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During his long and varied career, American author Christopher Morley wrote over 70
books;
edited newspapers and magazines; was active in the theater as playwright, producer,
and
actor; and served on the editorial board of the Book-of-the-Month Club for 28 years.
The
collection contains manuscripts for practically all of Morley’s writings, his voluminous
correspondence, and personal and family papers. |
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This collection was previously accessible only through a card catalog but has now been re-cataloged as part of a retrospective conversion project. For collection description previously available only in a card catalog, please see the
explanatory note for information regarding the arrangement of the manuscripts as well as the abbreviations commonly used in descriptions. The material remains as originally organized into four series: I. Works, 1896-1955 (boxes 1-40); II. Letters (Outgoing Correspondence), 1895-1956 (boxes 40-55); III. Recipients (Incoming Correspondence), 1896-1957 (boxes 55-111); and IV. Miscellaneous, 1787-1996 (boxes 111-164), with materials arranged alphabetically by title or author. See the Indexes for Works, Letters, Recipients, and Miscellaneous in this finding aid to further identify titles of works and correspondent names present in this collection. Additional materials not cataloged in the card catalog include Transfers from the HRC Library, 1887-1956 (boxes 165-166) and Later Acquisitions, 1996-2020 (box 166). |
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Series I. Works, 1896-1955 (boxes 1-40). In addition to Morley’s
dominant writing genres -- essays, poems, novels, and plays -- the works by Morley
present
in this series also include manuscripts representing addresses and lectures; articles;
autobiography; book reviews; columns; diaries and journals; introductions and prefaces;
juvenilia; notebooks; short stories; stories for children; and translations. |
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Morley’s earliest work in this series is "The adventures of a
cat" composed at age six (1896) along with other juvenila dating to 1904; the latest
works are his final poems published in Gentleman’s Relish
(1955). Notable are the manuscripts for Human Being (1933); the
autobiographical John Mistletoe; Kitty
Foyle original manuscript (1939); The Man Who Made Friends
with Himself (1949), which Morley considered his most important novel; Pandora Lifts the Lid (co-written with his close friend Don
Marquis, 1924); the first draft of Thorofare (1942); The Trojan Horse (in both novel and play versions, 1937, 1941); and
Where the Blue Begins (in multiple play versions, 1925). |
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Some of Morley’s works are present in multiple forms, such as novels adapted into
plays for
the theater or into scripts for radio or motion pictures. Some works (mostly plays)
in this
collection were adapted by Morley from works by other authors, including Charles M.
Barras,
Dion Boucicault, John Brougham, C. S. Lewis, William Shakespeare, and Edward Stirling.
Works
that Morley co-authored with other writers are also present, namely Earl Derr Biggers,
E. S.
Colling, John V. L. Hogan, Don Marquis, Felix Riesenberg, and Cleon Throckmorton. |
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The Works I - III at the end of this series are three notebooks containing early
handwritten versions of poems, which are often supplemented by later typed versions
that are
filed alphabetically by title throughout the Works series. See the Index of Works
in this
finding aid to locate individual titles of Morley works available. |
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Morley often used pseudonyms and at least 13 are represented for works in this collection,
with Barclay Hall, Dove Dulcet, John Mistletoe, and The Old Mandarin used most frequently.
The popular poems of The Old Mandarin are “pseudotranslations,” not poems translated
from
the Chinese, but poems written by Morley in the persona of The Old Mandarin. See the
Index
of Works for a complete list of the pseudonyms present in this collection. |
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Information in the journals and diaries in this series can be supplemented by reading
the
frequent letters that Morley wrote to his parents. Many works, especially early ones
contributed to periodicals, can be verified by examining Morley’s scrapbooks in the
Vertical
File Collection. These contain clippings, many annotated by Morley, and also anonymous
and
pseudonymous pieces. |
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Correspondence is contained in Series II. Letters (Outgoing
Correspondence), 1895-1956 (boxes 40-55) and Series III. Recipients (Incoming
Correspondence), 1896-1957 (boxes 55-111). Morley’s many correspondents are
dominated by other authors and editors, co-authors and adapters of Morley works, colleagues,
family members (parents, brothers, wife, children, and others) and publishers and
publications, but also include bibliographers, book collectors, booksellers, club
members
(especially the Baker Street Irregulars), educators, fans, friends and neighbors,
illustrators, sailing enthusiasts, and former schoolmates. |
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Among correspondents well represented in Morley’s correspondence are Ben Abramson,
Edward
Page Allinson (a life-long friend), William Rose Benét, Sir David William Bone, James
Bone, Tom Daly, Walter de la Mare, Bernard De Voto, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, Buckminster
Fuller, Louis Greenfield, Robert Cortes Holliday, Mitchell Kennerley, Julius J. Lankes,
Vachel Lindsay,William McFee, Don Marquis, C. E. Montague, Marianne Moore, Alfred
E. Newton,
Richard Pryce (British playwright), John Crowe Ransom, Felix Riesenberg, Robert Critchell
Rimington, A. S. W. Rosenbach, Vincent Starrett, Etsu Inagaki Sugimoto, Howard Swiggett,
Cleon Throckmorton (best known as a set designer), H. M. Tomlinson, James Whittall,
William
Lloyd Garrison Williams, Elizabeth Winspear (Morley’s secretary), and Sir Francis
James
Wylie. |
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Many organizations, publications, and publishers are represented in Christopher Morley’s
correspondence, including Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., Atlantic
Monthly, the Baker Street Irregulars (Elmer Davis, William Stanley Hall, James
Keddie, Jr., Robert Keith Leavitt, Harvey Officer, Edgar Wadsworth Smith), the
Book-of-the-Month Club (Basil Davenport, Amy Loveman, Harry Scherman, Meredith Wood),
Doubleday & Co. (Ken McCormick, Louise Thomas), Doubleday, Page & Co. (Arthur W.
