[No surviving envelope]
IHale, Irene (née Baumgras);a5 am grieved to say that Mrs. Hale has failed me at the end. I wrote a letter by the first post on Saturday, so that she should not have time to write; saying that I would ring up in the afternoon, and she could leave a message for me. She left word to say that she would like to come to tea to-day, and I left word to say that I would fetch her. I was quite elated; but my mistake was in making the appointment for to-day, which gave her two days to think the matter over. If I had made the appointment for Saturday I believe I might have got her to come: the best way with neurotic people is not to give them time to change their minds. I wrote, of course, on club notepaper, as I had no other address to give.
HoweverHale, Emilytaken to Tovaritch;f8, I have got three tickets for ‘Tovarisch’ – perhaps we shall learn how to pronounce it – on the floor, not very well forward, but on the aisle; and I will call for you for dinner first at 6.45. On Wednesday next.
TheCheetham, Revd Erictaken ill;b3 vicar is much better – I saw him yesterday – but not yet up and about. He said to inform you that he would be delighted to make your acquaintance, if possible, on one of your visits. Elizabeth told him that I had given you the impression that he was a much older man, and he wanted to know what I had said – had I perhaps called him an ‘amiable old thing’ or something of the sort? I denied having spoken flippantly, or having deliberately mislead [sic] you.
I look forward to Wednesday, and to the following Monday.
4.RevdCheetham, Revd Eric Eric Cheetham (1892–1957): vicar of St Stephen’s Church, Gloucester Road, London, 1929–56 – ‘a fine ecclesiastical showman’, as E. W. F. Tomlin dubbed him. TSE’s landlord and friend at presbytery-houses in S. Kensington, 1934–9. See Letters 7, 34–8.
3.IreneHale, Irene (née Baumgras) Hale, née Baumgras, widow of Philip Hale, celebrated as the prolific and influential music critic of the Boston Herald. Irene Hale, who was herself an accomplished pianist, had studied at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, where she gained the Springer Gold Medal 1881, and continued with her studies in Europe under Raif and Moritz Mosckowski: she later wrote music under the name Victor Rene.