[No surviving envelope]
It is a very long time since I have heard from you: and I had hoped for a note at least after the school reassembled. I should hope that I might be informed if you were ill; and that you would let me know yourself of any other difficulty or distress that was taking your time and energy; so I hope that nothing I have said, or failed to say, lately, has offended you.
I have nothing to report of myself except that I have been very busy, with the usual sort of activity which it would be tedious to chronicle; and am still very much in arrears with the accumulation of letters, and the foreign correspondence now heavier than ever. ICocktail Party, TheTSE rewriting;c6 have at least recast and re-written the first two scenes of my play, and I hope given them more animation, but it is more by effort of will than by anything that could be called inspiration. I have very little news out of America, but I hope that the winter has been as mild hitherto as it has here. IFabers, thehost TSE for weekend;h9 had to spend last weekend with the Fabers in Sussex, and did not shiver so much as I usually do in country houses at this time of year. Week after next I go to Oxford to speak, but only for one night.
Please let me hear from you.