[No surviving envelope]
[Shamley Wood]
Letter 8.
It is becoming again a long time between letters, which are themselves becoming slower, so that your letters, especially at the turn of the season from one term to the next, seem like reports from the past. IAmericaits horrors;c2'Easter holidays' not including Easter;b5 have to calculate where you are at the moment I am writing: in the middle of the severe weather, walking to and fro twice a day at least, in snow-boots, but looking to the short Easter break – which in American institutions never coincides with Easter, but usually comes a week or two earlier. Herespringat Shamley;b1 one already begins to look for the spring – thereflowers and floracrocuses;b3at Shamley;a1 areflowers and floracatkins;a8at Shamley;a1 crocusflowers and florapussy-willow;c5at Shamley;a1, catkins and pussy-willows, andflowers and floracelandine;a9spotted at Shamley;a1 a celandine was seen a fortnight ago – and if a bitter spell returns, by the end of February one thinks of it only as a momentary relapse. One looks forward to the spring with rather more eagerness than usual, because of the lack of fuel. When I got back last week, I found that they had decided (as I rather expected) that the letting-out and starting-up of the water heater every day, was consuming rather more coke than keeping the fire in: so now my carefully typed lists of bath nights and the wholly bathless day (Thursdays) are out of date. The fire has been started again, and one can have a bath every day; but on the other hand, the central heating boiler has been put out, so that the house is much colder. ExceptShamley Wood, Surreyoverheated;a7 when the weather is very cold, I prefer this, as soon as I get used to it, for the house was often too warm for my taste; but it is hard on the old ladies, who have to stop in bed on very cold days; and if the coal situation is no easier next winter (as I fear it will not be, whatever happens in the war) the position for the old and frail – especially those who have been used to comfort, will be such as to cause anxiety.
IMurder in the CathedralHoellering film;g1recording made for;a6 have got into a kind of routine life lately, crowded but monotonous: inMrs Millington (the blind masseuse);a8 addition to the course of recording (not this week, but two sessions next week) and my fortnightly masseuse, I have been having a morning a week at the dentist (I don’t mean that he keeps me long, indeed English dentists give much shorter appointments than Americans, but the time taken out amounts to most of a morning; and when I get back to the country, I give the first two days to work on my book, and the second two days to reading manuscripts, correspondence and any non-Faber business as well. In town I usually have an engagement one evening a week, and sometimes two. Two nights in town seems on the whole to give the best balance; for if I am there longer, I have to see more people, on quasi-business pretexts, so the time is not always well spent from my point of view. TheSecond World Warprognostications as to its end;e2 routine helps to keep one’s mind off the thought of suspense, which grows as the war approaches some kind of climax, and makes one more cautious of not being settled. What adds to the feeling of unsettlement is the uncertainty of what will be the cost of living after the war, whether I shall be able to afford more than a small flat, whether I shall be able to furnish it, and whether I shall be able to have a refuge in the country as I should like to have.
IEliot, Theresa Garrett (TSE's sister-in-law);d1 was relieved to hear from Theresa thatEliot, Henry Ware, Jr. (TSE's brother)goitre operated on;i7 Henry’s operation had been successful. I did not really anticipate that it would not be; and my greatest anxiety indeed has been about the period after it, and whether he would take proper care of himself; and also about the expense. But indeed that last worries me for all of you, and for you in particular: it seems to me that it is becoming more difficult for anybody but a workman or a millionaire or a crook to live in America at all, with taxes and cost of living both going up. So I await further explanations of your intentions for yourself for next year.
3.HenryEliot, Henry Ware, Jr. (TSE's brother) Ware Eliot (1879–1947), TSE’s older brother: see Biographical Register.