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new one- & never was a peerage more finely earned. No grocery about yours. loving & ever hungry for your company & Zoo-zoo's -

Böse-Kind.

Nearing Venice

LLOYD TRIESTINO Pfo "Ausonia"

June 2nd 1935

Dear John, I ought to be home by the time this reaches you - but with some holiday leisure still available, I feel I must write & tell you how your "Oliver Cromwell" has kept me absorbed during this voyage. In the rush of London I never could get it read, but slipping past the Greek Islands & up an oily-smooth Adriatic I have been able to, & oh! I have enjoyed it.

I don't know how you manage to write with that double standpoint of the complete contemporary & the later seer. I can almost see you yourself moving among those Cromwellian parliamentarians so

Last edit almost 2 years ago by Stephen
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vivid do you make them to us. And when I shut the book I have a feeling you must still be in connection talking with Oliver helping him to clear the issues - understanding his dilemmas merciless & yet merciful to his mistakes, & at all times capable of sharing his spiritual conflicts. To write such a biography you must surely in a sense almost become the man you are writing about don't you? & yet how far off you have to stand for your final judgments. And now you are off to understand & interpret a whole great Country to itself &

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to the outside world - embodying there the King's Grace. How I enjoyed that book too - which I read on the voyage out.

It was a strange experience being on the high seas for the Jubilee - quite out of touch with it all - to receive when I got to Cairo Air Mail letters from Arthur & all the children, including Harry lyrical about its beauty & significance & the particular beauty of the Queen. They came before all the gush of the papers & were so real & immediate I could not help sending quotations from them to Cynthia Colville - & she shewed my letter to the Queen, who was so moved by it she kept it & sent me such a nice message about it. Saturday's Times which I got at

Brindisi speaks of the King having a slight chill. How one trembles at any illness for him & realises afresh his irreplaceableness to us.

Its been a change being in Cairo but a very hot & rather an anxious one. But Kate & her baby are well & don't seem to mind much both being in a sweltering hot hospital with not much air inside & hot winds blowing round it. But I shall be thankful to get them home out of the prickly heat & flies. The marriage I feel is quite a happy one & Pascoe much come on & mellowed by it - & beautifully un-clumsy with his very tiny delicious little baby. When shall I see you & Zoo-zoo I wonder. I do so want you to come to Nannau for a few days fishing & I'll feed you exactly according to Plesch's régime. Dear John I call you by your old name still - tho' I love the

Last edit almost 2 years ago by Stephen
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