[Stamford House, Chipping Campden]
I want to tell you, before we meet again, how very happy I was Tuesday night in my awareness of the closeness of our response of feeling in each situation as it arose. Those have been channels in which, of course, we have not – and could not have, because if the situation had not been unique, it could not have existed at all – any experience. It is a wonderful thing, to be able to trust not only another person’s conscious mind, but their instinctive attitude in a new situation, and to feel that we both felt the same, and that reserves and reticences need no explanation, because there is a deeper level of spiritual understanding at which there are no reserves and reticences at all. I don’t think that it can be often that two people are able, in such a position, to preserve instinctively and without effort the right order of values and walk surefootedly and happy-heartedly along the edge of precipices and heights which most people would be unable to climb, or having climbed might fall from.
Itravels, trips and plansEH's 1939 England visit;d5TSE's 2–4 September Campden visit;a9 am prepared to find the weekend a very disturbed one, with little privacy or leisure. And I do not want to interfere with the necessary preparations, or be a burden to the household. You may trust my fitting myself in to whatever conditions I find.