[No surviving envelope]
Letter 21.
YourSecond World WarOperation Overlord;e4 letter of June 10 has arrived; and, being your first since D-Day, makes me feel somewhat synchronised with you: for that date marks an epoch, and nearly everything that has happened since has been only the logical – and for the most part, highly satisfactory – development of that. I shall for the present at least write regularly every week, just to reassure you about myself. Owing to certain circumstances I shall, for the present, be in town only for Tuesday nights: which I had contemplated doing, in lieu of a holiday, for some weeks of the summer anyway. Otherwise, I have nothing particular to report of myself, except that I am well, and so is everyone else, I am happy to say. I am glad to think that you will soon be in Manan: and who, I wonder, is Emily Greeley?1 She happens to occur in a particularly illegible part of your letter. Idogs'Boerre' (Norwegian Elkhound);b7poignant photograph of;e2 was glad, and sad, to get the photograph of Bøerre: which'Responsibility of the Man of Letters in the Cultural Restoration of Europe, The'Norseman sent to EH;a4 will remind me incidentally to send you ‘The Norseman’ with my article as soon as it appears. Perhaps when you have been away from it for a time, you will tell me exactly what you think of Millbrook: I get the impression that the people at the top are not quite right, and that they are doing the wrong things for the wrong girls: but you have left me in some doubt as to just how Unspeakable the latter are, and perhaps I am defaming them in my mind. Anyway, I am relieved that you have gone – which reminds me:
Having indented this to make it more memorable. I hope your time at Commonwealth Avenue will be as happy as may be. TheAmericaConcord, Massachusetts;e1EH's househunting in;a2 next thing you could tell me, to please me very much, would be to let me know that you had found just the wee house you want, in Concord, and just the right person or persons to share it with (for I don’t want to think of your living in a house alone, and I presume servants to live in are quite beyond price).
1.Not identified.
3.HopeMirrlees, Emily Lina ('Mappie', née Moncrieff) Mirrlees’s mother was Emily Lina Mirrlees, née Moncrieff (1862–1948) – known as ‘Mappie’ or ‘Mappy’ – see Biographical Register.