[Stamford House, Chipping Campden]
I got back early this morning,1 and was happy to find your very sweet letter. If I had not heard, I should have been sure that you were exhausted by the journey or had caught cold: as it is, I shall feel more assured when I see you. Itravels, trips and plansEH's 1937 summer in England;c7EH accompanies TSE to Edinburgh;a7 was particularly happy that you mentioned the hour at Russell Square, because that [was] to me (as I should have told you in any case) the best moment in the whole three – four – days. The most tiresome was being carried off towards the other end of the library, and not knowing when you left, or how you managed until you were safely aboard the train.
The rest of the time was, as you have supposed, very full indeed, but I got a nap or two in the afternoons. It ended with a discussion last night with the undergraduate Cosmopolitan club (including suave Indians, polite Chinese, and grinning black negroes, and an earnest young lady who insisted on my signing her book with her own pen) from which I was dashed off to catch the train. As it poured torrents all of Sunday I am lucky to have got back without a trace of a cold. NoBaillie, Very Revd JohnTSE leaves pyjamas with;a7 mishap except leaving my pyjamas behind at the Baillies’. It was all very satisfactory.
I will give the details (as will you) when we meet. I was very proud and happy to have you in the Hall with me; and I am very glad you came, but we have still to settle the matter of that £6 look [sic] you gave me. I shall certainly catch the 1.45 on Saturday.
1.From Edinburgh.
3.VeryBaillie, Very Revd John Revd John Baillie (1886–1960), distinguished Scottish theologian; minister of the Church of Scotland; Roosevelt Professor of Systematic Theology at Union Seminary, New York, 1930–4; and was Professor of Divinity at Edinburgh University, 1934–59. In 1919 he married Florence Jewel Fowler (1893–1969), whom he met in service in France during WW1. Author of What is Christian Civilization? (lectures, 1945). See Keith Clements, ‘John Baillie and “the Moot”’, in Christ, Church and Society: Essays on John Baillie and Donald Baillie, ed. D. Fergusson (Edinburgh, 1993); Clements, ‘Oldham and Baillie: A Creative Relationship’, in God’s Will in a Time of Crisis: A Colloquium Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Baillie Commission, ed. A. R. Morton (Edinburgh, 1994).