[Stamford House, Chipping Campden]
I am ashamed to have sent you such a poor scrawl last night, and to receive such a lovely letter this morning. IHayward, JohnHyde Park excursion with;i7 felt stupified [sic] by the heat, and by the exercise: but I felt afterwards that I had put it as if I had been very unselfish in taking John to the park, whereas it was quite as enjoyable and as beneficial for me as for him. IHale, Emilyrelationship with TSE;w9as perpetual progress and revelation;c1 am very happy in your speaking of the continual sense of growth of companionship and intimacy after each period more or less together; because one of the most precious things to me is just the sense of always growing more closely together and interknit – of something perpetually progressive, as well as the thankfulness for the unique sense of serenity and wellbeing that comes of being in your company – anywhere, but most when we have times alone together, even on the deck of a river steamer! It is not only being happy in the moment, but of being able to look forward to further unification and unexplored joy in the future: delights which one simply could not have understood the meaning of twenty years ago.
IFamily Reunion, Thesubmitted to EH's theatrical wisdom;e3 shall bring the play, and perhaps a typewriter, and want to discuss with you all the hinges and doorknobs the absence of which you will notice. YourMorley, Frank Vigor;h7 commentBrowne, Elliott Martin;c5 on Morley and Browne seems to me very sound. Astravels, trips and plansEH's 1938 summer in England;d1TSE's 3–6 September Campden visit;b1 for joining you in September – why not? we will discuss that when I come. ISeaverns, Helen;c1 am sorry the house will be so full, but I trust Miss Anderson will go away in the evening when the curfew rings, and we don’t mind Mrs. Seaverns. No, four guineas is not too much. Thank you VERY much for your letter. I enclose copies of letters I wrote this evening: IJoachim, Harold Henry ('H. H.')dies;a1 was saddened by the death of Joachim, though I had not seen him for many years.1
[Enclosure: Letter to Jacques Maritain, 2 Aug. 1938.2]
1.‘Professor H. H. Joachim’, The Times, 2 Aug. 1938, 12. JoachimJoachim, Harold Henry ('H. H.') was a Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, 1897–1919; Wykeham Professor of Logic at New College, Oxford, 1919–35. TSE was his pupil at Merton in 1914–15. See TSE’s tribute in The Times: CProse 5, 646–7.
2.See Letters 8, 918–19.
4.E. MartinBrowne, Elliott Martin Browne (1900–80), English director and producer, was to direct the first production of Murder in the Cathedral: see Biographical Register.
11.JohnHayward, John Davy Hayward (1905–65), editor and critic: see Biographical Register.
1.‘Professor H. H. Joachim’, The Times, 2 Aug. 1938, 12. JoachimJoachim, Harold Henry ('H. H.') was a Fellow of Merton College, Oxford, 1897–1919; Wykeham Professor of Logic at New College, Oxford, 1919–35. TSE was his pupil at Merton in 1914–15. See TSE’s tribute in The Times: CProse 5, 646–7.
4.FrankMorley, Frank Vigor Vigor Morley (1899–1980), American publisher and author; a founding editor of F&F, 1929–39: see Biographical Register.
3.HelenSeaverns, Helen Seaverns, widow of the American-born businessman and Liberal MP, Joel Herbert Seaverns: see Biographical Register.