[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
I was glad to get your note saying that you had received another of mine from Lisbon (there were three altogether); and sorry that I could not write last week. ThatTruro School, CornwallTSE's speech-day address to;a1 wasWest Cornwall School for GirlsTSE's prize-day address to;a1 only due to my spending all my time fussing over the two speeches to make to the schoolchildren in Cornwall. It is the most difficult kind of speech to prepare, a speech to school-boys or school-girls just on things-in-general. I do not feel that I did brilliantly, but at least it is over without any harm having been done. IEnglandCornwall;e2TSE's visit to;a1 went down on Thursday and came back by sleeping-car on Saturday night: so that I had one day of speaking and one of being shown the country. I was in Methodist circles, of course, but Cornwall is very Methodist; and at least I saw Cornwall among Cornish people and not as a seaside tripper. It is of course a foreign country, but not so unpleasantly foreign as Wales, and indeed appears more civilised, as there is a certain amount of architecture, and the local dialect is not unpleasing: it sounds to an untrained ear simply a variant of West Country English. The country folk still refer to outsiders as ‘foreigners’. An old farmer, with whom my host got into conversation, was telling some complicated story in which he mentioned that one of the characters was an Englishman, ‘and the English are very clannish, you know’. TheRock, TheCornish schoolgirl recites chorus from;d8 ceremony at the girls’ school at Penzance was more trying than that at the boys’ school at Truro, because one of the girls recited a chorus from ‘The Rock’ (articulating with quite unnatural clearness, and thereby losing a good deal of expression) and the Head Girl made a speech, which she had memorised, which consisted mostly of an address of welcome to me. My host was an elderly colonel, the Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Boys School, who is a magnate of Imperial Chemical Industries. Some of the country is quite beautiful (although perhaps not so extraordinary as the Cornish like to think) especially the upper reaches of the river Fal. St. Ives and St. Mawes are picturesque, but the fishing industry is pretty dead, and these towns are infested by artists.
TomorrowUniversity of Cambridgeconfers honorary degree on TSE;a7 ICorpus Christi College, Cambridgeawards TSE degree;b2 go to Cambridge, and return on Friday. ISpens, Willhosts TSE for degree;a6 shall stay with Spens, the Master of Corpus. And I don’t have to make a speech. Even if you had been there, I don’t think I could have got you into the ceremony, as I have been offered no tickets, and I understand that as the Senate house is very small the ceremony is open only to members of the University, and they have to ballot for seats.
You will confirm the name of the boat before you sail (I take it you will stick to the New Amsterdam) and whether you disembark at Plymouth or Southampton. If the former, I imagine that I meet you at Paddington; if the latter, Waterloo: but a Dutch boat is more likely to stop at Plymouth.
IPerkinses, the;h6 had dinner with the Perkins’s at Aban Court last week. I am sorry that I was only able to see them once, and could not ask Dr. Perkins to lunch before I left for Truro. I thought he looked very well (I am very sorry about the disappointment over the publication of his history of King’s Chapel) but Mrs. Perkins pale and not so well. Theytravels, trips and plansEH's 1938 summer in England;d1TSE's July Campden visit;a7 have asked me down for a week directly upon your arrival, andInternational Theatre Congress, Stratford-upon-Avon;a2 also'Future of Poetic Drama, The';a2 to stop the night with them on the night before or after I speak at Stratford (the 5th July). The Brownes will be at Malvern and at Tewkesbury, so we shall be able to see them.
ISt. Stephen's Church, Gloucester Roadchurchwarding at;a5 had a busy Whitsun, directly I got back from Cornwall, with the large annual collection for the Assistant Clergy, so spent a quiet and rather idle Bank Holiday. I must, as soon as I get back from Cambridge, put in some hard work on the play.
It is now just a month until I see you.
7.WillSpens, Will Spens (1882–1962), educator and scientist; Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge: see Biographical Register.