[1418 East 63d St., Seattle]
[Pike’s Farm, Crowhurst,
near Lingfield, Surrey]
ItPike's FarmTSE's stay with the Eameses extended;a8 is now settled that I am to leave my lodgings on the 28th August, butEameses, the;a2 that I may leave as much of my belongings here as I wish, and the Eames’s will have be [sc. me] back upon their return on the 17th September or thereabouts. Then I shall stay on in the same way until some time in October, or when the weather becomes too cold and foul. It is often very beautiful in the country throughout October, with fine weather; but the days draw in, and I find the ‘artificial light’ i.e. paraffin lamps, for this bungalow has no gas or electricity, pretty trying to the eyes to work by. However, this scheme suits me very well; the longer I can stay in the country the better; and I shall not have the nuisance of looking for another temporary habitation until my visiting is over. Itravels, trips and plansTSE's 1933 Faber summer holiday;b1rearranged;a3 have written to the Fabers to suggest myself for anytime between those two dates, for a week; andSociety of the Sacred Mission, Kelham Hall, Nottinghamshire;a3 whenWoolfs, the;a9 that is settled IWood, Charles, 2nd Viscount Halifax;a5 shall write to Kelham and to the Woolfs, and possibly Hickleton.1 I look forward to visiting the Fabers; they have a swimming pool so I hope the weather will be warm; I know the children better than the children here; and I have never visited Wales. AtHugh Inneses, the;a1Innes, Hugh McLeod
So you see, as my address is settled until some time in October, and the Morleys will be here all the time and I shall instruct them to keep all letters that come here, and not forward them, so that there shall be no risk of their going astray – AdaSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister);c9 writes to me regularly here – but no one else in America knows my address – I should be very grateful if I might hear from you, and please, a little information about yourself. It is difficult for me not to believe that I have become a very dim figure in your mind by now; hence perhaps a little formality creeps into my letters. One’s outgoing feelings remain the same in solitude and silence, and nothing that can exist one-sidedly alters, but intimacy, after all, is a mutual response.
IHale, Emilyfinances;w5;a5 should like to know whether your salary is to be curtailed again. EvenFirst New Deal;a1 if Roosevelt’s schemes prosper – which seems uncertain – I should say that the teaching profession would be the last to benefit, & at first likely to suffer more from rising prices. Myfinances (TSE's)American income;a3 own trust income slightly reduced by the Santa Fè Rlwy.
1.Charles Lindley Wood, 2nd Viscount Halifax, lived at Hickleton Hall, Yorkshire.
2.ChristinaInnes, Hugh McLeod Morley’s father, Hugh McLeod Innes (1862–1944), classicist, was a Fellow and Bursar of Trinity College, Cambridge; author of Fellows of Trinity (1941).
3.The first adumbration of TSE’s pageant play The Rock (to be performed at Sadler’s Wells Theatre, London, in 1934).
2.ChristinaInnes, Hugh McLeod Morley’s father, Hugh McLeod Innes (1862–1944), classicist, was a Fellow and Bursar of Trinity College, Cambridge; author of Fellows of Trinity (1941).
4.KennethKirk, Kenneth Kirk (1886–1954), Anglican priest, theologian, author. Fellow and Chaplain of Trinity College, Oxford, from 1933 he was Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology. He was to be elevated as Bishop of Oxford, 1937–54. Works include Some Principles of Moral Theology (1920) and The Vision of God (Bampton Lectures, 1928) (1931).
4.FrankMorley, Frank Vigor Vigor Morley (1899–1980), American publisher and author; a founding editor of F&F, 1929–39: see Biographical Register.
2.AdaSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister) Eliot Sheffield (1869–1943), eldest of the seven Eliot children; author of The Social Case History: Its Construction and Content (1920) and Social Insight in Case Situations (1937): see Biographical Register.
4.C. L. WoodWood, Charles, 2nd Viscount Halifax, 2nd Viscount Halifax (1839–1934), Anglo-Catholic ecumenist: President of the English Church Union, 1868–1919, 1927–34 – lived at Hickleton Hall, Doncaster, S. Yorkshire, where TSE visited him in Oct. 1927. TSE to his mother, 5 Oct. 1927: ‘He is a very saintly man – he is already over 89 – much older than you – but leads a very busy and active life’ (Letters 3, 736). Lord Halifax wrote on 27 Feb., ‘I have read your pamphlet with the greatest interest, &, if I may say so without the great impertinence, or presumption, think it quite admirable.’ (This letter was evidently not sent to EH.)