BRACERS Record Detail for 19236
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"Thursday My Dear Dear Love—Your letter this mg. was a great happiness." It is annotated by Colette: "In answer to mine from Manchester train dated 31 Oct. — Colette."
A literary version of this letter was prepared: document .052372, record 99831, using most of the last paragraph of this letter.
BR TO CONSTANCE MALLESON, [1 NOV. 1917]
BRACERS 19236. ALS. McMaster
Edited by S. Turcon. Reviewed by K. Blackwell
My dear dear Love
Your letter this morning3 was a great happiness. I hadn’t a thought that my letter would bring you back. Mrs Eliot4 is still in the country so I shan’t have to see her tonight, but I am dining with E.N. Bennett5 — I will reach you about 11. My love, you are patient and good with me — I don’t want to argue and reason and explain tonight — I just want the feeling of rest together — I want the feeling of union in the deep regions that doesn’t come any other way.
I could come in the afternoon, but I feel I would rather come when there is nothing ahead to do, and when we shall be free. It is a great joy to think of Mrs Dad6 not coming in the morning — I shall be in to lunch, so if anything doesn’t suit in this arrangement you can let me know by telephone.
The only thing you don’t give me is what I ought not to want — the sense of possession.
I am coming back to you tonight with all my heart and with all my soul — the world without you means nothing to me. I want your hand in my hair — your arms about me — the love in your eyes — shall I see that again? I have been numb and now I am not. O Love, my Love, my Love.
B.
- 1
[document] Document 200224.
- 2
[date] Colette wrote “1st Nov 1917” on the letter.
- 3
letter this morning Her letter of 31 October 1917 (BRACERS 112083). Written on document 200224 (BRACERS 19236) is this note: “In answer to mine from Manchester train dated 31 Oct. — Colette.”
- 4
Mrs. Eliot Vivienne Eliot (1888–1947). For further information on her, see BRACERS 19062, n.5.
- 5
E.N. Bennett Capt. E.N. Bennett was a member of the UDC; he wrote BR in 1918, wishing him success in the appeal of his court case.
- 6
MrsDad The wife of a soldier who had served with Miles Malleson.
