BRACERS Record Detail for 19187

To access the original letter, email the Russell Archives.

Collection code
RA3
Recent acquisition no.
596
Document no.
200167
Box no.
6.64
Source if not BR
Malleson, Constance
Recipient(s)
Malleson, Constance
Sender(s)
BR
Date
1917/07/20*
Form of letter
ALS
Pieces
1E
Notes and topics

"Friday night My Beloved—I am very unhappy, feeling I wrote you a horrible letter—please forgive me—"

Malleson noted: "This envelope must belong to a different letter".

Transcription

BR TO CONSTANCE MALLESON, [20 JULY 1917]
BRACERS 19187. ALS. McMaster
Edited by S. Turcon. Reviewed by K. Blackwell


Friday night1, 2, 3

My Beloved

I am very unhappy, feeling I wrote you a horrible letter4please forgive me — I do hate to think of you unhappy and it makes me desperate to find some way out. Dear Heart I ama miserable thinking of you torturing yourself all alone — I have arranged to go off for the day with Dakyns5 Sunday but I could get out of it if your mood changed — You seemed so hurt with me at the lecture6 — I have thought of nothing else ever since. Tomorrow evening I am engaged but I have nothing to do all day — I long for you Dearest — I feel so utterly lost when you withdraw yourself — my whole world seems to crack — but I quiteb understand — Goodnight my Beloved — my thoughts are with you every moment —

B

  • 1

    [document] Document 200167.

  • 2

    [envelope] The Lady Constance Malleson | 6 Mecklenburgh Square | W.C.1. Pmk: LONDON. W.C | 1.5 PM |24  JUL 1917

  • 3

    [date] This letter is with an envelope postmarked 24 July. Colette has noted on a separate piece of paper that the envelope must belong to a different letter. This letter must be Letter no. 2 of 20 July 1917.

  • 4

    a horrible letter His letter written earlier in the day (BRACERS 19187). In her reply, Colette notes: “I wasn’t hurt; you weren’t horrid; and if you do lecture me it is no more than I lecture myself” (BRACERS 113039).

  • 5

    Dakyns Arthur Dakyns (1883–1941). The Dakyns family lived in Haslemere so BR would have been acquainted with the family. BR had moved to Bagley Wood in 1905; Daykns was at Oxford, receiving his Lit. Hum. in 1906. In a letter of 1 January 1906 to Lucy Donnelly (Auto. 1: 181), BR writes: “Arthur has inherited a great deal of his father’s charm. He is the only person up here (except the Murrays) that I feel as a real friend….”

  • 6

    lecture Unidentified.

Textual Notes

  • a

    am “am” is underlined three times in a continuous stroke.

  • b

    quite “quite” is underlined five times in a continuous stroke.

Permission
Everyone
Transcription Public Access
Yes
Record no.
19187
Record created
May 23, 2014
Record last modified
Jun 23, 2025
Created/last modified by
duncana