[Stamford House, Chipping Campden]
IFabers, the1937 summer holiday with;d8 am writing a few lines before having my thumb poulticed again – result of getting a thorn into it. Also slightly lame from tennis. The weather has been very fine until to-day, & life pleasant and quiet and I have not used my mind at all – sun and bathing make one healthily stupid. ThisGerard Hopkinses, the;a1 afternoon the Gerard Hopkins’s 1 arrive, and a school friend of one of the boys’ (Mrs. H. née Muirhead of Camb. Mass.) I hope for a letter from you tomorrow, but letters are slow, cross-country to a remote place like this. My mind is too torpid to have much to offer, but will not be so at the end of next week. Meanwhile I pray for your repose of mind and body.
1.GerardHopkins, Gerard (‘Gerry’) Hopkins (1892–1961), publisher and translator, and his wife Mabel. A nephew of Gerard Manley Hopkins – whose poetry, letters and diaries he put into print – he was educated at Balliol College, Oxford (president of OUDS), and won the Military Cross during WW1. In 1920 he joined Oxford University Press, serving as publicity manager and later editorial adviser. Fluent in French, he became well known for his feats of translation: his output included vols 7–27 of Jules Romain’s Men of Good Will; biographies by André Maurois; Proust’s Jean Santeuil; memoirs, broadcasts, plays. He was made Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur, 1951. According to Grevel Lindop, he was ‘a big, genial man, full of confidence and (according to Press gossip) a womanizer’ (Charles Williams: The Third Inkling, 72).
1.GerardHopkins, Gerard (‘Gerry’) Hopkins (1892–1961), publisher and translator, and his wife Mabel. A nephew of Gerard Manley Hopkins – whose poetry, letters and diaries he put into print – he was educated at Balliol College, Oxford (president of OUDS), and won the Military Cross during WW1. In 1920 he joined Oxford University Press, serving as publicity manager and later editorial adviser. Fluent in French, he became well known for his feats of translation: his output included vols 7–27 of Jules Romain’s Men of Good Will; biographies by André Maurois; Proust’s Jean Santeuil; memoirs, broadcasts, plays. He was made Chevalier de la Légion d’Honneur, 1951. According to Grevel Lindop, he was ‘a big, genial man, full of confidence and (according to Press gossip) a womanizer’ (Charles Williams: The Third Inkling, 72).