[35A School St., Andover, Mass.]
I am rather slow in answering your letter of March 22, written on the first day of the holidays. I imagine that those brief holidays are now over. Americantravels, trips and plansTSE's 1932–3 year in America;a7TSE reflects on;b4 EasterAmericaits horrors;c2'Easter holidays' not including Easter;b5 holidays confuse me because they do not always seem to include Easter – at least, I remember that it was so at Harvard in 1933, and not even Good Friday was a holiday. IHale, Emilyas director ('producer');v9As You Like It;c9 am happy at least to know that yourShakespeare, WilliamAs You Like It;b3 production of ‘As You Like It’ was a success – though it is very rarely, I think, that you have had anything that could be called a failure. I wish that your headmistress was as appreciative as the audiences. I gather from your letter that the vacation ends on April 5th – a very strange date. (Do they deliberately avoid including Easter?)
Yourtravels, trips and plansTSE's 1955 visit to America;i7;a5 advice about cabins is good, I am sure; and I will get an outside if I can. The voyage on that boat is a quick one – I should have preferred a smaller and slower ship. I dread the company, when travelling alone: and on such a huge ship, at the most crowded time of the year, there are certain to be people who know me. And I suppose it means dressing for dinner, and talking to people. Well, I shall spend as much time in a deck chair with my eyes shut as possible.
Where will you be between the 22nd May and about the 12th June?
IfReligious Drama Conference, Oxford, 1955;a2 I went to the Religious Drama conference it would only be for one night: but I have made it clear that even that depends upon what my doctor thinks of me on my return.
I am really getting on pretty well, though it takes time to recover confidence. One remains aware of one’s heart, like a little dynamo going round inside one, for a long time after such an illness. That’s only a kind of nervous consciousness.
You say nothing more, in this letter, of the prospect of getting a half time job somewhere. How do you go about making enquiries. If you had to move from your very attractive house, I should hope that, other things being equal, it might be further away from Boston.
ButPerkins, Edith (EH's aunt);n7 I will write again to Aunt E. presently.