[No surviving envelope]
I have been not only stupid but unfortunate – the two things sometimes go together. Your letter arrived last night and was put outside my door, after I had looked out and thought that I should have no letter; so that I did not find it until just as I was going to bed, after the post had gone. So I wired this morning – and have yet no reply – to know whether you and Miss McPherrin would be free for lunch on either Thursday or Friday, because I wanted to get another man if possible. I hope I shall hear in the morning, and shall then try to engage my man. Ittravels, trips and plansEH's 1934–5 year in Europe;b4L'Escargot lunch;b7 would be dull to lunch with me alone. I propose the Escargot Bienvenu, 48 Greek Street, Soho, at 1.15; and I hope one day or the other. I shall be MAD if I don’t see you before you go.
HaveFranceParis;b7TSE's guide to;a4 you a Baedeker of Paris? I remember another quite nice moderate hotel, the Victoria Palace Hotel, which is on a small street at the Montparnasse (upper) end of the Rue de Rennes. It is just round the corner from the Rue de Rennes, it may be the Rue Desgoffes, but I am not sure, it should be in Baedeker.1 <You want top floor front.> You OUGHT to wire ahead for rooms, I always do; if you don’t, then it is better to go to a big hotel like the Chatham.2 Paris IS expensive in any case. If you go to the Victoria, on the Left Bank, then a good moderate priced restaurant is the Medecis, in the rue de Vaugirard facing the Luxembourg Gardens. There is a good teashop in the Bvd. St. Germain on the river side near the corner of the Rue des Sts. Pères; and for cheap meals, the Duval in the Bvd. St. Germain near there used to be good. I don’t know what train you take or what time you arrive in Paris: I hope not late; better take the 9 a.m. train if you go by Dover or Boulogne. ICaetani, Marguerite (née Chapin);a6 don’t know yet if Marguerite is in Paris or not, but if so, in case of need, her address is 4 rue du Cirque, near the Place Beauvau, rue du Faubourg St. Honoré.
If you won’t come to lunch, will you have tea on either Thursday or Friday. I hope to hear from you in the morning. I think you can bring back scent if the bottle has been opened, and it is MUCH cheaper there: I think Guerlain’s is still as good as any, Nuit de Noel is a good one, but you can always have smells before choosing.
I hope you are comfortable. I see it is Ladbroke Grove district. I shall feel saner tomorrow, when this speech is over.
Madame la Princesse de Bassiano
4 rue due Cirque.
[EH has added by hand:]
American Women’s University Club
4, rue de Chevreuse 6me
1.Victoria Palace Hotel, 6 rue Blaise Desgoffe, near the Luxembourg Gardens in the Cherche-Midi neighbourhood, was built in 1913 and managed by a Dane named Niels Davidsen. Originally fitted out with 150 rooms, it is now a 5-star hotel with 62 rooms.
2.Hotel Chatham, an elegant central hotel on the rue Daunou.
4.MargueriteCaetani, Marguerite (née Chapin) Caetani, née Chapin (1880–1963) – Princesse di Bassiano – literary patron and editor: see Biographical Register. LéliaCaetani, Lélia Caetani (1913–77), sole daughter, was to marry Hubert Howard (1908–87), a scion of the English Catholic House of Howard, who worked to preserve the Caetani heritage at Rome and at the castle of Sermoneta.