Page), Dramatic Publishing Co., Faber and Faber Ltd., Harcourt, Brace and Co., Harper
&
Brothers, Haverford College, Haverford College Library, J. B. Lippincott & Co., Little,
Brown & Co., Longmans, Green & Co., MacMillan Company, The New
Yorker, Random House, Saturday Review (Harrison
Smith), and Simon & Schuster, Inc. |
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The close relatives in the Morley family are best represented, although letters to
and from
many extended family members are also found here. Most substantial among the family
correspondents are the letters to and from parents Frank Morley and Lilian Janet Bird
Morley; brothers Felix Muskett Morley and Frank Vigor Morley; wife Helen Booth Fairchild
Morley; and children Christopher Darlington Morley, Jr., Louise Booth Morley Cochrane,
Helen
Fairchild Morley Woodruff, and Blythe Morley Brennan. |
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See the Index of Letters (Outgoing Correspondence) and the Index of Recipients (Incoming
Correspondence) in this finding aid to locate additional names of Morley correspondents
represented in this collection. |
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Series IV. Miscellaneous, 1787-1996 (boxes 111-164). The
Miscellaneous series is comprised of third-party works and correspondence (i.e., not
written
by or to Morley), plus some Morley personal and career-related papers. Most materials
are
filed alphabetically by creator. |
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Morley’s own segment of personal and career papers in this series (boxes 128-141,
162)
includes items from his childhood and school papers from both Haverford College and
the
University of Oxford, such as exams, grades, notes, and scrapbooks. Financial items
include
bills, checkbooks, receipts, reports, royalties, and tax materials. (Note: some other
financial reports from publishers are instead filed alphabetically under the publisher’s
name throughout this series.) Legal documents here are mainly agreements and contracts
for
specific works or publishers; there is also a last will and testament from 1954. Some
materials in this grouping do relate to Morley’s own works, such as advertisements,
forepages, proposals, lists of contents, indexes, programs, publisher’s dummies, reviews,
etc. |
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Most notable among the works by other authors in the Miscellaneous series is a manuscript entitled
"A Wild Plaint," first identified in 2017 as the work of American Black poet Fenton Johnson (1888-1958), considered a forerunner of the Harlem Renaissance. The manuscript was submitted under the pseudonym of Aubrey Gray to Doubleday, Page & Co. in 1909. Morley’s work as an editor at Doubleday, Page, likely accounts for the manuscript’s presence in his collection. |
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Other authors represented by writings in this series are Charles M. Barras (The Black Crook), Hilaire Belloc, Stephen Vincent Benét,
William Rose Benét, Gavin David Bone, James Bone, Henry Seidel Canby, Walter de la
Mare, Buckminster Fuller, Harry Wagstaff Gribble, William Stanley Hall, Vachel Lindsay,
William McFee (Aliens, 1919), Don Marquis, John Crowe Ransom
(Chills and Fevers, 1922), Felix Riesenberg, Thomas John
Skeyhill (Lust’s Dominion, Moon Madness, Soldiers of the Dark), Logan Pearsall Smith,
Vincent Starrett, Henry Major Tomlinson, Louis Untermeyer (From
Another World, 1935), Hendrik Willem Van Loon (The
Arts) and Wendell Willkie (One World, 1943).
Additionally, there are adaptations of works by Morley or others, including Jean Ferguson
Black (Thunder on the Left), Dion Boucicault (After Dark, revised and adapted by Christopher Morley), daughter
Louise Booth Morley Cochrane (Thunder on the Left), Frank
Daugherty (Parnassus on Wheels), and Richard Pryce (Thunder on the Left). |
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Among the correspondents in the series are Sir Max Beerbohm, William Rose Benét, Sir
David William Bone, James Bone, Walter de la Mare, Doubleday & Company, Inc./Doubleday,
Doran and Company, Inc., Faber and Faber, Ltd., Buckminster Fuller, William Stanley
Hall, J.
