Steinbeck (108 page)

Read Steinbeck Online

Authors: John Steinbeck

BOOK: Steinbeck
6.18Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 
 
 
 
1965-1968
809 PASCAL COVICI. New York. December 25, 1958. Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, Austin.
811 DR. E. s. MONTGOMERY. Washington, D.C. February 14, 1964. Himself.
811 HOWARD GOSSAGE. New York. March 15, 1965. Sally Gossage Jenkins.
811 MR. and MRS. BRUCE MCWILLIAMS. Sag Harbor. June 17, 1964. Themselves.
812
You know
I
have ...
HOWARD GOSSAGE. New York. March 20, 1965. Sally Gossage Jenkins.
812 JOHN HUSTON and GLADYS HILL. New York. March 2, 1965. John Huston.
814 DR. E. s. MONTGOMERY. New York. March 18, 1964. Himself.
814 DR. E. s. MONTGOMERY. New York. April 14, 1964. Himself.
814 DR. E. s. MONTGOMERY. New York. November 9, 1964. Himself.
814 CARLTON A. SHEFFIELD. New York. February 2, 1965. The Stanford University Libraries.
815 DR. E. s. MONTGOMERY. New York. March II, 1965. Himself.
815 JOSEPH BRYAN III. New York. March 14, 1965. Himself.
817 LYNDON B. JOHNSON. New York. March 17, 1965. Lyndon B. Johnson Library, University of Texas, Austin.
818 LYNDON B. JOHNSON to JOHN STEINBECK. The White House. March 27, 1965. Lyndon B. Johnson Library, University of Texas, Austin.
818 DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. New York. March 31, 1965. Steinbeck File.
820 JACK VALENTI. New York. April 23, 1965. Himself.
821 CARLTON A. SHEFFIELD. New York. April 26, 1965. The Stanford University Libraries.
821 ELIZABETH OTIS. New York. April 1965. Herself.
822 DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR. Sag Harbor. June 20, 1965. Steinbeck File.
824 ELIZABETH OTIS. Sag Harbor. July 14, 1965. Herself.
825 MR. and MRS. JACK VALENTI. Sag Harbor. July 16, 1965. Jack Valenti.
827 CARLTON A. SHEFFIELD. Sag Harbor. August 5, 1965. The Stanford University Libraries.
830 MAX WAGNER. Sag Harbor. Postmarked May 18, 1966. The Stanford University Libraries.
831 LYNDON
B,
JOHNSON. Sag Harbor. May 28, 1966. Lyndon B. Johnson Library, University of Texas, Austin.
832 ELIZABETH OTIS. Sag Harbor. June 9, 1966. Herself.
834 ELIZABETH OTIS. Sag Harbor. June 22, 1966. Herself.
835 JOHN STEINBECK IV. Sag Harbor. July 16, 1966. Himself.
837 JOHN STEINBECK IV. Sag Harbor. August 16, 1966. Himself.
838 HOWARD GOSSAGE. Sag Harbor. August 10, 1965. Sally Gossage Jenkins.
838 HARRY F. GUGGENHEIM. Sag Harbor. August 1965. The Stanford University Libraries.
839 WILLARD BASCOM. New York. March 3, 1965. Himself.
839 ELIA KAZAN. New York. October 28, 1966. Himself.
840 LYNDON B. JOHNSON. New York. November 28, 1966. Lyndon B. Johnson Library, University of Texas, Austin.
840 HARRY F. GUGGENHEIM. Saigon. January 4, 1967. The Stanford University Libraries.
842 ELIZABETH OTIS. Saigon. January II, 1967. Herself.
843 ELIZABETH OTIS. Bangkok. January 23,1967. Herself.
844 ELIZABETH OTIS. Penang. February 27-28, 1967. Herself.
846 ELIZABETH OTIS. Jakarta. March 18, 1967. Herself.
847 MR. and MRS. LAWRENCE SMITH. Hong Kong. March 1967. Themselves.
847 ELIZABETH OTIS. Sag Harbor. August 31, 1967. Herself.
850 MR. and MRS. JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH. New York. November 15, 1967. John Kenneth Galbraith.
850 ELAINE STEINBECK. to DR. E. s. MONTGOMERY. New York. November 14, 1967. Elaine Steinbeck.
850 CARLTON A. SHEFFIELD. New York. January 29, 1968. The Stanford University Libraries.
851 CARLTON A. SHEFFIELD. New York. March 23, 1968. The Stanford University Libraries.
853 MR. AND MRS. ALEXANDER KNOX. Sag Harbor. June 24, 1968. Alexander Knox.
855 CARLTON A. SHEFFIELD. New York. August 17, 1968. The Stanford University Libraries.
856 DR. DENTON SAYER cox. New York. March 15, 1964. Himself.
859 JOHN MURPHY. Sag Harbor. June 12, 1961. Steinbeck Library Salinas.
860 ELIZABETH OTIS. Jakarta. March 18, 1967. Herself.
861 ELIZABETH OTIS. Sag Harbor. Between September I and November I, 1968. Herself.
Speech
ACCEPTING THE NOBEL PRIZE FOR LITERATURE STOCKHOLM, DECEMBER 10, 1962
I thank the Swedish Academy for finding my work worthy of this highest honor.
In my heart there may be doubt that I deserve the Nobel award over other men of letters whom I hold in respect and reverence—but there is no question of my pleasure and pride in having it for myself.
It is customary for the recipient of this award to offer scholarly or personal comment on the nature and the direction of literature. However, I think it would be well at this particular time to consider the high duties and the responsibilities of the makers of literature.
