[41 Brimmer St., Boston]
I reread your last two letters after reading your dear note of the 28th March, which came yesterday (Thursday) and I felt more than ever annoyed with myself for my last letter but one, and dissatisfied with my very last. Even did I not, I should still always feel impelled every little while to say the same things over and over – to try feebly to express a little of my gratitude and thankfulness and humble adoration. And I want you to know that every letter has brought me increased and steadier happiness, and whatever you give me seems to me always far more than I expect or deserve. It is wonderful to feel humble and proud at once – both a humility and a pride that I have never known before – it is not two alternating feelings but all one feeling – I am sure you know what I mean.
I hold the hope that in time, I shall have filled in an account of all the last fifteen years, in my letters – and that you will in time, do the same for me in yours – but one has to wait and let things come up as occasion suggests, and not try to write an autobiography! (P.S. I am waiting to hear about Roxane). For there is too so much in present [sic], is there not, my dear Lady, and that is the most important part of our life.
I am glad that my poor photographs are upstairs. I wait impatiently for mine – I don’t know which I shall prize more, the You that will have been taken for me, but which I shall no doubt have to share with other friends and relatives, or the other that I have, my baby that I have taken possession of.
QuestionsHale, Emilycorrespondence with TSE;w3TSE envisions as reading-group;a3: if you are reading, will you not sometimes tell me what, so that I may sometimes read the same book that you are reading, at the same time. There is a very great deal of ‘standard’ literature that I have not read, and should like to read with you. So may we discuss your programme (a programme is not so hard to draw up as it is to carry out!)
And tell me a few of the pieces of music that you like particularly, so that I may get them for myself on the gramophone.
And your spring costumes and hats??
IJohn Dryden: Poet – Dramatist – Criticbeing composed and rehearsed;a1 am very busy this week and with the first of a set of three radio talks on Dryden, which I am to give on Sunday afternoons.1 I rehearsed the first this morning, and it went quite well.2 AlsoBritish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)TSE's committee service for;a1 discussed at the British Broadcasting Co, a committee on Educational Subjects in their Programme, which I am to join. HowEnglish Church Union;a2 easy it is to be put on committees! what with the English Church Union, andEnglish Review;a2 the English Review, and the B.B.C. and so on – unremunerative employment is very easy to get – and I could lecture every week – so long as I did not expect to be paid for it!
I shall write again by Tuesday – perhaps I shall have another letter, as you hold out hope of another (longer?) in a few days. You will read from this letter that I feel to-day peaceful and happy in the present, due to my dove.
1.John Dryden: Poet – Dramatist – Critic (New York, Oct. 1932).
2.TSE’s talks marking the tercentenary of John Dryden began with ‘The Poet who Gave the English Speech’, printed in The Listener, 15 Apr. 1931, 621–2.