[{"node":{"title":"MacNeice003","Collections":"Letters to George and Mercy McCann","Contributor":"MacNeice Estate","Coverage":"1939 Feb 29th","Creator":"Linen Hall Library","Date":"Wednesday, March 16, 2016","Format":"TIFF","Identifier":"MacNeice003","Item Description":"Letter","Keywords":"Romania, London","Language":"English","Path":"https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/content/macneice003","Publisher":"Linen Hall Library","Relation":"Linen Hall Library","Rights":"Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike CC BY-NC-SA","Scanned image":{"src":"https://www.niliteraryarchive.com/sites/default/files/MacNeice003_1.jpg","alt":""},"Source":"LHL Archive","Transcript":"2.\nsent me a letter through Patience all about girls (by the way here is a 20/- postal order which my pal in Pennsylvania sent me, for Patience.) Miss Potter, it seems, is a bit depressed being so cut off from civilisation. She wrote asking my plans but unfortunately I don't know what they are as yet. I may get an offer to stay over here which, H. M. grant willing, I should probably be pleased to accept. But I guess I should still come back this summer, If I was going to be here for some time, I should like to bring Dan over but I don't quite know how. \n\nO hell, someone is now playing cherries in one of the college towers (this, I am told, is the university Eric Linklater put into Juan in America.) The great thing about the students here is they're not shy; they tell you all about the poems they wrote at puberty and how they showed them to their mothers. \n\nIf you go to London, I suggest \n","Type":"Text"}}]