[Stamford House, Chipping Campden]
Thank you for your dear note received this evening: all the more dear and welcome because, I confess, I half expected it. Thistravels, trips and plansEH's 1938 summer in England;d1TSE's 5–21 August Campden fortnight;a9 will, I hope, my dear, reach you before I do, and tell you how eagerly I am looking forward to seeing you and being with you. IShakespeare, WilliamHenry VIII;b7 do NOT want to go to Henry VIII on Saturday, if there is the alternative of have [sc. having] a little time alone with you in the garden. ISorabji, Cornelia;a2 haveRichmond, Elena;a2 had a busy day – lunch with that darling Cornelia Sorabji and Lady Richmond, thenIovetz-Tereshchenko, N. M.;a3 to deal with Iovetz-Tereshchenko, thenRead, Herbert;b8 Herbert Read to tea, thenTandy, Geoffrey;c3 sherry before dinner with Geoffrey Tandy; and now several letters to write before bedtime – tomorrow to pack and shop, and two engagements before I dash to Paddington: and how happy I shall be to be on the train (change at Moreton) and be on the way to you.
2.N. M. Iovetz-TereshchenkoIovetz-Tereshchenko, N. M. (1895–1954), B.Litt. (Oxon), PhD (London): Russian exile; Orthodox Catholic Christian; university lecturer in psychology: see Biographical Register.
3.Herbert ReadRead, Herbert (1893–1968), English poet and literary critic: see Biographical Register.
4.ElenaSorabji, Cornelia Richmond invited TSE to meet Cornelia Sorabji (1866–1954) – barrister and prominent social reformer, and author of a book of reminiscences entitled India Calling – at their London home, 3 Sumner Place, S.W.7, on Fri., 29 Mar. Sorabji’s ‘Note re Orthodox Hindus and Protection for Religion’ lamented one specific aspect of the Report on the Indian Constitutional Reform, to the effect that the protection accorded to religion since 1858 (Queen Victoria’s Proclamation) would seem to have been deliberately withdrawn.
2.GeoffreyTandy, Geoffrey Tandy (1900–69), marine biologist; Assistant Keeper of Botany at the Natural History Museum, London, 1926–47; did broadcast readings for the BBC (including the first reading of TSE’s Practical Cats on Christmas Day 1937): see Biographical Register.