[No surviving envelope]
I know that I have not written for longer than usual; but the cause is that I postpone from day to day hoping that the next post may bring a letter from you: and that makes all the difference between two quite different letters from me! And it is hard to write – it becomes harder every day – as I think that perhaps you are not there, or anywhere, to be written to. A late mail arrived at the office just before I left – soD'Arcy, Fr Martin;a3 I may find something at the Club tomorrow when I go there to lunch with Martin D’Arcy – but have really given up hoping to hear from you this year, and am forcing myself to write. The least of evils would be that some letter has gone astray – theMorleys, the;b5Morley, Christina (née Innes)
If my fears for your health etc. & for your mother & for those you love – anxieties which I should expect to prevent you from writing to me – are ungrounded – and if there is no lost letter – and if my worst fears – from a selfish point of view – are justified: I will still beg you to write briefly to me (Russell Square is perhaps the best address after all, if letters are marked ‘Personal’, but I have an over-zealous secretary who will forward letters about even if I am away for a day or two), for I do feel that I am entitled to know what the matter is; and I send you my prayers for your health and happiness, and the health and happiness of those you care for, and my devoted love.
3.MartinD'Arcy, Fr Martin D’Arcy (1888–1976), Jesuit priest and theologian: see Biographical Register.