p.

OverviewTranscribeVersionsHelp

Here you can see all page revisions and compare the changes have been made in each revision. Left column shows the page title and transcription in the selected revision, right column shows what have been changed. Unchanged text is highlighted in white, deleted text is highlighted in red, and inserted text is highlighted in green color.

2 revisions
shashathree at Mar 25, 2023 12:02 AM

p.

case you do not come up to the standard of my picture
of you. And you said you thanked me for my "sweet &
loving & flattering" letters. You must not say flattering,
darling - the word has a meaning of insincerity, which
does not apply to anything I ever say to you. You must
not & need not feel alarmed, my sweetest darling -
when I come home, I will love you & adore you
& admire you & make love to you, much more than
I do in my letters, & that will go on for the whole
of our lives. I am the one who must try even harder
than I ever did before, to come up to the standard
of a person as wonderful as you - & to the standard
which I set myself in my own mind & in my letters
to you.
I have been working very hard ever since I began
this letter on Friday. Saturday's lunch was a
failure, as the Col cried off at the last moment.
Mrs Samuel was very upset & annoyed, which made
me feel all the more that there really was
something behind it all. However, we had a very excellent
lunch & a pleasant one, & I was back here at
4.0 & sent the buxom Helen back to her Depot. She
is a remarkably dull & senseless woman, & I really
cannot talk to her - & especially as she is so bloody
pleased with her own importance & efficiency.
At night I had to attend a conference with the
R.A.F. about defense, & which was pretty abortive. So
much so that I spent all Sunday evening talking
to the Brigade Major about the same thing.
I told you at the beginning of this letter that the
dust should rise - but it hasn't. It is an

p.