she formed with
her pen reached a maximum. By 1878 she evidently found it necessary
to forego ink altogether, and no part of any word is linked after
that year. But the size of letter decreased when she used only a
pencil. From her nervous collapse in the early 'eighties till her
death in 1886 the progressive changes become increasingly
marked.
I have inquired of physicians whether this increased size and
gradual unlinking could have relationship to her vision and
fatality. The evidence at the moment is inconclusive. But the
bearing of her medical history upon the problem of her handwriting
cannot be ignored, and the ultimate verdict will certainly include
a study of her health.
There are two areas into which handwriting changes fall: the
general
and the particular. The general includes characteristics involving
five to eight-year periods. During the 1850's all words are linked,
the writing is small and flowing, marked by a roundness that is
almost copybook in its style. In these years she often signs her
name "Emilie". The unlinking of letters begins in the early
'sixties and is well along to completion ten years later. The
letters become progressively more angular, and the pages show a
sense of drive and forcefulness. The "ie" for "Emily" is
permanently discarded after 1861. In the 'seventies the size of the
letters reaches a maximum, the use of a pencil is more frequent,
and in the later years of the decade supplants the pen
altogether.
Particular changes are far more complicated and overlapping.
Charts made of each individual capital letter for each successive
year tell a story quite easy to follow, for each year some capital
letters undergo striking changes not found in other letters. The
same phenomena are observable in lower-case letters, with the
further advantage that the alterations in the small letters can be
subdivided according to their use initially, medially, and finally.
For example, in 1859 her final "d" is formed by an upswept ascender
curving right. In the years preceding and following it sweeps left.
From '55 to '58 the small "h" used initially is hooked to the left.
The list of these minute variations through the years is very
extensive, and each serves as a reference to and a check upon the
others. Given a sufficient number of words in any document, it is
possible to assign a probable date within comparatively narrow
limits.
Since I have never tried before to study handwriting with the
purpose in mind of dating a manuscript by characteristic changes in
it, I cannot say whether all handwriting is so subtly variable. The
progressive unlinking of letters, in this case over an
eighteen-year period, is enormously useful, and made possible by a
physiological change that perhaps is comparatively rare. In her
case I believe it theoretically possible, if enough manuscript
existed, and if each manuscript used enough letters in sufficient
combination, to track down dates of composition within the limits
of a given week. But the quantity of manuscripts is wanting, and
even if they existed it would take years to compute and equate the
frequencies without the aid of an electric eye and a robot
tabulator. Our laborsome method of charts must remain but a very
rough estimate where handwriting alone is the clue. At best, it
must allow a margin of error measured in serveral months.
At worst, as in instances where the documents are so brief that
tell-tale combinations of letters do not appear, the probable
limits of error can extend through two to three years. It is at
this point particularly that we turn to paper groups for aid.
Emily Dickinson was fastidious in her stationery selection.
Whether it was wove or laid paper, it is almost invariably of an
identifiable quality,
and though over the years there is a great variety of it, when the
types have been identified and grouped, a distinct paper pattern
emerges. I suggest that for the moment we consider the rule, not
the exception. It is true that she had several paper types at her
desk at one time, and that she might on occasion use a sheet in
1875 left over from a batch presumably exhausted in the 'fifties.
Such exceptions are easy to spot, and when they occur they rule out
the aid which paper groups often can give.
The task of arranging paper into groups is tedious in the
extreme, and has not yet been completed. It involves identifying
whenever possible (and it is possible 95 per cent of the time)
every paper type that she used, measuring it, matching the groups,
and sub-dividing them according to their millimeter measurements.
Since the identification of a document by its group is desirable as
a check on the handwriting, this work must be pursued with no
reference whatever to handwriting or other identifying quality.
Much of the laid paper she used was embossed with, say, a head
of Minerva, or a capitol dome, or a basket of fruit, or the name of
a stationer or manufacturer. The wove paper is generally
watermarked and often dated. Let us suppose that all Weston's Linen
1868 paper has been identified and grouped, and that it totals 75
items. Millimeter measurements show that it falls into three
sub-groups. That is to say, the sheets have all been folded once,
to make four pages, with the spine vertical on the left, the way
boxed stationery usually is sold. When we open it out for
measurement, we find that the four outer corners for the entire
quantity are identical in size. But the middle vertical
measurements—the part that becomes the spine when
folded—are in
three distinct divisions: group A measures 180 mm; group B, 183 mm;
group C, 177 mm. These groups, then, were trimmed folded, and
represent three distinct batches.
