[No surviving envelope]
Letter 42
I did not write last week, as I have been having my seasonal illness after all – an infection, the doctor says, and certainly I was feeling particularly well just before it. The current form is a kind of laryngitis – a sore throat and a laryngeal cough; but I, for the first time, had no temperature at all, and after the first 24 hours did not feel very ill. But the cautious doctor is keeping me away from London until after Christmas. IFabers, the;g7 was hoping to get away to the Fabers for a quieter Christmas: as this house will be very full: theMirrlees, Maj.-Gen. William Henry Buchanan ('Reay')at Shamley for Christmas;b1 General, back from India for a few weeks, andCokers, thedue at Shamley for Christmas;a1Coker, Lewis Aubrey ('Bolo')
IMcPherrin, Jeanette;f6 was very glad to hear of Jeanie’s visit, and rejoiced in reading her letter. OnElsmith, Dorothy Olcott;a9 the other hand, grieved over the news of Mrs. Elsmith (to whom I did write – it seems a very long time ago, and I wonder whether she got it – you might ask her – I wrote to an address in New York which you gave me). I thought that she had chosen a man beneath her: comparatively coarse-grained, I thought; and I suspected, of a somewhat difficult temperament. But to be the second husband, especially without issue, of a woman with a considerable family of children, is perhaps not easy; and perhaps too he was not so successful a man as he would have liked to be. INason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine;a8 have just had a sweet Christmas note from Meg, who had been in Swansea to see an aunt, and got a copy of the photograph of me with the Mayor and Mayoress.
Thank you for your conscientious account of your diet, which is satisfactory. I am worried, however, by your inability to ride a bicycle: I had no idea that the trouble with your leg was so persistent.2 I wonder if there is not any treatment which would do it good. For I fear that you may find the walk to and fro, at least twice a day, a good deal of a tax upon you.
ISecond World Warand post-war European prospects;e9 wishEuropeits post-war future;a8 indeed that I could take a more cheerful view of the future of Europe and the world in general, than I can see any reason for at present. One cannot hope to see any really settled and prosperous state of any country in one’s lifetime; but one hopes for signs of something better appearing in the next generation: and, so far as oneself and those one cares for are concerned, the prospect of a serene old age.
IHousman, Laurencecompared to his brother;a1 doHale, Emilyas actor;v8in play by Laurence Housman;d1 not know Laurence Housman’s plays, though I know he has written a good many:3 IHousman, Alfred Edward ('A. E.')and his brother Laurence;a3 should not expect to find anything particularly ‘Catholic’ about them. A. E. Housman is said to have observed having his own poems attributed to his brother Laurence, but he did object to have Laurence’s poems attributed to him: but A.E. was very acid, and perhaps they are better than that. I hope that you had a great success with it. But the question of making the play part of the curriculum, surely raises the question of what other part of it could be left out. My impression is that in American schools too many subjects are studied, in a smattering way, instead of really sound drill on the few essentials like languages, mathematics and history. Do your girls do any Latin?
I shall send a cable – I should have hesitated to do so this year, but that I have the good reason of not having written last week when in bed; andPerkinses, the;l2Perkins, Dr John Carroll (EH's uncle)
With much love, and Christmas blessings
1.See TSE, ‘Preface to Roll Call [Apel, by Jerzy Andrzejewski]’: CProse 6, 581–5. The text was never published with TSE’s preface.
2.TSE to J. C. Perkins, 26 Dec. 1944: ‘Emily has spoken well of her own health; but I have been more reassured by reports of her good health from other and (on this point) more reliable sources. I am sorry, especially at this time of year, that she lives so far from the school, and that she finds she cannot bicycle. And I imagine that you found her very tired at the end of term, especially having produced a play, as she always throws herself so unsparingly into such work’ (Beinecke).
3.Laurence Housman (1865–1959): prolific English playwright, poet and illustrator; active supporter of feminism; literary executor of his older brother, the poet A. E. Housman (1859–1936). His plays include Angels and Ministers (1921); Little Plays of St Francis (1922); and Victoria Regina (1934; first staged in 1937). See also his autobiography The Unexpected Years (1937); and Elizabeth Oakley, Inseparable Siblings: A Portrait of Clemence and Laurence Housman (2009). It is not known which play by Housman was produced by EH.
4.TSEElsmiths, theseminal Woods Hole stay with;a1Elsmith, Dorothy Olcott
2.JeanetteMcPherrin, Jeanette McPherrin (1911–92), postgraduate student at Scripps College; friend of EH: see Biographical Register.
1.MajMirrlees, Maj.-Gen. William Henry Buchanan ('Reay').-Gen. William Henry Buchanan ‘Reay’ Mirrlees, DSO, CB, MC (1892–1964), served in the Royal Artillery. He was the only son of William Julius and Emily Lina Mirrlees, brother of Hope Mirrlees.
1.MargaretNason, Margaret ('Meg') Geraldine (Meg) Geraldine Nason (1900–86), proprietor of the Bindery tea rooms, Broadway, Worcestershire, whom TSE and EH befriended on visits to Chipping Campden.