BRACERS Record Detail for 19207

To access the original letter, email the Russell Archives.

Collection code
RA3
Recent acquisition no.
596
Document no.
200187
Box no.
6.64
Source if not BR
Malleson, Constance
Recipient(s)
Malleson, Constance
Sender(s)
BR
Date
1917/09/06
Form of letter
ALS
Pieces
1E
BR's address code (if sender)
LON
Notes and topics

"My Beloved—Yesterday was perfect heaven—quite unbelievably happy."

A literary version of the letter containing only part of the last paragraph of the letter was prepared — document .052364, record 99823.

Transcription

BR TO CONSTANCE MALLESON, 6 SEPT. 1917
BRACERS 19207. ALS. McMaster
Edited by S. Turcon. Reviewed by K. Blackwell


<London>
6 Sp. 171, 2

My Beloved

Yesterday was perfect heaven — quite unbelievably happy. I loved looking at things for you, and the time at the Attic3 was beyond all words — bathed in joy, like a landscape in the morning sunshine. I am afraid the things I said about Roy4 gave you pain — I was thinking so intently about the matter itself that I couldn’t remember anything else — Very likely my guesses were all wrong.

I love the things you chose5 — I only wish there were more of them. It is a most fearful moral effort not to spend more on giving you things — I find you gave me £6 instead of £5 the other day — that is counted in in the enclosed cheque.

I have had a letter from K. Mansfield6 which I will show you — I want to discuss it with you. She seems very anxious to be friends with me, but I don’t think she wants a love-affair — I don’t at all, but her mind is very interesting and I should like to see a fair amount of her, as long as there is not too close an intimacy. It is her black view of other people that chiefly worries me.

Saturday tea-time — till then I shall just exist. My Darling, your love is so precious and so beautiful — I feel unworthy of it, but it is gradually making me more nearly worthy. It fills me with life and energy — but what is more, it has smoothed out all the wrinkles in my instincts, and brought light into the dark corners where terrifying pain lurked — Nothing less would have done that. My heart, I bless you for all you are and all you give me — my whole being has become filled with the joy of you.

B

  • 1

    [document] Document 200187.

  • 2

    [envelope] The Lady Constance Malleson | 6 Mecklenburgh Square | W.C.1. Pmk: LONDON.W.C | ?.15 PM | ? SEP 17?

  • 3

    the Attic The flat she shared with her husband Miles at 6 Mecklenburgh Sq.

  • 4

    Roy Sir Coleridge Arthur Fitzroy Kennard (1885–1948), diplomat and author, known as “Roy” to his friends.

  • 5

    the things you chose Presumably one of these things was a wristwatch that he had wanted to give her since December 1916 (BRACERS 19095).

  • 6

    K. Mansfield Katherine Mansfield (1888–1923). BR first met the short-story writer in July 1915; an intense friendship began in November 1916. Her early death was caused by tuberculosis.

Permission
Everyone
Transcription Public Access
Yes
Record no.
19207
Record created
May 23, 2014
Record last modified
Jun 23, 2025
Created/last modified by
duncana