[No surviving envelope]
I am terribly distressed by my mistake about the date: of course I would not have made any engagement for that evening if I had realised that it was the evening you would be in London; and I am all the more upset by its changing your plan. But I think I will keep the room anyway, because you must have somewhere to go to where you can lie down, take a bath, rest and change before you go on. So, if I may, I shall lunch with you at the Basil Street Hotel; and, if you must, you can take an afternoon train to Broadway. (I will look up trains, I don’t remember there being a station there; and you must arrange to be met by a car at whatever station serves Broadway). I must find out at this end whether it is the airport, or the terminus in London, that you arrive at at 9.30 – I imagine the former. I shall see if I can get a car and meet you at the airport: that saves time, and saves getting a taxi at Buckingham Palace Road. No, you say Evesham is the Broadway station: I will look into that, andNason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine;c4 if so I write [sic] to Meg and ask what arrangements can be made for meeting you there. And I will keep the time from July 12 as free of engagements as I can.
PenelopeNoyes, Penelope BarkerTSE's dinner at the Connaught with;e9 is in London and is dining with me tonight at the Connaught. I have not seen her yet.
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.
12.PenelopeNoyes, Penelope Barker Barker Noyes (1891–1977), who was descended from settlers of the Plymouth Colony, lived in a historic colonial house (built in 1894 for her father James Atkins Noyes) at 1 Highland Street, Cambridge, MA. Unitarian. She was a close friend of EH.