[240 Crescent St., Northampton, Mass.]
I am annoyed to think that if I had written last night I could have caught the Queen Mary, and now must wait for the Europa. I was very tired last night, after a busy morning, a business lunch, a business interview in the City after lunch, return to Russell Square to sign my letters, andSt. Stephen's Church, Gloucester Roadvestry goings-on;a2 then a vestry meeting from six to eight; and abandoned the attempt to write any letters at all. What'Note on Two Odes of Cowley, A'and Grierson Festschrift;a1 timeGrierson, Sir HerbertFestschrift essay for;a1 ICowley, AbrahamTSE's note on;a1 had toward the end of Holy Week (and it was largely taken up of course with services, and then with looking after the church money) had to go on composing a brief note on Abraham Cowley for a volume in honour of Herbert Grierson on his retirement from Edinburgh University. Nowtravels, trips and plansTSE's 1937 tour of Scotland;c5itinerary;a2 I am in the middle of preparations for departure tonight – we arrive tomorrow at Dumfries, where weBlake, Georgeand TSE's 1937 tour of Scotland;b1 are met by Blake with a car, and motor through Galloway to Glasgow. A day at Glasgow to be occupied with meeting authors and newspapermen, and then on by car to Inverness, possibly stopping for one night at some place on the way. Then back to Glasgow by way of Aberdeen, and probably back to London by Tuesday morning. And any excursion from London for longer than a weekend means a pressure of work beforehand and another pressure afterwards.
IFamily Reunion, Thedescribed (mid-composition);b5 hope to finish the first draft of the first act soon after my return (thoughFlat 3, 11 Emperor's GateTSE moving to;a2 with the move to 11, Emperor’s Gate, which is due to take place on the 12th, I shall not be settled until towards the end of the month).1 I had rather wait to show you the whole play – if I can finish the first draft by the middle of June! – than try to describe it – because I am afraid that any account I can give will not do it justice! It is a modern dramatic play – I am not sure whether it will be a ‘tragedy’ or not, but it is very grim – the scene being a birthday party at which everything goes wrong except the cake. TheFamily Reunion, Thecompared to Murder;b3 versification is rather different from that of ‘Murder’, and I think I have got a form in which ordinary conversations will not sound ridiculous, and the more poetical passages will not seem highfalutin. There is no Fogerty chorus of young ladies this time, but at certain places certain of the characters speak for a few lines chorally. I have also revived the Furies of Aeschylus, but they have nothing to speak. And that’s about all I can say, except that there is a slight detective-story interest in it too. ThereHale, Emilyas actor;v8potentially in The Family Reunion;c4 isEvans, Edithconsidered for The Family Reunion;a7 a nice little part, which I shall probably enlarge in the second act, for you or Edith Evans. Of course it will all have to be re-written under expert advice about entrances and exits etc. – you will be in time to give me your counsel on these matters. AndAuden, Wystan Hugh ('W. H.')The Ascent of F6 (with Isherwood);d3 I think it is not a bit like Auden & Isherwood. AndSpeaight, Robertbecoming conceited;c9 I should prefer not to have Bobby Speaight as my leading man. (Did I tell you that some of us think he is getting rather conceited).
IMurder in the Cathedral1937 Harvard University production;f1;a1 thinkHarvard Universityproduces Murder;b2 that somebody might have invited you to see the Harvard performance – of which I have no reports yet – although I think you must by now be very tired of seeing such a variety of Murders.
As for manuscripts! I feel very contrite – but you must understand that it is because I attach so little importance to manuscripts! InGallup, Donaldgives TSE creeps;a2 fact, allYale Universityexhibits first editions of TSE;a7 this goings-on at Yale has given me the creeps – almost as bad as having a Portrait Effigy at Tussaud’s, which please God I shall never have. (And I have never been to Tussaud’s and don’t want to go). But you shall have the next manuscript or near-manuscript – which will probably be a typescript with corrections in pencil – that is all there was of ‘Burnt Norton’ – even if it [is] not so directly concerned with yourself. I have no acting version of The Rock – or of the Canterbury text of Murder either.
I hope that I shall hear that you have been to Princeton, or else have been able to get about further afield than Boston. ThePerkinses, the;f9 Perkins’s are coming very early.2 I hope that they will arrange to be out of London during Coronation Week – I trust at Camden [sic] itself – because it will be most crowded and uncomfortable.
I shall not be able to write again for a week. I hope that you will have a calm holiday, not worrying too much over yourself, but waiting for grace.
I hope you got my cable to Brimmer Street3 – it was judiciously worded, I hope – I did not know what would happen to it if you were not there.
1.TSEFlat 3, 11 Emperor's Gatedescribed;a3n was assigned two rooms on the upper floor of Cheetham’s new quarters at Flat 3, at the top of 11 Emperor’s Gate, London, S.W.7. He had to mount 79 stairs to his eyrie.
2.The Perkinses were expecting to reach Chipping Campden on 26 Apr.
3.Cable not found.
10.W. H. AudenAuden, Wystan Hugh ('W. H.') (1907–73), poet, playwright, librettist, translator, essayist, editor: see Biographical Register.
10.GeorgeBlake, George Blake (1893–1961), novelist, journalist, publisher: see Biographical Register.
2.EdithEvans, Edith Evans (1888–1976), versatile stage and screen actor; enduringly celebrated for her appearance as Lady Bracknell in the film of Oscar Wilde’s The Importance of Being Earnest (1952). Evans won her reputation during her long association (from 1925) with the Old Vic, London: her other notable roles included Judith Bliss in Noel Coward’s Hay Fever on the stage and the movie Tom Jones (1963). DBE, 1946.
3.DonaldGallup, Donald Gallup (1913–2000), curator, bibliographer and editor: see Biographical Register.
15.SirGrierson, Sir Herbert Herbert Grierson (1866–1960), Knight Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature at Edinburgh University, was elected Rector in 1936; knighted in 1936; celebrated for his edition of The Poems of John Donne (2 vols., 1912) and Metaphysical Lyrics and Poems of the Seventeenth Century (1921) – which TSE reviewed in the TLS, 21 Oct. 1921. TSE’s address was delivered on Fri. 29 Oct.
2.RobertSpeaight, Robert Speaight (1904–77), actor, producer and author, was to create the role of Becket in Murder in the Cathedral in 1935: see Biographical Register.