[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
I was relieved to get your cable on Monday, but still no letter has come since No. 31 of April 4th, and that is a long time. I hope that mine also have not been delayed to the same extent. Perhaps your 39 went by ordinary mail; and I dare say that it will turn up within a post of my sending this off. There will be a gap in mine, as I put off writing last week in the daily expectation of hearing from you, until I became too impatient and cabled. (It was stupid of me, by the way, not to have made my cable reply paid). ThenSt. Paul's School, Londonaddressed on modern poetry;a1 onOakeshott, Walter F.;a2 Monday I had my committee, and on Tuesday afternoon I had to go down to St. Paul’s School (which is now in the country) at the invitation of the High Master to talk to him and some of his masters about modern poetry – the question in their minds being: why is it so difficult for us to understand? 1 I think that a critic, rather than a poet could have explained better to them, but they seemed satisfied.
Itravels, trips and plansTSE's abortive 1940 Italian mission;d8itinerary;a6 can now give you my time-table. Leave Monday May 20th. After that
Excelsior-Gallia Hotel, Milan: 21–23.
Astoria Hotel, Genoa: 23–25
Excelsior Italie Hotel, Florence: 25–28
Excelsior Hotel, Rome: 28–1 June.
Excelsior Hotel, Naples: 1–4 June.
Hotel des Palmes, Palermo: 4–7 June.
Hotel Beaujolais (probably) Paris: 9 June.
After that I may spend a couple of nights quietly in Paris, returning by air.
The difficulty is [sc. in] the Mediterranean does not look as if it would lead to anything; but if my visit should have to be deferred on account of it I would cable you. If anything started while I was there, the Embassy would look after me. In each of these towns there is a British Institute, which is where I am to lecture, and the local Institute staff look after me while I am there. I shall however be glad to get back, and start on some work of my own.
TheFaber and Faber (F&F)war ties TSE to;e3 chiefFaber and Faber (F&F)on war footing;e2 difficulty of the moment is the inevitable shortage of the paper supply from Scandinavia, which is serious for publishers – and I am told that even New York publishers have in the past been depending largely on Scandinavia too. The world has been consuming far too much paper anyway, and it would be a good thing if fewer books were published (though actually the proportion of paper consumed in normal times by books is surprisingly small) but the likelihood is that some good books, as well as a good many bad ones, will have to be postponed. Otherwise, there is no lack of anything the private person needs, though prices tend to rise.
TheHayward, Johnexcursions to Cambridge to visit;k1 springHugh Inneses, thevisited in Cambridge;a3 is very slow and cold everywhere, though the country is beginning to look seasonable, with cherry blossom. On Saturday I go down to Cambridge to visit Magdalene and to see John Hayward, as well as the Innes’s (Christina Morley’s parents, who must be pretty lonely – they have no other children, as their two sons were killed in the last war) and perhaps other people.
ASheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister);h3 letter from Ada, dated April 14, came yesterday, and yet nothing from you. Hers came as usual by ordinary mail. I always feel restless and unsettled if more than ten days elapses; and one had [thought], evidently without good reason, that the spring would mean more rapid transit. Meanwhile'Types of English Religious Verse'prepared for Italy;a2 I'Last Twenty-Five Years of English Poetry, The'written for Italian audience;a2 try to plod on with the final draft of my lectures, in which I am copying out any poems that I want to read or quote, so as to save taking books. The papers to be filled in before leaving the country are numerous. If I hear from you to-day or tomorrow I will write again immediately. I do hope that you have not had an illness, and that you can keep up your courage and faith – very hard I know, but what are courage and faith for? If I have a cheerful letter (but don’t ever force it – you know I want you to write always according to your mood) I shall rejoice.
1.St Paul’s School had been evacuated from London to Crowthorne, Berkshire. The High Master, 1939–46, was Walter F. Oakeshott (1903–87).
11.JohnHayward, John Davy Hayward (1905–65), editor and critic: see Biographical Register.
4.WalterOakeshott, Walter F. F. Oakeshott (1903–87), a graduate of Balliol College, Oxford (first class honours in Greats), he was a school and university administrator, and scholar of medieval art. Assistant Master, Winchester College, 1931–8. High Master of St Paul’s School, London, 1939–46. Headmaster of Winchester, 1946–54. Rector of Lincoln College, Oxford, 1954–72. Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University, 1962–4. President of the Bibliographical Society, 1966–8. Fellow of the British Academy, 1971. Knighted, 1980. He became famous in June 1934 for his discovery, in the Fellows’ Library at Winchester, of a manuscript copy of Malory’s Le Morte d’Arthur (now British Library: Add MS 59678). The ‘Winchester Manuscript’ was to be published in The Works of Sir Thomas Malory, ed. Eugène Vinaver (1947); see Oakeshott, ‘The Finding of the Manuscript’, Essays on Malory, ed. J. A. W. Bennett (Oxford, 1963), 1–3.
2.AdaSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister) Eliot Sheffield (1869–1943), eldest of the seven Eliot children; author of The Social Case History: Its Construction and Content (1920) and Social Insight in Case Situations (1937): see Biographical Register.