[35A School St., Andover, Mass.]
St James, Cape Town]
I am sitting on a balcony at the Robin Gordon Hotel, at St. James, a kind of seaside suburb about forty minutes from Cape Town, looking out across the bay towards a range of blue mountains: whileFabers, theon 1950 South Africa trip;i1 the Fabers have gone in to Cape Town to shop. So far, everything has gone off very well.1 (But there are drawbacks. IChosack, Cyril;a1 have just interrupted this letter to answer the telephone: a Mr. Cyril Chosack2 who wanted me to give a broadcast talk to the children of South Africa on my experiences as a schoolmaster. And I have got to ring up somebody at the University to decline an invitation to lecture there). Except for our arriving at Funchal too late at night to see anything of it, the voyage was just what one expected; and Teneriffe exceeds expectations, the impressiveness of the high snowy mountains rising abruptly out of the sea. WeMillin, Sarah Gertrude;a2 have been staying with Judge and Mrs. Millin at Fish Hoek until to-day; very kind and generous hosts indeed. They have taken us driving about the peninsula, and to the Opening of Parliament. This is a beautiful but melancholy country: the mountains somewhat suggestive of Provence, and a little of New Mexican mesas. AsAmericaCalifornia;d3its southern suburbs like Cape Town;c4 for the suburbs of Cape Town, they remind one of southern California, but are still more depressing. The contrast of the beauty of nature (gumtrees in flower, bougainvillias, hibiscus etc.) and the sprawling urban chaos; and race problems in an extreme and complicated form.
We are here until the 3d, when I take a ship again and the Fabers proceed to Durban. OnMirrlees, Hopein Stellenbosch;d5 WednesdayClerk, Mabel Honor, Lady (née Dutton);a1 I go to Stellenbosch to lunch with Hope Mirrlees and Lady Clerk;3 on Thursday somebody is taking us to the Botanical Gardens. We have had some excellent sea bathing at Fish Hoek, and have witnessed the Opening of Parliament – the present government being all Afrikanders [sic], and therefore looking like Dutch peasants, it was rather depressing. WeSmuts, Field Marshal Jan;a2 have also met Smuts, a very attractive personality. ICocktail Party, The1950 New York transfer;d7;a8 have no news from New York, and am apprehensive about that.4 I shall write again before I leave.
Another reporter just arriving.
1.See next letter for Geoffrey Faber’s account of the trip to S. Africa.
2.CyrilChosack, Cyril Chosack (1916–91): South African actor, director and radio dramatist; he appeared in co-starring roles in the films Man Without a Face (1935) and Late Extra (1935).
3.LadyClerk, Mabel Honor, Lady (née Dutton) Mabel Honor Clerk, née Dutton (1880–1974), widow of Sir George James Robert Clerk of Penicuik, 9th Baronet (1876–1943).
4.TSE was anxious for news of The Cocktail Party, which had opened in New York on 21 Jan.
2.CyrilChosack, Cyril Chosack (1916–91): South African actor, director and radio dramatist; he appeared in co-starring roles in the films Man Without a Face (1935) and Late Extra (1935).
3.LadyClerk, Mabel Honor, Lady (née Dutton) Mabel Honor Clerk, née Dutton (1880–1974), widow of Sir George James Robert Clerk of Penicuik, 9th Baronet (1876–1943).
5.SarahMillin, Sarah Gertrude Gertrude Millin (1889–1968): South African novelist and writer of non-fiction and biography. Works include The Night is Long (autobiography: F&F, 1941); a six-volume diary (F&F, 1944–8); and The Measure of My Days (1955). See Martin Rubin, Sarah Gertrude Millin: A South African Life (Johannesburg and London: Ad. Donker, 1977). In Oct. 1934 F&F had offered a remarkable advance of £2,500, with royalty of 25%, for Millin’s two-volume life of General Smuts (1936). Her husband was Philip Millin (1888–1952), Judge of the South African Supreme Court.
2.HopeMirrlees, Hope Mirrlees (1887–1978), British poet, novelist, translator and biographer, was to become a close friend of TSE: see Biographical Register.
6.FieldSmuts, Field Marshal Jan Marshal Jan Smuts, OM, CH (1870–1950): South African (Afrikaner) lawyer (he read Law at Christ’s College, Cambridge, and was called to the bar at the Middle Temple), soldier, statesman; Prime Minister of the Union of S. Africa, 1919–24, 1939–48. An internationalist, he was a proponent of the League of Nations, United Nations and Commonwealth of Nations.