[22 Paradise Rd.; forwarded to Perkins, 90 Commonwealth Ave., Boston]
Your letter 64 arrived this morning – several days after 65, so that is some irregularity – just as I was going to write anyway before leaving for Oxford. I would have written yesterday, but I had a good deal of typing to do in the morning, and then learned that a Mrs. Hawkes, who runs ammunition works, and who had come for a day or two of rest, had had a touch of ’flu and was in bed in the next room: and the floors and partitions in this house carry sound too well – as the house was originally designed by an eccentric woman who wouldn’t employ an architect. I now go my usual round: Oxford and Hampstead, andCoker, Margaret Rosalys ('Margot', née Mirrlees);a1 am to be driven back on Thursday by Mrs. Coker (the younger daughter) who is coming from Bicester and has to stop in London.
IHale, Emilyvisits Perkinses in Boston;n6 was glad to hear about your visit to Boston; and have no need to say, but always like to say, how fully I understand the causes of its exhausting nature. I shall now satisfy your scruples and not cable so often, though I don’t like not to: allEliot, Henry Ware, Jr. (TSE's brother)nervous about TSE during Blitz;f8 the more because I feel obliged to cable pretty often to Henry, he is so nervous. HisSheffield, Ada Eliot (TSE's sister)apparently ill;h6 last cable to me said ‘Ada doing finely’, which was not at all reassuring as he meant it to be, because I had not heard of her being ill, or having had any accident: so I am now awaiting his reply to the cable of enquiry I sent him. Another reason for cabling him frequently is that he has paid my life insurance premium for me, to save me the difficulty of getting a licence to send the money myself.
IFamily Reunion, The1940 American production;h2;a1 was very much interested to hear of the performance of ‘The Family Reunion[’], of which I knew nothing. Perhaps that is not true: Ashley did telephone to me some weeks ago to mention some U.S.A. production, to which I gave my assent; whether it was this one I don’t know. I am glad that you approved of it. MartinBrowne, Elliott Martin1939 production of The Family Reunion;c1direction of Family Reunion;c2 managed the candle scene very skilfully – indeed improving considerably on my own directions; but his handling of the ghosts left much to seek. I should prefer them to be left to the imagination: and if the window is so arranged that the audience can decide for itself whether anyone on the stage sees them except Harry. It would be just as good an interpretation for my purpose if Agatha and Mary were supposed to see them only by a transference from Harry’s mind. Howwritingthe effect of war on;c7 longCocktail Party, Thedeferred by war;a9 ago the whole thing now seems, and the days when I could concentrate on the problems of those characters (now like forgotten friends) and ignore, for months on end, current events.
IBritish Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)'Towards a Christian Britain';b9 have had several other suggestions for broadcasting, but nothing that seems exactly in my line. I have decided that the ‘postscript’ work is not for me; now I have been asked to do a short part in a Christmas broadcast from Canterbury; but the short piece they want me to do is merely descriptive of the cathedral, and apart from my association in the public mind with that place, it is something that a number of other people could do as well or better. I feel that I ought to save the microphone for occasion[s] on which I really have something I want to say to the public. However, I have got to see a man who will call on Thursday morning, about it. The third broadcast, in a Christian series, is more in my way: but the subject, ‘The Christianisation of Britain’, is immense for twenty minutes!
IAldington, Richard'Farewell to Europe';a2 should be interested to know whether Aldington’s essay in the ‘Atlantic’ 1 contained anything libellous, either overt or by innuendo. IAldington, RichardStepping Heavenward;a3 ask because he once did write a very libellous account of me under the guise of fiction: 2 I took no steps about it because that would only have given it more publicity. It was vicious because he knew just enough about me to persuade anyone who made the identification that other things about his fictitious character, which were pure inventions, were also based on fact. But that was years ago: it is a pity that the elephant never forgets, because he is an unbalanced fellow, and he had previously taken as injuries one or two things I had said to him, or about him in print, which I had intended in all good will, but which I realised afterwards were, to a man of his temperament, tactless on my part. All the elephant can do is to mention him in its prayers, which it does; but it would perhaps be more Christian simply to forget all about the affair and about him.
WellHale, Irene (née Baumgras)decamps from Northampton;c6, I am thankful that Aunt Irene has left, andHale, Emilyreligious beliefs and practices;x1TSE on her 'Christian spirit';b3 I don’t think that your Christian spirit needs any more of this particular discipline. I say ‘Christian spirit’ too not as pleasant flattery but with a certain precision, because I think there has been much more to it than the amiable good-nature of the ‘natural’ Emily. You naturally tend to believe in people, but there is nothing pliant or negative about you; and when you see through somebody I suspect that you naturally tend to be severe and perhaps even intolerant: so that your attitude towards Aunt I. is a bit of triumph over yourself!
ICorpus Christi College, OxfordTSE's Oxford perch;a1 must now prepare to walk down to [sic] the hill to the bus; then another wait at the station; then a wait for the 1.15 from Paddington at Reading; and then a walk from the station at Oxford to Corpus.
1.Richard Aldington, ‘Farewell to Europe’, Atlantic Monthly, 66: 3 (Sept. 1940), 376–96; 66: 4 (Oct. 1940), 510–30; 66: 5 (Nov. 1940), 644–64; 66: 6 (Dec. 1940), 774–97: advance serialisation of sections of Life for Life’s Sake: A Book of Reminiscences (New York, 1941).
2.Richard Aldington’s satirical fiction Stepping Heavenward: A Record (1931) features TSE as ‘Jeremy Pratt Sybba’ – a name that is otherwise spelt, for obvious Popeian reasons, as ‘Cibber’ – and Vivien Eliot as ‘Adèle Paleologue’.
3.RichardAldington, Richard Aldington (1892–1962), poet and critic; friend of TSE in the years immediately after WW1. Aldington’s Stepping Heavenward, with its caricatures of TSE and Vivien Eliot, Ottoline Morrell and Virginia Woolf, had been published on 12 Nov. 1931. See further Vivien Whelpton, Richard Aldington, vol. 1: Poet, Soldier and Lover 1911–1929; vol 2: Novelist, Biographer and Exile 1930–1962 (Cambridge, 2019).
4.E. MartinBrowne, Elliott Martin Browne (1900–80), English director and producer, was to direct the first production of Murder in the Cathedral: see Biographical Register.
5.MargaretCoker, Margaret Rosalys ('Margot', née Mirrlees) Rosalys Mirrlees – ‘Margot’ (b. 1898) – wasCoker, Lewis Aubrey ('Bolo') married in 1920 to Lewis Aubrey Coker, OBE (1883–1953), nicknamed ‘Bolo’, a major in the Royal Field Artillery. T. S. Matthews, Great Tom: Notes towards the definition of T. S. Eliot (1974), 126: ‘The married daughter, Margot Coker, had a large country house near Bicester …’
3.HenryEliot, Henry Ware, Jr. (TSE's brother) Ware Eliot (1879–1947), TSE’s older brother: see Biographical Register.
3.IreneHale, Irene (née Baumgras) Hale, née Baumgras, widow of Philip Hale, celebrated as the prolific and influential music critic of the Boston Herald. Irene Hale, who was herself an accomplished pianist, had studied at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music, where she gained the Springer Gold Medal 1881, and continued with her studies in Europe under Raif and Moritz Mosckowski: she later wrote music under the name Victor Rene.
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.