[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
Very little seems to have happened since I wrote last, and I have no letter from you this week, but it is a short week, and I may find one at the office on Tuesday. IAmericaits horrors;c2'Easter holidays' not including Easter;b5 can never remember when you get your Easter vacation, except that I know that in American colleges it is never at Easter. So slow is communication, that I seem only just to have heard from you about the Christmas recess; I am hoping that you have made plans for a more restful change this time; for now, at the end of the winter, (and a severe winter) is when you need a restful break. IPerkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle);d6 had a nice letter from Dr. Perkins, in which he spoke of your seeming much stronger this winter than last. I hope that he is right.
ThisChristianitythe Church Year;d8in wartime;c2 week has centred, of course, around the daily services of the Church. No longer having a choir, and not being able to employ special choristers any longer, the offices have been a good deal shorn, but all the essentials have been preserved. I have missed the ‘Tenebrae’ services which we have always had on the Wednesday, Thursday and Friday evenings of Holy Week, and which are very beautiful: but it has been a solemn and dignified Holy Week nevertheless; and there only remains Easter Day tomorrow.
I'English Tradition: Some Thoughts as a Preface to Study, The';a1 have done my article for ‘Christendom’, but have not yet heard whether it is satisfactory; 1 and'Types of English Religious Verse';a3 now'Last Twenty-Five Years of English Poetry, The'written for Italian audience;a2 I have about six weeks in which to write my two lectures.
It has been a relief to have a day without a newspaper, and I felt no temptation yesterday to turn to the wireless for news: IWagner, RichardParsifal;a2unsuitable music for Good Friday;a1 did not turn it on at all, partlyBritish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)plays Parsifal on Good Friday;b7 to express my disgust with the B.B.C. for always performing that horrid music of ‘Parsifal’ on that day. Any music less suitable to the day than that – if one is going to have music at all – I cannot imagine. The future of the world remains completely obscure; and so far, the economic consequences of the war are the most interesting to guess at. There is a good deal of concern over the future of the public schools – or most of them – as fewer people will be able to afford the expense of sending their boys to them; and it seems likely that they will be reconstituted with state aid – perhaps as part of a further reaching change in the educational system.
DrPerkins, Edith (EH's aunt);e4. Perkins spoke of Mrs. Perkins not having had such good health this winter. I hope there is no anxiety?
I think I am rather stupid and tired at the end of this week. But not in poor health, for the time of year (warmer weather, especially after the extreme cold winter, makes one languid); and it has been a Lent bringing some serenity in spite of the overwhelming burden of the world’s troubles. And if I have a letter from you on Tuesday, that will help very much.
1.TSE, ‘The English Tradition: Some Thoughts as a Preface to Study’, Christendom: A Journal of Christian Sociology 10: 38 (June 1940), 101–8: CProse 6, 64–72.
3.DrPerkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle) John Carroll Perkins (1862–1950), Minister of King’s Chapel, Boston: see Biographical Register.