[240 Crescent St., Northampton, Mass.]
ThisWare, Mary LeeEH sends memorial for;c8 is an interim note, to catch the Normandie tomorrow, and I will write again tomorrow night. Your letter of the 21st March, enclosing your memorial for Miss Ware, arrived just on the morning of my departure.1 Wetravels, trips and plansTSE's 1937 tour of Scotland;c5recounted;a3 had a successful (I think) visit; but it was tiring; and for three days I did not get the opportunity to wash properly; and I am suffering from indigestion after the baps and bannocks and oatcakes and porridge and mutton pies that I had to eat. We covered about 850 miles, I believe, by motor; onScotlandDumfries;b4;a1 theScotlandKirkudbright;c1;a1 first day from Dumfries through Kirkudbright [sc. Kirkcudbright] and along the Ayrshire coast, whichScotlandGlasgow;b7;a3 is lovely, to Glasgow; on the second day from Glasgow to a little inn on Loch Fyne – a delightful sea loch, with tide and seaweed and sea smell; on the third day to Inverness; on the fourth day up the Beauly River and back by Glen Urquhart; and on the fifth day from Inverness back to Glasgow. We interviewed several of the principal Glasgow booksellers; andMorley, Frank Vigortwo nights' sleep in a caravan with;g6 IScotlandInverness;b9;a2 had to spend two nights in a caravan (what you call a trailer) with Morley in a backyard in Inverness; and whenever either of us turned over in his bed the caravan quivered from end to end.2
I hope that my letters to Northampton have reached you, whether forwarded or kept for your return – I don’t believe any have been lost so far – it is that I have been infrequent; but from now I expect to write more regularly. I hoped, unreasonably, that I might find another letter on my return, but it is only just a week tomorrow since the last.
ByMurder in the Cathedraldiscrepancies of Canterbury Text;d1 the way, did you not know that the ‘arrangement’ (the introits) after the Sermon in ‘Murder’ is only in the first edition and was only used at Canterbury – for the London production and for the second edition a chorus is substituted. IMurder in the Cathedral1937 Amherst College production;f2singled out for praise;a1 have a letter from Professor G. R. Elliott who thinks that their Amherst production was especially good.
Your notice of Miss Ware is very good – but I think some of the sentences might be simplified – especially the opening sentence, which in any piece of writing ought to be immediately grasped, takes two or three readings. I should like to go through the whole thing with you to consider points of style and order.3
I hope I shall feel more active and less indigestive tomorrow night.
1.See below, Note 2.
2.See further TSE’s accounts of this trip: letters to Enid Faber, 6 Apr. 1937; to Geoffrey Faber, 20 Apr. (Letters 8, 556, 565–8).
3.See Appendix: ‘Mary Lee Ware: January 7, 1858 – January 9, 1937’.
4.FrankMorley, Frank Vigor Vigor Morley (1899–1980), American publisher and author; a founding editor of F&F, 1929–39: see Biographical Register.
3.MaryWare, Mary Lee Lee Ware (1858–1937), independently wealthy Bostonian, friend and landlady of EH at 41 Brimmer Street: see Biographical Register.