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I'Should there be a Censorship of Books?';a2 have been very firm with myself that this must NOT be a letter, because I must finish my Speech: that is why I have taken small paper and am double-spacing. ItMcPherrin, Jeanette;c5 is9 Grenville Place, Londonoffered to Jeanie;b5 just to let you know that according to Elizabeth there will be a room for Jean here at any time within a reasonable future, so you need not worry. AndCheetham, Revd Erictaken ill;b3 the Vicar is away in a nursing home; and when I came in the other evening Mary said to me: ‘I’m very sorry to tell you, Sir, but the Cook has done a bunk: so I hope as it’s Elizabeth’s night out too, you won’t mind having a cold supper’. You will probably hear all about that from both Mary & Elizabeth; but we have a new cook who looks like a Dutch doll. ITrouncer, Margaret;a5 willLeslie, Sir Shane;a1 not attempt to tell you now about dinner with Mrs. Trouncer and Tom Trouncer and Shane Leslie andSimon, Margaret;a1 Mr & Mrs Edwards the latter was Betty Simon a daughter of Sir John1 and would have been Susanna’s godmother but for being a Papist; or about Mrs. Trouncer’s false teeth andappearance (TSE's)teeth;c2blamed for hair-loss;a5 my doctor wanting me to have all of mine out I had one out on Saturday but he wants me to get rid of the rest as he says I am being poisoned that’s why my hair comes out. OrGeorge, Robert Esmonde Gordon ('Robert Sencourt');c3 about lunch with Robert Sencourt to-day andBligh, Florence Rose, Countess of Darnley;a2 we had to wait for Elizabeth Underhill and Lady Darnley whose car broke down near Arundel so that we did not finish lunch till 4.35 which wasted a good part of the day. ButGeorge, Robert Esmonde Gordon ('Robert Sencourt')and Stead visit Campden;c4 RobertStead, William Forcevisits Campden;a7 is to be in Oxford and might it be possible to invite him and William Force Stead over to tea at Campden while I am there. ButFabers, the1935 summer holiday with;c5 IMcPherrin, Jeanette;c6 hope Jean will come before the 22nd, else Itravels, trips and plansTSE's 1935 Faber summer holiday;b9;a2 hope you will ask me after Wales instead of that week when you will be in London.
1.MargaretSimon, Margaret Simon (b. 1900).
3.FlorenceBligh, Florence Rose, Countess of Darnley Rose Bligh (née Morphy), Countess of Darnley (1860–1944), Australian-born widow of Ivo Bligh, 8th Earl of Darnley.
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.RobertGeorge, Robert Esmonde Gordon ('Robert Sencourt') Esmonde Gordon George – Robert Sencourt (1890–1969) – critic, historian, biographer: see Biographical Register.
1.SirLeslie, Sir Shane Shane Leslie (1885–1971), diplomat and author. Born into the Anglo-Irish Ascendancy – first cousin on his mother’s side to Winston Churchill – he read classics at King’s College, Cambridge, where he became a Roman Catholic for life (though christened John Randolph, he styled himself ‘Shane’ – the Irish form). He also resigned the Irish estates entailed upon him and was for several years committed to Irish Nationalist affairs (he stood for Parliament in the 1910 election, unsuccessfully). In 1907 he went to Russia and visited Lev Tolstoy, and for a while he studied Scholastic Philosophy at Louvain University. He edited the Dublin Review, 1916–26, and published works including The End of a Chapter (1916); Henry Edward Manning: His Life and Labours (1921); Mark Sykes: His Life and Letters (1923); The Skull of Swift (1928). He succeeded as third baronet on the death of his father in 1944.
2.JeanetteMcPherrin, Jeanette McPherrin (1911–92), postgraduate student at Scripps College; friend of EH: see Biographical Register.
2.WilliamStead, William Force Force Stead (1884–1967), poet, critic, diplomat, clergyman: see Biographical Register.
2.MargaretTrouncer, Margaret Trouncer (1903–82), author of A Courtesan of Paradise: The Romantic Story of Louise de la Vallière, Mistress of Louis XIV (F&F, 1936). See http://archive.thetablet.co.uk/article/18th-december-1982/23/obituary-margaret-trouncer