Such is the prestige of the Nobel award and of this place where I stand that I am impelled not to squeak like a grateful and apologetic mouse, but to roar like a lion out of pride in my profession and in the great and good men who have practiced it through the ages.
Literature was not promulgated by a pale and emasculated critical priesthood singing their litanies in empty churches—nor is it a game for the cloistered elect, the tin-horn mendicants of low-calorie despair.
Literature is as old as speech. It grew out of human need for it, and it has not changed except to become more needed. The skalds, the bards, the writers are not separate and exclusive. From the beginning, their functions, their duties, their responsibilities have been decreed by our species.
Humanity has been passing through a gray and desolate time of confusion. My great predecessor, William Faulkner, speaking here, referred to it as a tragedy of universal physical fear, so long sustained that there were no longer problems of the spirit, so that only the human heart in conflict with itself seemed worth writing about. Faulkner, more than most men, was aware of human strength as well as of human weakness. He knew that the understanding and the resolution of fear are a large part of the writer's reason for being.
This is not new. The ancient commission of the writer has not changed. He is charged with exposing our many grievous faults and failures, with dredging up to the light our dark and dangerous dreams, for the purpose of improvement.
Furthermore, the writer is delegated to declare and to celebrate man's proven capacity for greatness of heart and spirit—for gallantry in defeat, for courage, compassion, and love. In the endless war against weakness and despair, these are the bright rally-flags of hope and of emulation. I hold that a writer who does not passionately believe in the perfectibility of man has no dedication nor any membership in literature.
The present universal fear has been the result of a forward surge in our knowledge and manipulation of certain dangerous factors in the physical world. It is true that other phases of understanding have not yet caught up with this great step, but there is no reason to presume that they cannot or will not draw abreast. Indeed, it is a part of the writer's responsibility to make sure that they do. With humanity's long, proud history of standing firm against natural enemies, sometimes in the face of almost certain defeat and extinction, we would be cowardly and stupid to leave the field on the eve of our greatest potential victory.
Understandably, I have been reading the life of Alfred Nobel; a solitary man, the books say, a thoughtful man. He perfected the release of explosive forces capable of creative good or of destructive evil, but lacking choice, ungoverned by conscience or judgment.
Nobel saw some of the cruel and bloody misuses of his inventions. He may even have foreseen the end result of his probing—access to ultimate violence, to final destruction. Some say that he became cynical, but I do not believe this. I think he strove to invent a control—a safety valve. I think he found it finally only in the human mind and the human spirit.
To me, his thinking is clearly indicated in the categories of these awards. They are offered for increased and continuing knowledge of man and of his world—for
understanding
and
communication,
which are the functions of literature. And they are offered for demonstrations of the capacity for peace—the culmination of all the others.
Less than fifty years after his death, the door of nature was unlocked and we were offered the dreadful burden of choice. We have usurped many of the powers we once ascribed to God. Fearful and unprepared, we have assumed lordship over the life and death of the whole world, of all living things. The danger and the glory and the choice rest finally in man. The test of his perfectibility is at hand.
Having taken God-like power, we must seek in ourselves for the responsibility and the wisdom we once prayed some deity might have. Man himself has become our greatest hazard and our only hope. So that today, Saint John the Apostle may well be paraphrased: In the end is the
word,
and the word is
man,
and the word is
with
man.
Index
Abramson, Ben
“About Ed Ricketts” 315-16, 404
Adams, Marion Sheffield
Albee, Anne
Albee, Edward
Albee, George ; breach with
Albee, Richard
Allen, Fred
America and Americans
(Steinbeck)
American
(New York)
American Academy of Arts and Letters, The
Anthony, Edward
Arthur (King), and Tortilla Flat .
See also Morte d'Arthur
Associated Farmers, vs. Steinbeck
Atkinson, Frances
 
