[No surviving envelope]
HowGill, Ericdesigns F&F letterhead;a2 doFaber and Faber (F&F)commission new letterhead from Eric Gill;d1 you like the new letterpaper? I think that I may get tired of it. Designed by Eric Gill.
IEssays Ancient and ModernTSE working on;a3 am writing a note – I never seem to write quite so easily when away from my own lair – I have spent the morning toiling over an essay for the new book of essays they want to produce – because I mean just in case you wrote to me on Wednesday it will be waiting for me at home. IMorleys, theTSE's September 1935 week with;f3 was persuaded to come down here (Pike’sPike's FarmSeptember 1935 week at;b3 Farm) onGarrigou-Lagrange, Réginald;a2 Wednesday night by the 11.52 train after Père Garrigou-Lagrange’s lecture (a charming old man) soO'Sullivan, Richard;a2 rushed back from Mr. O’Sullivan’s rooms in the Temple in time to pack hastily. Yesterday a fine hot morning, and scratched one finger pulling up an old brick walk that they want to re-lay, so I am writing with some slight difficulty. To-day cold and showery.
Itravels, trips and plansEH's 1934–5 year in Europe;b4TSE's Campden birthday weekend;e4 wonder whether I ought to come down on the afternoon of the 26th or not. What do you think? I should love to of course; butPerkins, Edith (EH's aunt);b9 I feel that the accident of the date, and the question of coming up in that way, made Mrs. Perkins feel that there was nothing else to do but ask me a day sooner. Tell me what would make the best impression.
I am unhappy over your trouble and suffering, though I should be much more unhappy, selfishly, if you did not share it with me. And there is no way out without suffering either; one just has to choose between the right and fruitful pain and the wrong and harmful.
I shall see you in a fortnight, whatever else happens or does not happen in the world. Everything at the moment seems to depend upon France. HoareHoare, Sir Samuel, 1st Viscount Templewood;a1 has at least said what has brought him the best press he could have got, especially throughout England.1
1.SirHoare, Sir Samuel, 1st Viscount Templewood Samuel Hoare, 1st Viscount Templewood (1880–1959), Conservative politician, was Foreign Secretary from 7 June to 18 Dec, 1935.
6.RéginaldGarrigou-Lagrange, Réginald Garrigou-Lagrange, OP (1877–1964), Dominican priest; leading Catholic Thomist theologian; author of Le Sens Commun: La Philosophie de l'être et les formules dogmatiques (3rd edn, Paris, 1922), and Les Trois Conversions et les trois voies (1933): both in TSE library. He spoke under the auspices of the Aquinas Society at the Temple, London, on ‘Le Premier Regard de l'intelligence et la contemplation’.
6.EricGill, Eric Gill (1882–1940), English sculptor, typeface engraver, typographer and printmaker. See Fiona MacCarthy, Eric Gill (1989).
1.SirHoare, Sir Samuel, 1st Viscount Templewood Samuel Hoare, 1st Viscount Templewood (1880–1959), Conservative politician, was Foreign Secretary from 7 June to 18 Dec, 1935.
7.RichardO'Sullivan, Richard O’Sullivan, KC, KSG (1888–1963), barrister, wrote on the Christian origin of the Common Law of England. He was founder of the Sir Thomas More Society.