[c/o Perkins, 90 Commonwealth Ave., Boston]
Letter 89.
I am not up to much in the way of a letter, as I have felt rather knocked about after having my teeth out (the second batch) in a nursing home on Thursday. I was given a very good new anaesthetic – ‘evipan’ – which is an injection and therefore not disagreeable like gas or ether – which put me out for two hours. The dentist took half an hour tussling with my teeth; and I not only feel battered, but suffering, as one always does, from the poison getting loose. No doubt I shall be very much better for this: freer from colds and rheumatism, but at present I am sorry for myself, and very languid. WhetherMoot, The;c3 I go on from London to the weekend meeting of the Moot at Oxford I leave open; but in any case I expect to take next week off. This will be my last week at Oak Hill Park1 until October: Ide la Mares, thegive TSE wartime refuge;a6 remove as usual to much Hadham Hall.
I was glad to get no. 95: you have a pretty strenuous course, andHale, Emilyas actor;v8The Wingless Victory;c6 I hope that the dramatic event will not be the last straw; but I think that the stimulus of doing what you enjoy most will make up for that. IAnderson, MaxwellThe Wingless Victory;a1 have read the Anderson play, but I don’t remember it: the versification is very poor, but he has some dramatic ability.2 I wish indeed that I could see you; andShakespeare, WilliamEH imagined as Lady Macbeth;a7 I should also like to see you as Lady M.: though when I say ‘Lady M.’ I mean, modestly, Lady Macbeth.
IUnderhill, Evelyn;c4 know that you did not meet Evelyn Underhill at Grenville Place – I remember that occasion quite well – but I had thought that you did go to Campden Hill Square with the Perkins’s. CheethamCheetham, Revd Eric;e7 is carrying on bravely, with one curate, occasionally getting away for a short rest, but running the magazine etc. and assisted in looking after the church by several serious ladies, several of whom are always about, polishing brass and silver etc. and by Miss Bingham.
BobbySpeaight, Robertbroadcasts East Coker;d7 Speaight gave a very good broadcast of East Coker, which I wish you could have heard. I am relieved to hear that no photograph has yet been sent: as for any of myself, that will have to wait, because we are not allowed to enclose photographs, printed matter etc. in letters. Anyway, none has been taken, not even a snap shot.
I hope for a full account of the play, and perhaps, by separate letter, some pictures of it and you in it.
1.The Fabers’ home in Hampstead, London.
2.MaxwellAnderson, Maxwell Anderson (1888–1959), American playwright, author and journalist; winner of the Pulitzer Prize 1933 for the satire Both Your Houses. Some of his plays are written in blank verse, including Mary of Scotland (1933); Winterset (1935); The Wingless Victory (1936). Wingless Victory was the play EH was to act in.
2.MaxwellAnderson, Maxwell Anderson (1888–1959), American playwright, author and journalist; winner of the Pulitzer Prize 1933 for the satire Both Your Houses. Some of his plays are written in blank verse, including Mary of Scotland (1933); Winterset (1935); The Wingless Victory (1936). Wingless Victory was the play EH was to act in.
4.RevdCheetham, Revd Eric Eric Cheetham (1892–1957): vicar of St Stephen’s Church, Gloucester Road, London, 1929–56 – ‘a fine ecclesiastical showman’, as E. W. F. Tomlin dubbed him. TSE’s landlord and friend at presbytery-houses in S. Kensington, 1934–9. See Letters 7, 34–8.
2.RobertSpeaight, Robert Speaight (1904–77), actor, producer and author, was to create the role of Becket in Murder in the Cathedral in 1935: see Biographical Register.
1.EvelynUnderhill, Evelyn Underhill (1875–1941), spiritual director and writer on mysticism and the spiritual life: see Biographical Register.