Let us say that the number of sheets in each group is roughly even,
about 25 in each. Turn now to absolutely identifiable documents in
each group. There are five in group A—all in the year 1872; ten
in group B—covering 1874-75; eight in group C—all 1877-78.
Turn
back to group A. Of the remaining items in it, 20 had been dated
about 1872-73 on the basis of handwriting; and three are
unmistakably later. The remaining two are too brief to guess at
closely from handwriting. They are clearly not later than 1876 nor
earlier than '73. All that can be said of them is that they belong
with group A, and fall within a pattern common to that batch.
Now group B, where the ten identifiable items fall within the
years 1874-75. Let us suppose that 12 of the 15 items remaining
have been assigned dates, on the basis of handwriting, ranging from
1874 to '78. The remaining three had been classified as doubtful,
with a tentative range of dates between 1872-74. I think it
reasonable at this point to
assume 1872 is too early a date for any paper in group B. It seems
more likely that group A was purchased from the stationer and used
sometime before group B; that group B, the same
kind of
stationery but from a different batch, was purchased later; that
therefore the evidence of the group as a whole points to a date not
earlier than 1874 for the three doubtful items.
Similarly in group C, if but one item were conjectured to fall
before 1877, I should think the burden of convincing us of the
possibility would be more difficult, once the pattern of the group
is shown to extend forward from that year, not back of it.
For purposes of clarity, the illustration has been simplified,
but it is representative of the use to which paper groups may be
put. Evidence from it can never be final, nor can it be used except
in conjunction with other evidence. But where it exists, it must be
considered.
I think it important to underline at this point that I am
presenting problems, not reaching conclusions. To establish a text
for Emily Dickinson, particularly of her poems, in terms of exact
chronology will never be possible, for all the reasons that have
been set forth. The evidence must derive solely from handwriting
and from paper groups, and whether taken separately or together,
they cannot do more than suggest areas of time. The most that can
be done is to give the physical evidence in the greatest possible
detail.
It remains finally to say something about the text of the
poetry. There would obviously be no problem if every poem were left
in a single and final version. But such is not the case. At a rough
estimate, I should say that 80 per cent of the poems exist in
finished versions, copied fair, with no alternate lines or variant
readings suggested. Of the remaining 20 per cent—some 400
poems—she offers variant readings, for the most part with no
indication which reading she might ultimately have selected in a
final version. Any editorial choice therefore becomes impossible in
a definitive edition, since it can represent only an editorial
preference.
In one instance I thought she herself had provided a solution.
One of the poems which she copied into a packet had several
suggested readings for eight different words in the course of the
five stanzas, but with no indication of her choice. (Sometimes,
though infrequently, her choice is indicated by an underlining of
the word she prefers, or by a deletion of the one she has
rejected.) Then I found the same poem included in a letter to
Higginson with choices made in every instance. Here, then, seemed
proof that she had established her final version. But in another
letter to another correspondent, written at substantially the same
time, she has included the same poem—also evidently a final
version—wherein she adopted six of the choices made in the
Higginson letter, but
selected two from among her variants in the remaining instances. If
any conclusion is to be drawn from this citation, it would seem to
be that there are no
final versions of the poems for which
she allowed alternate readings to stand in the packets.
Later when anthologists are compiling selections for lay
readers, they may do what they wish about selecting the
"appropriate" version. The text for my edition in preparation must
simply record the lines as she wrote them, noting the alternates
and the variant readings. It would be misleading to give the
impression that many such exist. Even of the 300 or 400 poems that
show them, by far the largest part offer alternates for but one or
two words in any poem.
Some dozen or so work sheets exist: those scraps of paper which
represent the first draft of a poem—often potentially a great
one. They are the jottings which throw brilliant flashes upon the
creative spirit in travail. Such is the poem "Two butterflies went
out at noon," which has been reproduced in facsimile in Bolts of
Melody. So far as I know, it never proceeded beyond the
work-sheet stage. What shape she might finally have given it! But
we sit, helpless to gain her insight, knowing only that such
speculations "tease us past thought, as doth eternity."
Here then are the problems. Our tools are method only. As we
crave solutions, daydreaming what we might learn from Dickinson
herself if we could visit the Stygian world and hold parley with
her Shade, I am reminded of a story told me some years ago of
William Lyon Phelps. "Will Rhett Butler return to Scarlett O'Hara?"
a student queried after finishing Gone with the Wind. "That
is an interesting question," he answered. "I am dining with
Margaret Mitchell tonight, and I will try to bring you back the
answer." "And what did she say?" the student asked next day: "What
was Rhett's choice?" "She said," replied the professor, "that she
hadn't the slightest idea."
Notes