 
Bailey, Elizabeth, no
Ballou, Robert O.; characterized
Barrymore, Ethel
Bascom, Willard
“Battle Hymn of the Republic,” and
The Grapes of Wrath
.
Belmonte, Juan
Benchley, Peter
Bergman, Ingrid
Beskow, Bo .
Beskow
(cont'd.)
Beskow, Greta
Best, Marshall
Bilowit, Ira J.
Birkhead, Reverend L. M.- 204
Blixen, Baroness (Isak Dinesen)
Bolt, Robert
Bombs Away: The Story of a Bomber Team
Book-of-the-Month Club
Boone, Jean Anderson
Brackett, Charles
Brady, Leslie
Brenner, Gertrudis
Brewer, Warren and Putnam
Bryan, Joseph
Buccleuch, Duchess of
Burning Bright
(Steinbeck) .; cast of ; evaluation of; reviews of
Burrows, Abe
 
 
Calypso Poem
Camino Real
(Tennessee Williams)
Camp David
Cannery Row (Steinbeck) ; musical of; response to
Capa, Robert
Cape and Smith; and
The Pastures of Heaven
Caswell, Paul
Cathcart, Robert
Cervantes, Miguel
Chaplin, Charles
Charley the poodle, death of.
See also Travels with Charley.
Chase, Thurston
Chaucer, Geoffrey
Chicken Little
Christian Science Monitor
“Chrysanthemums, The,”
Collier's,
correspondence for
Commonwealth Club award
Communism
Conger, Gwyndolyn, see Steinbeck, Gwyndolyn Conger
Connelly, Marc
Conrad, Barnaby
Cornell, Katharine
Country Girl, The
(Odets)
Courier-Journal
(Louisville)
Covici, Dorothy
Covici, Pascal ; death of
Covici, Pascal, Jr.
Covici-Friede; financial difficulties of; and
In Dubious Battle
Cox, Dr. Denton Sayer
Crawford, Joan
Critics.
See also
Reviews
Critics' Circle award
Crow, Fannie
cummings, e.e.
Cup of Gold
(Steinbeck) ; disappointment with; publication of; purpose of
 
 
Day, A. Grove
Dinesen, Isak, see Blixen
Dickey, Roland
Discove Cottage
Dissonant Symphony
(Steinbeck) ; appraisal of
Don Keehan
; abandoning of
Don Quixote
(Cervantes)
Dos Passos, John
Drudi, Gabriella
 
 
East of Eden
(Steinbeck); completion of; movie of ; “prologue” of; research for; reviews of; rewriting of ; success of; and title ; writing of
Ehrenburg, Ilya
Eighth Day, The
(Wilder)
Emerson, Faye
Esquire
Ethridge, Mark
 
 
Fairbanks, Douglas, Jr.
Farber, David
Farmers Hotel, The
(O'Hara)
Farrar and Rinehart
Faulkner, William
Fearnley, John
Figaro
Fischer, Dr. Walter K.
Fisher, Jack
Fisher, Shirley
Fleming, Victor
Flowering Cherry
(Bolt)
Fonda, Henry
Forgotten Village, The
Forman, John
Frere, Alexander
Freud, Sigmund
Friede, Donald
Friends of Democracy
 
 
Galbraith, John Kenneth
Garland, Robert
Geffen, Felicia
Gilbry, Louis
Gilfry, William A.
Gingrich, Arnold
Gish, Lillian

Other books

Texas Tall by Janet Dailey
Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers
Wizard at Large by Terry Brooks
Body of Shadows by Jack Shadows
Glazed Murder by Jessica Beck
War of the Wizards by Ian Page, Joe Dever
The Hero Strikes Back by Moira J. Moore
The Complete Dramatic Works by Samuel Beckett