To Diana Cooper, 23rd December 1945, Barhatch, Cranleigh, Surrey.
And I got your letter about Maurice.* It was of deep interest to me. Especially as I can’t talk to Diana about him. Diana thinks writing poetry and being a Catholic (or having any religion) the two big unpardonable idiocies. So you can’t expect much sympathy about Maurice. She also thinks his novels were extremely bad.
I’ll tell you how I first knew Maurice. He stood under the gas jet in the hall of Audley Square and Claud introduced us. It must have been ‘96 or ‘97. When he had gone I said something in dispraise of his personal appearance and Claud said: ‘Well, he certainly hasn’t got the bel air.’ You must remember he had a very big brown moustache and rather long brown hair. I at once became a greater friend than Claud was and so remained. We never drifted apart or were estranged.
I always was completely at my ease with him. I think I can say like you that he was the best man I ever knew but I never had any feeling that he was saintly. I think that was because he was nervous and fussy. I think saintly people shew a sort of calm resignation at being in God’s hands, so that all must be well.
I think you were very good to him and have nothing to reproach yourself with. Nothing at all. You couldn’t pretend to be in love with him.
I dare say you judge rightly when you say you would please him with a grand choral requiem. I had exactly the opposite idea when I arranged his mass. I can’t explain why I thought Maurice would like it like that, but I did think so. There was a matter-of-fact simplicity about it.
You say no woman was probably ever in love with him. You are likely to know. I have been told that when he was in Copenhagen he was engaged to be married to a French girl. It was broken off. Natalie or Connie might know about it. What his relations to Lady Lovat were I don’t know. Were they happy? Did he in some degree bore her? Kath has implied to me that he was a burden, an incubus at times. Difficult for her to leave him as he minded her going away so much.
Then there was Mme Benckendorff.** I suppose they were lovers. It seems hard to believe, but in my old age I grow to believe that all things are possible. Then there was Nan. I saw that from near. And I was puzzled to death. I think he must have asked her to marry him. It was an enigmatic situation.
I have always thought what you told me about balls and suppers hard to understand. I suppose men never fully grasp how they can bore and throttle women. But how often they do. Or how often women complain of it. I wonder if I’ve been like other men. I can only suppose so.
Maurice was the most loved man I’ve known and he deserved it. I can’t say more than that.
I suppose he was a freak, an oddity.
I wrote my Christmas letter to Lady Norah Smith this morning. She was Graham before that, Brassey before that, Hely-Hutchinson before that. I’m always afraid I’ll write and she’ll tell me she isn’t Smith any more. O the whirligig of time! She used to live in the largest house in Hill St and drive out in a Victoria with 2 spanking bays and I think they had £13,000 a year. Now she commutes from Taplow and works in an office in London at enlarging maps. She is very talented indeed.
When Diana had in X-word puzzle: ‘Good King Wenceslaus looked out, On the feast of …’ she had no idea what the missing word could be. Religious poetry is not her forte. I’ve been here 9 weeks all but 2 days. It’s a longish visit. Diana has been very kind indeed and she has asked me back. But I am looking forward to Flora’s company for a change. There’s no doubt Diana has a sort of mental sloth. She talks rather little and she hates anything to do with the imagination – poetry, philosophy, love, religion, she can’t abide. She likes Gibbon and Miss Austen and 18th century memoirs and she likes to talk about the League of Nations and Poland and the American Loan. I don’t think modern people interest her. Her whole outlook is narrow and confined.
* Maurice Baring, 27 April 1874 – 14 December 1945 was an English man of letters, known as a dramatist, poet, novelist, translator and essayist, and also as a travel writer and war correspondent, with particular knowledge of Russia. (Wikipedia)
** Countess Beckendorff was the wife of the last Russian Imperial ambassador in London.
Merry Cristmas, Christopher, and Happy New. What a pleasure your dailies are. Your visits and walks (churches, memorials, houses and parks especially) and your book discoveries, are splendid. And your on-this-day diary dips are top notch. So, many thanks. R
RDN, thank you, much appreciated. If you watch the King’s speech there is an old post (6th March 2019) about the Fitzrovia Chapel.
Christopher
Another great story Christopher.
From all your distant relatives in Australia have a Merry, Merry Christmas and a fabulous 2025.
Cheers, Cousin Terry.
GGrandson –
John Thomas Kennedy Hill.
Shepparton, Victoria, Australia