[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
OneBrownes, the Martin;b9Browne, Elliott Martin
Whatappearance (TSE's)nose;c1too thin for pince-nez;a3 else have I forgotten? that I have got my pince-nez, which look impressive and are really useful many times a day. The difficulty is that they fall off if I smile, sneeze, yawn, sweat, blow my nose or lean over; and it is difficult to eat in them because they tend to fall off when I chew, and the cord gets gravy on it. I may manage them with more address by the time you see them. I dare say I have the wrong kind of nose; too pinched and too narrow. I have also bought a winter suit, of a sober dark grey.
WhenEnglandLondon;h1in wartime;d4 there is a moon it is quite possible to dine out in a district that is familiar or not too far away. LastJennings, Richard;a4 night with Jennings, tonightRichardses, thewartime dinner with;b2 with the Richards’s. The tendency is to dine, or at least to meet, about half past six, and to go home very early.
I must try to [be] patient in waiting for letters, and only hope that you have now heard from me. My letters won’t come in order, but I will put anything urgent into the air letters. Mytravels, trips and plansEH's 1939 England visit;d5in TSE's memory;b3 mind is ever full of the scenes of the last week and last weekend at Campden, and especially the moment of looking out at the yew tree, which has never looked more impressive than it did under that particular glow of moonlight. It was the most wonderful of summers.
1.JohnPrickett, John Prickett (1907–95), Headmaster of Kent College for Boys, Canterbury, 1933–60.
5.RichardJennings, Richard Jennings (1881–1952), leader writer and literary editor of the Daily Mirror; noted bibliophile. He lived at 8 The Grove, London S.W.5; later at 8 The Little Boltons, S.W.10.
1.JohnPrickett, John Prickett (1907–95), Headmaster of Kent College for Boys, Canterbury, 1933–60.