[Grace Toll Hall, Scripps College, Claremont]
I can write only a tiny note – and that delayed – which will hardly be more than an explanation of not writing sooner or at more length. TheRock, Theon the point of completion;c3 early part of the week was taken up with finishing off the pageant text for printing – BrowneBrowne, Elliott Martinproduction of The Rock;a2revising into the night with TSE;a8 andRock, Thecockney dialogue revised;c4 I were working here one night till after eleven – andHowson, Revd Vincentrevises TSE's cockney dialogue;a1 revising all the cockney dialogue with the East End parson, Vincent Howson.1 ThenDemant, Revd Vigo Auguste;a5 I remembered that I'Religion and Literature';a1 have to deliver an address (on ‘Religion and Literature’ for Victor Demant at his church in Richmond on Tuesday evening;2 andMorleys, the;c2 as I had promised to go to the Morley’s [sic] for the weekend (I must catch a train in a few minutes) I have not the weekend on which to work at it. It would have suited me better to have gone there <Morleys’> next week. However, after the middle of the week I hope for breathing space and will write at greater length.
The Rev. Vincent Howson’s bark is worse than his bite. Having met, we get on very well; he was pleased at my allowing him to introduce a speech of his own devising, and this will give him more enthusiasm in delivering my speeches. HisEnglandLondon;h1the varieties of cockney;c3 cockney is excellent – every phrase and almost every word of mine we went over carefully so as to get it right – cockney is not a simple matter – there are different phrases in different social grades, and the West End cockney (Pimlico or Notting Dale, say) is different from the East End, and Bermondsey and the Surrey side is different again; but now I think we have got the dialogue all of a piece, and I have retained all the things I wanted said. And we are to have a man with an accordion to accompany my song – that’s his idea, and ought to be a great success.
IPerkinses, the;d8 am longing for more news of your and the Perkins’s itinerary. It will be delightful to see them again soon. I suppose you have to stay through the graduation festivities (June 19th?). And this letter closes with the usual message of love and devotion.
1.RevdHowson, Revd Vincent Vincent Howson (d. 1957), St James’ Vicarage, Ratcliff, London, was ‘Bert’ in The Rock. Founder and producer of the East End Amateurs, he had been a member of Sir Frank Benson’s Shakespearian Company. His final post was as rector of St Paul’s, Covent Garden.
2.TSE’s lecture ‘Religion and Literature’, given at Richmond, Surrey, was to be published in Faith that Illuminates, ed. V. A. Demant (1935), 29–54: CProse 5, 218–29. ‘[T]he whole of modern literature is corrupted by what I call Secularism …’ Fee £5 per contribution.
4.E. MartinBrowne, Elliott Martin Browne (1900–80), English director and producer, was to direct the first production of Murder in the Cathedral: see Biographical Register.
4.RevdDemant, Revd Vigo Auguste Vigo Auguste Demant (1893–1983), Anglican clergyman; leading exponent of ‘Christian Sociology’; vicar of St John-the-Divine, Richmond, Surrey, 1933–42: see Biographical Register.
1.RevdHowson, Revd Vincent Vincent Howson (d. 1957), St James’ Vicarage, Ratcliff, London, was ‘Bert’ in The Rock. Founder and producer of the East End Amateurs, he had been a member of Sir Frank Benson’s Shakespearian Company. His final post was as rector of St Paul’s, Covent Garden.