[c/o Perkins, 90 Commonwealth Ave.; forwarded to 22 Paradise Rd., Northampton]
(including one from Wales)
IFabers, the1940 summer holiday with;e7 have not time to write very much, and for a time my letters may tend to be short; but I wanted to let you know at once that I had returned from Wales – where, it is only necessary [sic], I had a very quiet and healthful, and uneventful holiday of ten days. I stayed one day longer than I had intended, asFaber, Enid Eleanor;b3 I found that Enid had to drive into Aberystwyth anyway on Tuesday, so I wished to spare them the petrol consumption to drive me in on Monday. I am very well, and am sending you a cable to-day to Commonwealth Avenue to reassure you. ISecond World WarThe Blitz;c6 know, my dear, that the time is going to be very hard for you for the next days, and I think constantly and incessantly of the strain upon you. We can only, as we must, think that no other course or situation was possible: at least we have not the particular torment of thinking that it might have been arranged otherwise. But I should like you to know (though it can bring you no comfort) that I am always burdened by the consciousness of the trouble I have brought you: and I cannot think – and it would not be for me to think – that there has been any adequate benefit or happiness. I shall probably be writing you more little letters like this, instead of fewer long ones; and I want you to know that I depend upon you more steadily and profoundly than ever.
1.TSE was mistaken here. EnidFaber, Enid Eleanor Eleanor Faber (1901–95) was the daughter of Sir Henry Erle Richards (1861–1922), Fellow of All Souls College and Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy at Oxford University, and Mary Isabel Butler (1868–1945).