BRACERS Record Detail for 19118
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"Friday My Darling—I keep thinking about you and wondering how things are with you."
BR TO CONSTANCE MALLESON, [2 FEB. 1917]
BRACERS 19118. ALS. McMaster
Edited by S. Turcon. Reviewed by K. Blackwell
My Darling
I keep thinking about you and wondering how things are with you. My thoughts are with you perpetually. I understand what you say about feeling alone, and the dignity it gives to life and the tenderness it brings — it is a feeling I live with always. Yes, perplexed times must come, and just be lived through — but you know, my dear one, that I am here waiting for you,4 longing to help if only I could, longing to give you love and a great tenderness — I miss you dreadfully — in spitea of the fact that I have been so busy I should probably not have seen you if you had been here — still I should have felt you near me. — The world looks very black again, after the little gleam that Wilson brought.5 God help us all!
Dearest, I love you. Goodbye.
B.
- 1
[document] Document 200091.
- 2
[envelope] Colette O’Niel | c/o Miles Malleson Esq | Repertory Theatre | Birmingham. Pmk: LONDON. W.C | 3 15 PM | B 2 17B
- 3
[date] Colette wrote “2nd Feb 1917” on the envelope.
- 4
waiting for you Colette was away with her husband, Miles Malleson, in Birmingham. For information on Miles, see BRACERS 19046, n.4.
- 5
little gleam that Wilson brought BR surely refers to Woodrow Wilson’s speech before the U.S. Senate on 22 January 1917, calling for a “peace without victory” settlement of the War and proposing a World League for Peace. Germany’s response was to declare unrestricted submarine warfare.
Textual Notes
- a
spite BR wrote “spit”.
