[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
I have had no letter from you this week: it may be that there is one waiting at the office this morning, but I shall not be able to answer it until next week, asMoot, The;b3 I have to go to a weekend meeting of the Moot at Jordan’s – I missed the last one in February, as I was recuperating from a cold. Itravels, trips and plansTSE's abortive 1940 Italian mission;d8in jeopardy;a7 don’t suppose that the news from the Mediterranean (probably much magnified by the American press) is to be taken at its face value, and implies modern diplomacy rather than genuine aggressiveness; but even the slight uncertainty of going to deliver them makes the preparation of lectures more tedious. Meanwhile the spring is very slow in coming, and there is no temptation whatever to wear anything but winter clothes. Idogs'Boerre' (Norwegian Elkhound);b7;c8 hope that the year is more forward with you, and that the weather draws you forth to long walks with Boerre. I think of Williamsburgh and Petticoat Hill with the view across the valley.
I have nothing more than small events to report. IHutchinsons, the;c1 dinedMcKnight Kauffers, the;a9 on Tuesday quietly with the Hutchinsons and the Kauffers, andDemant, Revd Vigo Auguste;b2 on Wednesday with the Demants in Richmond to discuss his next book. I have bought a pair of fawn coloured corduroy trousers for country wear (supposed to be very strong) and a few more shirts to complete my stock before the price goes up. I hope to visit Cambridge in a week or two. AffairsFaber and Faber (F&F)war ties TSE to;e3 in Scandinavia of course affect the supply of paper: if it means that books will be fewer, instead of merely more expensive, that will not be altogether a bad thing.
YourMorrow, Elizabeth Cutter;a2 newspaper cutting about Mrs. Morrow 1 arrived, and I read it with much interest.
ICocktail Party, The;a7 shallwritingthe effect of war on;c7 find life more tolerable when I am able to get started with a play, as the private agonies of composition will take my mind off of public affairs. The combination of those, with the spring which is here according to the calendar, make me rather restless without some job like that which I really want to do. I never did and never shall enjoy lecturing, the only attractions of which are money and taking one where one wants to go. Itravels, trips and planspossible wartime transatlantic crossings;d7;a7 do feel however that Smith would be a difficult place for me to visit for any length of time, though I shouldn’t mind being at Amherst, or Williams … or even Mt. Holyoke! though the last would certainly be a penance.
1.Elizabeth Cutler Morrow, Acting President of Smith College, 1939–40. Cutting not traced.
4.RevdDemant, Revd Vigo Auguste Vigo Auguste Demant (1893–1983), Anglican clergyman; leading exponent of ‘Christian Sociology’; vicar of St John-the-Divine, Richmond, Surrey, 1933–42: see Biographical Register.
1.ElizabethMorrow, Elizabeth Cutter Cutter Morrow (1873–1955), benefactor and philanthropist – widow of Dwight Morrow (1873–1931), U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, 1927–30, and Senator – was the active, enterprising President of the Alumnae Association of Smith College; from 1926, a Trustee of the Board. She served as Acting President of Smith College for the interim year 1939–40.