[22 Paradise Rd., Northampton, Mass.]
I want to write a letter, but I have not much to write about. No letter from you is due until the end of the week, so I have had none since I last wrote. Unlesswritingthe effect of war on;c7 oneSecond World Warits effect on TSE;b3 is actually engaged in war work that has to be done and that takes all one’s time, it is very hard to struggle against the temptation to waste time, simply from the always present sense of waiting. IYeats, William Butler ('W. B.')and 'Yeats';c3 am'Yeats';a1 trying to think about the plan of my lecture on Yeats, andMannheim, KarlMan and Society;a5 I have also promised to review Mannheim’s ‘Man and Society’ for the Spectator, but I find concentration difficult.1 And I don’t feel much like trying to make any plans for the summer. I suppose the best thing is to plan to spend a few weeks in country lodgings in some pleasant surroundings: I know of a farm house in Dorset, and another in Devon; andFabers, the1940 summer holiday with;e7 Itravels, trips and plansTSE's 1940 Faber summer holiday;e1;a1 expect to repeat my annual visit to Wales. But just at present, one is more than ever inclined to postpone decision.
I hope I shall feel less tongue-tied and numb at the end of the week! All this note is for is to express – no, hardly to express, but to indicate as a symbol all the feeling that is unexpressed.
1.TSE, ‘Man and Society’ – review of Mannheim, Man and Society in an Age of Reconstruction – Spectator 164 (7 June 1940), 782.
3.KarlMannheim, Karl Mannheim (1893–1947), Hungarian–Jewish sociologist: see Biographical Register.
4.W. B. YeatsYeats, William Butler ('W. B.') (1865–1939), Irish poet and playwright: see Biographical Register.