[Stamford House, Chipping Campden]
Thank you for your letter of yesterday, which came more quickly by the ordinary post than mine seems to have done by express. Thetravels, trips and plansEH's 1938 summer in England;d1EH's late-July London stay;a8 first thing is to get your visit of next week arranged. I have cleared the Thursday, but only, I am sorry to say, at the cost of making, or at least offering an engagement for Tuesday night. I found when I got back (I am sorry I did not mention this in my last letter) thatMadge, Charles;a5 I had a date of some time back to dine with one of my young men, Charles Madge, and discuss some things he is writing; and Tuesday seemed to be the only possible day. I was also thinking at the moment that Tuesday would be a good deal of a rush anyway, and I shall have some reading to do for the committee, and that perhaps you could stay over Friday night. The disadvantage of that is that you would be travelling back on Bank Holiday Saturday, but if you did I would reserve you a seat in advance, and see you to the train. I hope that this alteration will not be inconvenient? I also propose that you should look at the ballet programme for next week, and let me know which evening provides the programme which attracts you the most: observe that there is one Ballet at Covent Garden and another at Drury Lane – I imagine that they are about equal in merit, that is, that if the best dancers were taken from each there would be enough for one good ballet. TonightDrury Lane TheatreHindemith ballet with Dodo;a1 IHindemith, PaulNobilissima visione;a2 have to take Dodo to the first night of the Hindemith ballet, so I shall be able to judge of Drury Lane.1
MartinBrownes, the Martin;b8 Browne rang up yesterday and tells me that he and Henzie will be in Stratford during my next period in Campden, so I hope we can arrange to see them then. He is to be in Tewkesbury first, and said he would send me both addresses. He is not producing anything at Stratford, only lecturing at the summer school there.
ISperry, Willard Learoyd'pathetic';a3 hope your lunch at Oxford was not too fatiguing. Sperry seemed to me quite pathetic.
And we could go to a theatre one other night next week, if you will let me know what seems to you most worth while, or what actor is worth seeing. I will write again before I go to Winchester. Thank you again for your dear letter.
1.The London premiere of Paul Hindemith’s fifty-minute ballet Nobilissima visione (‘The Noblest Vision’), with libretto – based on scenes from the life of St Francis of Assissi – by Hindemith and Léonide Massine, was presented at Drury Lane on 21 July, with Hindemith himself conducting the performance, and with sets and costumes by Pavel Tchelitchew.
1.CharlesMadge, Charles Madge (1912–96), poet and sociologist: see Biographical Register.
5.WillardSperry, Willard Learoyd Learoyd Sperry (1882–1954), Congregationalist minister; Dean of the Harvard Divinity School, 1922–53; Plummer Professor of Christian Morals, 1928–53.