[No surviving envelope]
AsPerkins, Edith (EH's aunt)sight failing;g8 I wrote to Aunt Edith, the two birthday letters reached me the day before, so I kept them unopened till the morning of the 26th. (ACheetham, Revd Ericremembers TSE's birthday;d9 greeting from Cheetham, andMorleys, theremember TSE's birthday;k8 one from the Morleys, also came, butNason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldineapparently forgets TSE's birthday;b1 no letter from the always previously faithful Meg – I must write to her, but I can’t do it yet as it would look as if I had expected a cake!) Glad as I was to get your letter, it contained very sad news. You had not told me that your aunt’s blindness was going to be total, as I now infer. I gather that she can still distinguish between light and darkness. But in my last letter I asked her whether you could read herself [sic] if I wrote in spaced capitals – which I would not have said had I had this letter of yours first. But in spite of (and from one point of view, all the more because of) her extreme incapacity and of what you can do for her when there, I9 Lexington Road, Concord, Massachusetts;a3 am sure that it is much better for you to be in Concord (I must look up your address in Lexington Road – I ought to have copied it from the letter at once). And I am glad that the rooms themselves are so pleasant as you make them sound.1
IKrauss, Arthur;a1 am also very grieved to learn of the death of Arthur Krauss,2 knowing that his friendship meant a great deal to both of you. YouKrauss, Sophie M.;a7 do not mention Mrs. Krauss: I thought her also a very nice person, but perhaps the stronger part of the friendship, both for you and your uncle, was with him. (Sometimes one has married friends to whom one is so used as a pair, that it is a shock when one of them dies, to find that the friendship with the other languishes or develops a certain constraint). Surely he was no more than middle-aged: I remember him as seeming a younger man than myself.
Iappearance (TSE's)teeth;c2remaining upper teeth removed;b4 am going to another nursing home, between Swiss Cottage and Hampstead, on Friday the 10th for the weekend, so as to have a general anaesthetic to have all my teeth out. I knew this would be desirable soon in any case, but had intended to wait for the spring. But suddenly the tooth flared up, so that I could not eat, and had to be removed at once with a local anaesthetic; and as it was a tooth upon which my present structure depended, so that I should have needed a new plate in any case, it seemed best to get it over with. It'Edgar Poe et la France';a2 is a nuisance, as I am grinding away to complete a lecture on Poe for the French and the Italians (didtravels, trips and plansTSE's scheduled December 1947 visit to Marseilles and Rome;g2;a2 I tell you that the scheme is for me to fly from Marseilles to Rome) without yet having had any definite date in November given me for the ceremony at Aix on which the rest of the expedition turns.
Otherwiseappearance (TSE's)hernia;b9recovery from;a3, my abdomen is doing very well indeed, and both the surgeon and the doctor are pleased with its progress. Beyond an occasional dragging sensation, and the fact that I tire easily, I feel perfectly well.
I shall try to time a birthday letter as closely as possible, and meanwhile my loving and unhappy thoughts go towards you.
IEliot, Theresa Garrett (TSE's sister-in-law)after Henry's death;e2 am glad that you see something of Theresa. I think that she is still reaching out for every occupation to fill and distract her thoughts, and I do not feel sure that she will not yet have to go through a period of great exhaustion and inertia. She always sounds a bit feverish in her activities, and I should like her to concentrate on those that bring in a little money.
1.TSE to Meg Nason, 4 Oct. 1947: ‘Since my return, the news of Mrs. Carroll Perkins’s eyesight has been bad: apparently it is to be expected that she will become nearly blind. Dr. Perkins I thought pretty frail; he can walk only very little. They were very pathetic. Emily will be at hand; she writes that she has just found some nice rooms in Concord Mass. which seem to be as near as possible what she has been looking for, and she is to continue to give her class in speech training in Boston, though she has ceased her connexion with the school in Concord’ (BL).
2.Sophie Krauss’s husband, Arthur, had died at the age of 64: see ‘Krauss Rites to be held tomorrow’, Seattle Times, 17 Sept. 1947, 28.
4.RevdCheetham, Revd Eric Eric Cheetham (1892–1957): vicar of St Stephen’s Church, Gloucester Road, London, 1929–56 – ‘a fine ecclesiastical showman’, as E. W. F. Tomlin dubbed him. TSE’s landlord and friend at presbytery-houses in S. Kensington, 1934–9. See Letters 7, 34–8.
1.SophieKrauss, Sophie M. M. Krauss (b. 1891), wife of Arthur Jeffrey Krauss (1884–1947), Episcopalian, who had resided in Seattle since 1921. Arthur Krauss ran the Krauss Brothers Lumber Company and was to retire in 1938 when the business was wound up in the area. They lived at 128 40th Avenue N., Seattle, with Lillie Cook (49) and Lucy Williams (28) – presumably their servants. See too Lyndall Gordon, The Hyacinth Girl, 183.
1.MargaretNason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine (Meg) Geraldine Nason (1900–86), proprietor of the Bindery tea rooms, Broadway, Worcestershire, whom TSE and EH befriended on visits to Chipping Campden.