I was pleased to have your note, tho’ sorry to learn you were a ‘minor casualty of the Asian ’flu’. I hope you have wholly recovered. Yes, my coming here must have surprised you, and it is not the right choice for a number of reasons. FurthermoreAbbot Academy, Andover, MassachusettsEH on leaving;c1 my leaving Andover and Abbot has been more of a ‘break’ than I realized apparently, for I am not in good health, and the excellent doctor here (for whose presence I can be grateful indeed) is ready to let me go ‘home’ rather than trying to carry on under abnormal physical conditions.
This is naturally very unwelcome and difficult, but I do not think unnatural, considering everything of the last thirty eight years of teaching and being a happy member of a community. SoEliot, Esmé Valerie (née Fletcher, TSE's second wife);c2, I shall be flying back I trust, early next week, and unable to meet Valerie – to whom give my sincere regrets please. I may stay for a time with a kind older friend of the last few years intimacy, in her apartment in Boston before finding my feet again. With God’s help I shall, I know.
You will be interested to know that the English Squire ‘Scuddie’ Griffiths is still going at 89 years of age, tho’ greatly weakened by serious illness this past year. His wife is splendid in all ways – in spite of seeming so societyfied – and has been the staunchest help to me these last ten days.
I shall leave this tiny place – cold in so many ways in its atmosphere and stay in a local hotel over Sunday before coming up to return to the States.
It is all very unexpected, but some lesson will come from it later I believe. Good wishes to you for your life and work as always.
1.Gordon, Imperfect Life, 418: ‘She appeared disturbed to locals [in Chipping Campden], and did not stay long; by February 1958 she was back in Boston. In March she went to teach at Oak Grove School in Vassalboro, Maine, and after one semester retired finally.’ In 1968 EH was to tell a friend, Marjon Ornstein, that the weeks at Vassalboro had been an 'endurance test' (Gordon, The Hyacinth Girl, 376).’
7.EsméEliot, Esmé Valerie (née Fletcher, TSE's second wife) Valerie Fletcher (1926–2012) started work as TSE’s secretary on 12 Sept. 1949, and became his second wife on 10 Jan. 1957; after his death in Jan. 1965, his literary executor and editor: see 'Valerie Eliot' in Biographical Register.