BRACERS Record Detail for 19643
To access the original letter, email the Russell Archives.
"My Beloved—Thank you 1000 times for your dear dear letter this morning—bless you my heart's life—"
BR TO CONSTANCE MALLESON, 20 APR. 1920
BRACERS 19643. ALS. McMaster
Edited by S. Turcon. Reviewed by K. Blackwell
<letterhead>
70, Overstrand Mansions,
Prince of Wales Road,
Battersea, S.W.1, 2
20.4.20
My Beloved
Thank you 1000 times for your dear dear letter3 this morning — Bless you my Heart’s life —
If it is fine Sunday we will have a heavenly day. I have been looking up trains — We will meet at Lewes and walk on the downs. Do you remember Lewes platform4 and prison? That was an unforgettable day — O my Love, I love you so deeply — with the fibre of my being —
Am pulling strings about Russia5 — seeing Ministers etc.6 — Don’t know what will come of it —
I did understand what you meant over the phone.
Perhaps Sunday night we shall want to stay together either at Lewes or in town — If you think that possible, consider it — It needn’t be settled till Sunday evening.
No new developments about C.A.7 All my love, Heart’s Comrade8 — Oh I do love you —
B
- 1
[document] Document 200636.
- 2
[envelope] Miss Colette O’Niel | c/o F. Forbes-Robertson Esq | “Mice and Men” Co. | St. Leonards | Sussex Pmk: BATTERSEA S.W.11. | 1.15 PM | 20 APR 20
- 3
your dear letter Not extant.
- 4
remember Lewes platform For information on this significant event, see BRACERS 19368, n.8.
- 5
strings about Russia BR hoped to travel there. He did visit in May until near the end of June.
- 6
seeing Ministers etc. On this date BR wrote Lady Ottoline that, “If our Government gives me permission, I shall have to get visas from the Consulates of Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland and Esthonia, each of which will take ages” (Selected Letters, 2: #336).
- 7
C.A. (Reginald) Clifford Allen (1889–1939). What might be new developments for C.A. are unknown, but he did accompany BR to Russia and fell ill. For information on him, see BRACERS 19046, n.7.
- 8
Heart’s Comrade For information on the use of the term, see BRACERS 19145, n.12.
