[41 Brimmer St., Boston]
I have just time, I am thankful to find, to write a short letter this morning after getting rid summarily of two visitors who seemed to have no other purpose in life than to waste other folks’ time; and an American professor from Ipsilanti who seemed to be taking me in conscientiously merely as one of the sights of London, like Westminster Abbey and the Monument; and am glad because your letter of the 21st has come (only eight days!) and I can begin to answer it. Where shall I begin? How is it that a man from Union Theological College is preaching at King’s Chapel? IsPerkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle);a3 your uncle to be in Boston next winter? Here is a nest of questions to begin with.
And about the intuitions of the future, I think that perhaps there is a misunderstanding. (Given the misunderstanding, I agree with your observations). TheHale, Emilyrelationship with TSE;w9and the prospect of TSE's Harvard year;b4 sort of premonition I spoke of has no relation to practical action that I can discover; it is very general and points to no solution of practical problems; and no relation whatever to fortune-telling! It has been more with me a kind of Cassandra voice unheeded and unheedable. On the personal and conscious plane, I do deliberately accept the present and its continuance; I try to check every tendency to think or dream of how things might be if some things were altered; for that is a most insidious poison, rendering one feeble and useless, and killing all joy in whatever one has to be joyful in; but I should be dishonest with myself if I pretended that I had quite cast it out: it is a poison for which perpetual re-inoculation is necessary.
You must know by now that I am not completely at the mercy of your ‘moods’ – perhaps you exaggerate the variations of the moods themselves – because surely by now I ought, and you ought, to be able to keep fast hold on the permanent under the shifting: and on the other hand I am sure you would not like me to be completely obtuse to moods! I shall always be swayed by your state of mind and feeling of each letter, and you can do with me as you will. AsHale, Emilyrelationship with TSE;w9and TSE's habitual reserve;a4 for reserves, [sic] it it seems to me that one should not worry about that. Very reserved people – and people who perhaps have been forced by circumstance into a reserve still greater than their natural endowment – should not force unreserve: surely it comes of itself, naturally, more and more; and it seems to me that the process is unending to the end of life, a continuous process of development and liberation. I am already far more unreserved with you than I had thought possible to be with anyone!
As for Scripps College, I must talk of that in my next letter. Till then, que Dieu protège mon petit oiseau; et que tous mes péché a soient dans tes oraisons dénombrés!1
1.‘May God protect my little bird; and may all my sins be numbered in your prayers.’ Cf. Hamlet III. i. 4–35.
3.DrPerkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle) John Carroll Perkins (1862–1950), Minister of King’s Chapel, Boston: see Biographical Register.