[No surviving envelope]
Letter 27.
August Bank Holiday
It was a <very welcome!> surprise to get your airgraph of July 25 this morning: I have been so accustomed to getting them only from young poets in Egypt, the Middle East and India, that this was what I expected it to be, so I wondered who it was that had found out my country address. ISecond World WarV-1 Cruise Missile strikes;e5 am relieved to learn that you had got my first fly-bomb letter: I have said a little more about them since, now that the general area affected, and London, are allowed to be mentioned. I have actually never seen, but only heard, any of those in the daytime: I have seen their red incandescence at night.1 In the country they are more bearable, not only because more infrequent, but because you can always hope that the one which misses you will land somewhere where it can do little harm.
IFaber and Faber (F&F)fire-watching duties at;e6 have now changed my fire-watching night to Wednesday – thatFaber, Geoffreyas fire-watching companion;j8 suits Geoffrey better, and it means that I do not have the scramble to catch a train at the end of the weekly Wednesday afternoon board meeting. Therefore I may not go up for the day tomorrow, because I expect that the transport will be very crowded with people returning from the bank holiday. As things are, I have sometimes missed a train simply because the bus was too crowded to get on to. I am hoping that by the end of the summer London will be more peaceful; as, by the autumn, it will become more inconvenient to be only one night a week in town – at present, I trust it as a kind of substitute holiday: but I imagine that they will go on launching their projectiles from places in Holland, and perhaps even from Germany itself, until they are completely crushed. I wish now that I had ever visited Florence: but on the other hand, when a beautiful place one knows is in danger, it is all the more distressing.2
I am very glad you are out of the heat: and I hope that there is no continual drone of aeroplanes over Grand Manan.
TheHinkleys, theTSE imagines EH's evening with;e8Hinkley, Eleanor Holmes (TSE's first cousin)
IWhat is a Classic?rewritten for publication;a4 haveVirgil Society, TheTSE's Presidental Address for;a3 finished re-writing my Virgil address for October (which is to be printed as a pamphlet by Faber & Faber),4 andAssociation of Bookmen of Swansea and West Walespaper prepared for;a1 must now tackle my talk for the booklovers of Swansea.5 MeanwhileHoellering, George M.persists with TSE;a8 the patient Hoellering is quietly persistent: heMurder in the CathedralHoellering film;g1casting Becket;a5 lunched with me last week, and I am to have a private view (at his cinema, the Academy in Oxford Street) of a film in which I shall see, and pass upon, the actor whom he has in mind to invite to be Becket. Buttravels, trips and plansTSE's abortive 1944 North Africa mission;f3;a8 how soon I can turn my mind again to that depends on whether the African tour takes place or not – nowSecond World WarOperation Overlord;e4 that General Bradley is advancing towards Paris!6 I have just written to the head man of the B.C. to suggest that the question be re-considered in a month or so. It would have been rather exciting to have gone in May, but now I think I should rather wait and go to Paris.
1.Little Gidding:
The dove descending breaks the air
With flames of incandescent terror
Of which the tongues declare
The one discharge from sin and error.
The only hope, or else despair,
Lies in the choice of pyre or pyre –
To be redeemed from fire by fire.
2.The Allied advance in Italy had reached and begun crossing the Arno River into Florence.
3.SusanWambaugh, Susan Elizabeth Elizabeth Wambaugh (1884–1945).
4.What is a Classic? (1945).
5.‘What Is Minor Poetry?’ – TSE’s address to the Association of Bookmen of Swansea and West Wales, was given at Swansea, 26 Sept. 1944 – Welsh Review 3: 4 (Dec. 1944), 256–7.
6.General Omar Bradley (1893–1981) commanded the U.S. 12th Army Group in the Allied advance through France. The Liberation of Paris finally took place between 19 and 25 Aug.
11.GeoffreyFaber, Geoffrey Faber (1889–1961), publisher and poet: see Biographical Register.
3.GeorgeHoellering, George M. M. Hoellering (1898–1980), Austrian-born filmmaker and cinema manager: see Biographical Register.