[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
This is LETTER NO. 4: I forgot to number No. 3. So far, including this letter, I have written four times, twice by sea and twice by air. IHale, Emilysafely returned;m4 was thankful to get your cable announcing your arrival, because correspondence seems to be very slow. I suppose that there has been a great congestion at first, more than the censors are yet able to cope with. The Censor will like me better than you, anyway, because I TYPE. I have written to my relatives, of course, but have not heard from any of them.
I imagine that you are probably remaining in Northampton (andPerkinses, thetemporarily homeless;j2 the Perkins’s stopping with the Springs at Boxwood: it is very hard for them, returning in this way, to have no home of their own to return to); and I hope that you are resting, and that the weather is not too hot. (It was very hot here for several days after you left, but is now cool and cloudy). Idogs'Boerre' (Norwegian Elkhound);b7;c2 wonder whether you have got Boerre back yet, and how he is behaving. I long for the most quiet sort of domestic news, and your thoughts about matters that have nothing to do with war, but with more trifling and also more important things.
I am likely to be busy enough, I think, in my ordinary life; itCocktail Party, The;a2 may [be] that I shall settle down after a time to a play. ButOldham, Josephfounds new wartime committee;c8 I am of course involved in Oldham’s schemes: there will be an attempt to get something going. AMairet, Philipon Oldham's new wartime committee;b3 littleSmith, William Henry, 3rd Lord Hambledenon Oldham's wartime committee;a2 committeeVidler, Revd Alec R.;a1, consisting of Oldham, myself, Mairet, Lord Hambleden, and possibly Vidler, the editor of ‘Theology’1 is to try to meet regularly on Monday evenings. IRichards, Ivor Armstrong ('I. A.')which he commits to;b6 now hear from Richards that he will go to Harvard after all – of which I am glad – andRichardses, thehost TSE before departing Magdalene;b1 I am to go down to Magdalene for the weekend of the 30th, before he leaves. This coming weekend will be spent with an Oldham group at Golder’s [sic] Green, only meeting in the daytime, and returning home at nightfall.
I shall write again by the air route before the end of the week. Meanwhile, my love and blessings.
1.RevdVidler, Revd Alec R. Alec R. Vidler (1899–1991), Anglican priest, theologian and periodical editor; librarian of St Deiniol’s Library at Hawarden, Chester (later Warden), 1939–48; editor of Theology: A Monthly Review, 1939–48. He was a noted participant in the discussion group ‘The Moot’, and served on the editorial board of the Christian News-Letter, and as editor of its associated books. Canon of St George’s Chapel, Windsor, 1948–56, he became in 1956 Fellow and Dean of King’s College, Cambridge, and university lecturer in Divinity, 1956–66. Works include The Modernist Movement in the Roman Church: Its Origins and Outcome (1934); Scenes from a Clerical Life: An Autobiography (1977).
8.PhilipMairet, Philip Mairet (1886–1975): designer; journalist; editor of the New English Weekly: see Biographical Register.
8.JosephOldham, Joseph (‘Joe’) Houldsworth Oldham (1874–1969), missionary, adviser, organiser: see Biographical Register.
4.I. A. RichardsRichards, Ivor Armstrong ('I. A.') (1893–1979), theorist of literature, education and communication studies: see Biographical Register.
1.WilliamSmith, William Henry, 3rd Lord Hambleden Henry Smith, 3rd Lord Hambleden (1903–48), Governing Director of W. H. Smith.
1.RevdVidler, Revd Alec R. Alec R. Vidler (1899–1991), Anglican priest, theologian and periodical editor; librarian of St Deiniol’s Library at Hawarden, Chester (later Warden), 1939–48; editor of Theology: A Monthly Review, 1939–48. He was a noted participant in the discussion group ‘The Moot’, and served on the editorial board of the Christian News-Letter, and as editor of its associated books. Canon of St George’s Chapel, Windsor, 1948–56, he became in 1956 Fellow and Dean of King’s College, Cambridge, and university lecturer in Divinity, 1956–66. Works include The Modernist Movement in the Roman Church: Its Origins and Outcome (1934); Scenes from a Clerical Life: An Autobiography (1977).