B. Lippincott Company, Guy R. Lyle, William McFee, Don Marquis, André Maurois, Felix
Riesenberg, H. M. Tomlinson, Sir Hugh Walpole, and Elizabeth Winspear. There are also
numerous letters written to the publisher Frederic Chapman (1832-1895) and/or Chapman
&
Hall, including letters from P. T. Barnum, George Meredith, Ouida, Olive Schreiver,
and
possibly Anthony Trollope, among others. Morley’s maternal grandfather, James Bird,
who
worked at Chapman & Hall, is the probable source of these letters. |
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There is also extensive correspondence for members of the Morley and allied families
(Bird,
Booth, Clay, Fairchild, Muskett, Vigor, etc.), but especially for Morley’s immediate
family:
Blythe Morley Brennan, Louise Booth Morley Cochrane, Christopher Morley, Jr., Felix
Muskett
Morley, Frank Morley, Frank Vigor Morley, Helen Fairchild Morley, and Lilian Bird
Morley.
Childhood drawings and/or writings are often present for Morley’s brothers and children.
Morley’s mother Lilian’s papers are particularly rich with autobiographical reminiscences,
her own works, including diaries and travel descriptions, scrapbooks, mementoes, and
sympathy letters on the death of her husband, Frank. Morley’s father Frank Morley,
a notable
mathematician who joined the faculty of Johns Hopkins University in 1900, is also
represented by substantial material, including correspondence to and from fellow
mathematicians, Johns Hopkins faculty members, and other colleagues, with over 80
letters
from the British physicist Charles Chree (1860-1928) alone. |
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The Miscellaneous series also contains works, correspondence, and other papers related
to
various Morley activities and enthusiasms, such as the Baker Street Irregulars; the
Book-of-the-Month Club; the Hoboken Theatrical Company; and sailing ships: |
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• Baker Street Irregulars: Correspondence, drawings, manuscripts, membership lists,
and
music. In addition to Christopher Morley, individual creators of works and correspondence
here include William Stanley Hall, Pope Russell Hill, Harvey Officer, Svend Petersen,
and
Edgar Wadsworth Smith. |
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• The Book-of-the-Month Club: Correspondence, financial reports, a few manuscripts
under
consideration, and reader’s reports. Related correspondents are Helen Hare Caroll
Cain, John
Erskine, Harper & Brothers, Alfred A. Knopf, Amy Loveman, Felix Morley, Frank Morley,
Random House, Harry Scherman, William Allen White, and Meredith Wood. Especially notable
in
the Harper & Brothers correspondence to Meredith Wood of the BOMC is a letter suggesting
changes to Richard Wright’s Black Boy in 1945. |
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• Hoboken Theatrical Company: Papers for Morley’s theatre venture include agreements
and
other legal documents, correspondence, financial reports, lists of plays, manuscript
notes,
press releases, and publicity programs. In addition to Christopher Morley and Cleon
Throckmorton, the letterhead for the company identifies Conrad Milliken and Harry
Wagstaff
Gribble as other associates of the company. |
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• Sailing ships: In 1923, Morley was part of a group that purchased a full-rigged
merchant
sailing ship originally known as the Inveruglas and renamed
Tusitala to honor Robert Louis Stevenson by his Samoan name.
Present in this series is a 1925 ship’s log for the Tusitala,
along with two other ship’s logs, for the A. S. Sunlite and the
Robert Fulton. Related correspondence by William McFee,
William Stanley Hall, and Felix Riesenberg is present, along with some correspondence
about
Joseph Conrad’s ship, Otago. |
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See the Index of Miscellaneous in this finding aid for detailed descriptions from
the card
catalog for the third-party works and correspondence in this segment of the Morley
Collection. |
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Transfers from the HRC Library, 1887-1956 (boxes 165-166.) The
transfers are made up of a small group of non-print items withdrawn from the Morley
Library
or from individual Morley books, including some letters, manuscripts by Horace Howard
Furness and Harry Wagstaff Gribble, and drawings, as well as a Christopher Morley
guest
book, circa 1915-1925. |
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The largest group among the transfers are illustrated calligraphic manuscripts, 1931-1956,
created by R. J. Bucholz, a calligrapher and printer in Cleveland, Ohio. Among the
items are
19 small-format books, often with texts by some of Morley’s favorite authors (Hilaire
Belloc, George Gissing, Logan Pearsall Smith, Robert Louis Stevenson, and others);
two
bookmarks; 15 greeting cards for birthdays and holidays; and three designs, possibly
for
The Saturday Review. |
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Later Acquisitions, 1923-1968 (box 166). Six additions to the
Morley Collection were acquired between 1975 and 2020 and include: correspondence
between
Morley and H. Tatnall Brown and Guy R. Lyle, 1948-1955, 1968; correspondence between
Elizabeth B. Winspear and Morley, 1943 with related items; a telegram from Ogden Nash
to
Morley, 1949; a Bureau of Literary Control form created under Morley’s P. E. G. Quercus
pseudonym, undated; a photograph by Edwin Levick of Morley on board the Tusitala,
1923; and
letters from Morley to Maureen Isensee, 1943-1953. |